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Olives
I have tried various methods of preserving olives but none have been very successful.
I only have one tree but it's currently weighed down with fruit so would like to have another try at making something edible. Does anyone have a tried and tested method or any handy hints? Yvonne |
Re: Olives
Originally Posted by YMF
(Post 11748157)
I have tried various methods of preserving olives but none have been very successful.
I only have one tree but it's currently weighed down with fruit so would like to have another try at making something edible. Does anyone have a tried and tested method or any handy hints? Yvonne Here is one of many ideas found on a simple search. How to prepare the olives harvested from your olive tree; an Italian recipe |
Re: Olives
All the recipes I have tried have come from internet searches and foodie forums, none of them have produced anything particularly good hence why I am asking here in the hope that someone can give me some informed advice.
Of course it could be that my olives are not that good or better for oil but not sure how to find that out. (I have tried Google!) |
Re: Olives
Originally Posted by YMF
(Post 11748179)
All the recipes I have tried have come from internet searches and foodie forums, none of them have produced anything particularly good hence why I am asking here in the hope that someone can give me some informed advice.
Of course it could be that my olives are not that good or better for oil but not sure how to find that out. (I have tried Google!) |
Re: Olives
This is what I did, following my neighbour's instructions:
Soak the olives in water to cover them, changing it at least once a day. After 4-8 days, the horrible bitterness will have gone (keep tasting to check) then you drain them, make three fine slits downwards in each one (some people have a small board with holes that you push the olives through and each hole has three needles poking inwards and that slits the olives. It's a bit quicker, but I just used a sharp, stainless steel knife.) Put a layer of olives in a big jar, then a layer of sliced garlic, red pepper, carrot, basil, salt, spices or other herbs if wished. then another layer of olives and so on. Fill the jar with a mixture of water and vinegar and close, wait three weeks and start eating them. I think it depends mostly on the flavour and quality of the olives. Mine were very bitter, so by the time they'd soaked enough, they hadn't much taste. The best green ones are the big, fat manzanillas, i think, but very oily black ones are my favourites. I'm no expert - I'm sure someone else will reply with better knowledge. |
Re: Olives
Thanks for that, I spoke to one of my neighbours today and from my understanding of his very strong local accent his method sounded very similar.
The only difference was he did say the first week just in water then the second in salt water but not too strong. He also said he likes to use rosemary as a flavouring. |
Re: Olives
I think I'll use rosemary next time. I think I'd prefer it.
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Re: Olives
Originally Posted by YMF
(Post 11749348)
Thanks for that, I spoke to one of my neighbours today and from my understanding of his very strong local accent his method sounded very similar.
The only difference was he did say the first week just in water then the second in salt water but not too strong. He also said he likes to use rosemary as a flavouring. Hope this is usefull |
Re: Olives
I always thought the intitial soaking should be in salt water. I wonder whether my neighbour forgot to mention that, perhaps assumed tht I'd assume it. (All mine are native Spanish, than goodness, except for a Chiliean.)
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Re: Olives
You can also use caustic soda ( drain cleaner) sold in most hardware shops. It takes Phenols ( bitter flavours) from olives much quicker.
Pete |
Re: Olives
I put 5kg olives in cloth bag with 2kg of salt. Let the bag hang until no liquid runs out. Then bottle. They lasted 1 year.
|
Re: Olives
The salt draws out the juice, but then did you rinse the salt off? Then did you bottle them in vinegar or vinegar-and-water, with herbs, garlic, etc., or did you just save them as they were? Or wot? (said the Akond of Swat.) Were they green? D'you know the variety?
I have a baby manzanilla olive tree - one day it'll produce those big, fat, green ones that are such a treat. |
Re: Olives
Originally Posted by teuchterpete
(Post 11752307)
You can also use caustic soda ( drain cleaner) sold in most hardware shops. It takes Phenols ( bitter flavours) from olives much quicker.
Pete |
Re: Olives
Originally Posted by Lou P.
(Post 11752827)
I used that to murder my husband - I'm not going to use it for olives!
Our neighbour gave us a huge jug of their home grown olives after the whole soaking process-they were horrible.I just buy them because they aren't expensive. Olive trees however are way too much work. As an aside..... how did you do it? ;) |
Re: Olives
Originally Posted by Pica
(Post 11752971)
Priorities-right on lady!:thumbup:
As an aside..... how did you do it? ;) |
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