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Award-winning chef, author and forager Alan Bergo. Food is all around you.

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Pickled Angelica

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Pickled angelica stem recipePickled, tender Angelica stems are a good introduction to working with the plant, and I’m surprised I didn’t try it sooner after all the years I’ve worked with it.

Angelica (my local species should be A. atropurpurea) is fascinating, and delicious in the right place, but was

Wild edible Angelica atropurpurea

Angelica at the perfect stage to harvest–young and tender.

frustrating as it doesn’t obey some of the culinary logic I generally hold as true. The flavor of the stems raw is intensely perfumed—way too strong to be pleasant for most people unless something’s done with them first, like fermenting them in cream like I do here. Confusingly, if you cook the same stems, or pair them with other powerfully flavored ingredients, you might not even taste it at all, a good example being if you tossed them into my rhubarb-angelica crisp without allowing the ingredients to sit together and marry overnight so the rhubarb mix can absorb the aroma of the raw angelica, similar to how truffles are used.

Candying the stalks, which is probably the most common thing to do, is fine, and a great garnish for cakes, along with the perfumed syrup it makes as a byproduct, but sometimes I don’t want things candied, or I might want a way to preserve something that isn’t ultra sweet, which is where pickling them can come in handy.
Let me preface by saying this isn’t a pickle like most people are used to, there’s salt in it, sure, but moreso it’s a sweet pickle. Sweet pickles like this (the same proportions are great with other fruits, cherries being a good example) are a good way to preserve something that you light otherwise preserve in syrup.
Pickled angelica stem recipe

The stems turn a subtle green against the deep pink of the liquid. I love the shape of the stems cut on the bias.

The Angelica takes really well to it, and keeps a good amount of its natural perfume, but not too much—just enough to be interesting. The only real thing to know is that you can’t just pour hot liquid over it and call it a day. The stems are chewy, and even very young, you’ll want to simmer them until they’re tender in the liquid.

After that, you can use them after just a few days once the aromas settle down. The vinegar-sugar combo here is one I love since it makes the finished product so versatile. Where candied angelica is firmly rooted in the sweet world, picked Angelica could be savory or sweet. Here’s a few ideas:

How to use

  • Serve with soft goat cheese, made spreadable by loosening with cream.
  • With a salad of fruit, especially with things like baked rhubarb, peaches or cooked apples, preferably with some goat or sheep cheese, or whipped cream.
  • Imagine it as a garnish for roasted duck or game,
  • The herbaceous flavor likes fat. Cream and dairy, especially creme fraiche are good, but also things like oil, or fatty meats, especially duck.
  • Toss them in a salad as a punchy garnish, especially one with red fruits or buttery nuts like hazelnuts.
  • After pickling, the stems could make a great addition to sweet fruit chutneys, with a good splash of the liquid added.

Safety note

I taught myself to identify angelica years before I’d seen my first hemlock, waiting until the plants made flowers to harvest, since it’s simple to differentiate the two when the flowers are showing. Unfortunately, the stage when you want the tender stems to do something like this is probably the stage most amateurs could confuse the two plants. make sure you’re 100% on your ID of angelica before you attempt something like this, but don’t let it scare you.

Pickled angelica stem recipe
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Sweet Pickled Angelica Stems

Tender angelica stems simmered with spices, sugar and vinegar. Yield: 1 qt jar.
Prep Time15 mins
Cook Time20 mins
Course: Snack
Cuisine: American
Keyword: Angelica, Pickles
Servings: 10

Ingredients

  • 12 oz tender angelica stems leaves discarded
  • 1.5 cups water
  • 2 teaspoons kosher or sea salt
  • 1 Cup sugar
  • 3/4 cup apple cider vinegar
  • 1 Tablespoon pickling spice

Instructions

  • Toast the pickling spices and mix with the water, vinegar, salt and sugar.
  • Bring the mixture to a boil.
  • Meanwhile, cut the angelica into ¼ inch slices, add to the pickle liquid and cook until tender, about 5-10 minutes.
  • Can in a water bath, or cool, pour into a jar and refrigerate. The angelica will last for months and will mellow a bit as it sits.
Pickled angelica stem recipe

Related

Previous Post: « How to Cook Angelica Blossoms (Zavirne)
Next Post: Burdock Stalks and Carrot Saute »

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Comments

  1. Maria

    October 9, 2021 at 2:37 am

    Thanks for this great information. I have a beautiful Angelica plant and only used the seeds for tea. Now I now there is much more to it.

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Alan Bergo
Summer veg PSA: One of the edible plant parts I co Summer veg PSA: One of the edible plant parts I cover in my book you might not know are squash and pumpkin shoots. 

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I like to give them a dip in boiling water to wilt them quick, then toss them with some fat or stir-fry them quick. The little curly-cues make them look like fairy tale veggies to me. 

#squashshoots #cucurbitaceae #eatmoreplants #kehoecarboncookware
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#cattails #foraging #chickweed #runnerbeans #saladsofinstagram
Long, fun day snatching crayfish out of the water Long, fun day snatching crayfish out of the water by hand with Sam Thayer and @danielvitalis for @wild.fed 

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Without a net catching crayfish by hand is definitely a wax-on wax-off sort of skill. Clears your mind. 

They’re going into gumbo with porcini, sausage and milkweed pods today. 

#crayfish #ninjareflexes #waxonwaxoff #normalthings #onset🎥🎬
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Been a few years since I worked with these. Thankfully Sam Thayer dropped a couple off for me to work with. They’re tender, crisp and delicious. 

Sam mentioned their mild flavor and texture could be because they don’t have to worry about predators eating them, since they grow in the muck of cattail marshes. 

I think they could use a pet name. Pond tusk? Swamp spears? Help me out here. 😂

Nature makes the coolest things. 

#itcamefromthepond #cattail #rhizomes #foraging #typhalatifolia
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Cooked natural wild rice (not the black shiny stuff) is great hot, cold, sweet or savory. It’s a perfect, filling lunch for a long day of berry picking. 

I make them with whatever I have on hand. Mushrooms will fade into the background a little here, so I use a bunch of them, along with lots of herbs and hickory nut oil + dill flowers. 

I’m eating the leftovers today back up in the barrens (hopefully) getting some more bluebs for another shoot this week w @wild.fed 

#wilwilwice #wildrice #chanterelles #campfood #castironcooking
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Next up blewits. Spawn from @northsporemushrooms

#winecaps #strophariaaeruginosa #allthemushroomtags
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