Skip to main content

This site is delivered by Worcestershire County Council.

Let's Waste Less logo
  • Reduce
  • Reuse and repair
  • Recycle
  • Household Recycle Centres
Open or close navigation
  • Reduce
  • Reuse and repair
  • Recycle
  • Household Recycle Centres

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Let's Waste Less
  3. FoodSavvy
  4. Food Savvy Recipes
  5. Cauliflower sweet piccalilli

Cauliflower sweet piccalilli

A delicious recipe for pickling vegetables in vinegar to preserve them. Perfect to give as a gift or for saving veg until you fancy eating something extra tasty.

Ingredients: (makes about 2 litres)
•    1 small cauliflower, cut into small florets, stalk chopped into batons and leaves shredded
•    2 onions, diced
•    1 cucumber or courgette, deseeded and cut into large dice (use the middle as a hydrating snack or to flavour water)
•    75 grams of green beans, cut into 1-centimetre strips (optional)
•    400 millilitres of white vinegar (white wine, cider or distilled)
•    50 grams of sea salt
•    75 grams of sugar (caster is perfect but whatever you have)
•    Garlic clove, bashed (optional)
•    3 teaspoons of mustard (English is great but whatever you have)
•    1 teaspoon of ground ginger 
•    10 grams of flour (corn flour or plain flour) 
•    2 tablespoons of turmeric

 

Method:
1.    Put the washed and chopped veg in a bowl and toss with the sea salt. Leave, covered at room temperature, for at least 20 minutes. Drain the veg and wash well under cold water. Drain well. Heat the vinegar, sugar, garlic, mustard, ginger and turmeric and a pinch of salt until the sugar dissolves. Add in the drain veg and boil for 5 minutes.
2.    Meanwhile mix the corn flour with half a glass of cold water and stir to make a paste, then pour in with the vinegar veg mix and stir for a few minutes until the mixture thickens. Remove from the heat, and pack into warm sterilised jars. 
3.    Seal and leave in a cool dark place until you wish to give it as a gift or eat with friends and family.


 

Recipe created for #FoodSavvy Norfolk & Suffolk
 

  • Business waste and duty of care
  • Campaigns
  • Fly-tipping
  • Food Savvy
  • Household Recycling Centres
  • Recycle
  • Reduce
  • Reducing waste in schools
  • Reuse and repair
  • The waste hierarchy
  • Waste and duty of care
  • e-permits
  • Footer secondary menu

    • Accessibility
    • Cookies
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy policy
    • Website photography