In-N-Out Is Quickly Running Out of One of Its Most Popular Secret-Menu Items

   –   Teen Vogue

If you love In-N-Out, then you love In-N-Out. So, fans of the iconic burger chain may be disappointed to hear that the vendor that supplies its cascabella peppers is facing a major shortage, Foodbeast reports.

You know what cascabella peppers are — those bright yellow, vinegar-marinated peppers often sliced into rings that make any and every animal-style burger 800 times better. (And no, they’re not jalapeño peppers. Hey! The more you know). Rations at the chain are in full force, to the tune of two measly chilies per order. Management have pulled the peppers from the ketchup station, so no more heating up to your heart’s content. And Subway and Carl’s Jr., who rely on the same vendor, are also facing the same pepper problem.

The shortage is attributed to a California weather issue, with a “combination of bad weather, disease, and poor soil conditions [reducing] the overall cascabella supply as much as 60 percent this year,” according to Munchies.

Customers want their cascabellas, and they want them now. Stores nationwide have even tried offering alternatives, like peperoncino, which was met with far less enthusiasm. The companyposted a memo on its Twitter page stating, “We hope to resume normal operations with chilies when the new crop is ready, hopefully sometime in July.”

 

Watermelon-Rind Pickles Recipe

By Dede Ryan   –   Mother Earth News

This is a terrific dessert on a warm night, a delicious accompaniment to grilled food, or a snack right out of the fridge. And, the best part is that it’s made from something you usually throw away.

These pickles come from a 1996 copy of Better Homes and Gardens Canning & Preserving recipes. I’ve experimented with variations over the years, but this is the best!

Ingredients:

• 4 1/2 pounds watermelon rind (enough to make 9 cups)
• 6 cups water
• 1/3 cup pickling salt
• 3 1/2 cups sugar
• 1 1/2 cups white vinegar
• 1 1/2 cups water
• 15 inches cinnamon sticks
• 2 teaspoons whole cloves

Directions:

1. The most time consuming task is cutting the rind into 1-inch cubes. I like to cut the beast into quarters, then into strips, then use a vegetable peeler to remove the tough green skin. Be sure all the pink fruit is off the rind so your brine stays clear.

2. Cut into cubes to measure 9 cups, place in a large bowl. Combine the 6 cups water and pickling salt and pour over the rind. Cover and let stand overnight.

3. Pour the rind into a colander in the sink and rinse with cold running water. Place in a large pan and cover with cold water. Heat to boiling and reduce to simmer. Cover and simmer for about 20 minutes until the rind is tender. You’ll watch it turn to a rich color. Drain.

4. At the same time, in a separate large pan, combine the sugar, vinegar, and 1 1/2 cups water. I make a cheesecloth bag of the cinnamon and cloves and submerge it in the liquid. Heat to boiling, reduce heat and boil gently, uncovered for about 10 minutes. Them remove the delightful-smelling spice bag. Add the watermelon rind and return to boiling. Cover and boil gently until rind is translucent, about 30 minutes.

5. Pack rind and syrup into hot, clean half-pint canning jars, leaving 1/2-inch headspace. Remove air bubbles by running a sterilized knife around the product. Process filled jars in a boiling-water bath for about 10 minutes, adding minutes, depending on your elevation (actually, your geographic elevation — if you are standing on a chair, it doesn’t matter). Lift jars onto a cooling rack and wait for the satisfying “ping” as each jar seals.

This recipe makes 6 half-pints.The taste and texture are quite extraordinary. Enjoy!

What’s the Big Dill? 5 reasons why you should be drinking pickle juice

BY ABBY REISNER   –   Tasting Table

Now that pickle juice is available in a can, you don’t have to beat around the bush with actual pickles—get right to the good stuff. Everyone seems to love pickle juice, and understandably so. There are many uses out there for pickle juice that go way beyond the jar: You can cook with it, hydrate with it or even scrub pots with it.

Some people swear it helps heartburn, or even soothes sunburned skin—we tried that with little to no success, unless you consider walking around smelling like a deli all day a plus—but there are alt uses that do actually work. Here are five tried-and-true ways pickle juice can do more than just perk up salad dressing, and why it’s so good for you.

① It’s the ultimate hangover helper. Picklebacks actually do more than provide a weird, briny buzz. The salt and water in pickle juice not only helperase the woes of the previous night, but they also help take preventive action. Pregame with a virgin shot to help stock your body with the goods it needs before the dehydrating powers of alcohol swoop in.

② It helps before a workout. The high salt levels in pickle juice make it an A+ electrolyte source, rendering expensive (and sugary) sports drinks unnecessary. Hydrate ahead of time with the stuff, and then make gains with the peace that you’re doing right by your muscles.

③ . . . Or after. Don’t put your sore legs through one more session of post-run ice-bath hell. Pickle juice is shown to help relieve workout-induced crampsnearly instantly, thanks to the vinegar and sodium. Those will also help you stock back up on everything you sweated out in spin class.

④ It gives bruises a beating. Adding vitamin C to your diet can help strengthen your blood vessels and repair damage, meaning it’s useful in preventing bruising. Tae kwon do fighters have been known to up their intake of the vitamin C-containing juice before a match to cut down on the blue-black aftermath.

⑤ It can cause a meltdown. Future snowstorms have nothing on dill pickles. Give pesky ice patches the finger by drizzling the salty juice over them. Don’t believe us? Put ice in a cup, pour brine over top and prepare to be wowed as the ice melts instantly.

The Secret To Making Deliciously Crisp Homemade Pickles

Alan Henry , Gawker Media

There’s nothing like a crisp, delicious, fresh pickle, whether you prefer yours kosher, half-sour, or sweet. But making sure yours are crisp and crunchy starts with the cucumber-a crisp pickle demands a crisp cucumber, and nothing less will do. Here’s how to make sure you get the best ones.

First, our friends at Old World Garden Farms notes that timing is everything, especially if you’re growing your own cucumbers for pickling:

The best time to pick cucumbers is early in the morning (before 9 a.m.) but not before the morning dew is primarily gone off the plant.

The time of day you pick your vegetables affects the taste and storing quality of the crop. Vegetables harvested in the morning generally are sweeter, crisper and juicier than those picked at other times. This is because as they rest in the garden overnight, vegetables tend to replenish the moisture lost during the day. Picking mid-day will result in soft cucumbers that make soft pickles.

Second, they also note that you should cut off the blossom end as soon as you can-it produces an enzyme that will speed the softening process once it’s been picked. If you’re picking your own, you can tell the blossom end because it’s the one without the stem attached. If you’re at the farmer’s market or grocery store, look for the end with the rough, bumpy dot-not the smooth, indented one-and you’ll know which end to cut off first.

Of course, you should also make sure you have the right kind of cucumbers for your pickles. They explain the difference between salad and pickling varieties:

When it comes to making pickles, there is a big difference between pickling cucumbers and salad cucumbers. First of all, most pickling cucumbers are shorter and thinner than the salad variety. They have a small seed core and typically have a thick and bumpy skin texture. They tend to be more crisp, and therefore, when used correctly, make for crispy pickles.

Beyond this, make sure you use good pickling spices (and post linked below will show you how) and that you don’t over-process your new pickles. For more explanation on any of these-and a great step-by-step-hit the link below.

Jalapeño Popper Grilled Cheese Sandwich

Ingredients:
    • 2 jalapeno peppers, cut in half lengthwise and seeded
    • 2 slices sour dough bread
    • 1 tablespoon butter, room temperature
    • 2 tablespoons cream cheese, room temperature
    • 1/2 cup jack and cheddar cheese, shredded
    • 1 tablespoon tortilla chips, crumbled
Directions:
  1. Place the peppers on a baking sheet with the cut side facing down.
  2. Place the baking sheet on the top shelf in the oven and broil until the outer layer of the skin has blackened, about 8-14 minutes.
  3. Place the peppers in a zip-lock bag or other sealable container, seal and let them cool until you can handle them, about 20 minutes.
  4. Remove the skins from the peppers. The skins should easily “pinch” off.
  5. Butter the outside of each slice of bread and spread the cream cheese on the inside. Sprinkle half of the cheese on the cream cheese of one slice of bread, top with the jalapenos, crumbled tortilla chips, the remaining cheese and finally the other slice of bread.
  6. Heat a non-stick pan over medium heat.
  7. Add the sandwich and grill until golden brown and the cheese has melted, about 2-4 minutes per side.
About this Recipe:

Source – http://www.closetcooking.com/2011/04/jalapeno-popper-grilled-cheese-sandwich.html

Why In-N-Out Is Running Out of Those Little Yellow Peppers You Love

BY RICHARD PARKS   –   MUNCHIES

This month, many of California’s most popular chain restaurants are facing an unprecedented shortage of a beloved tiny, bright yellow pickled pepper.

The sudden scarcity of cascabella peppers has customers complaining, restaurants scrambling for alternatives, and suppliers’ business suffering. All are waiting for a healthy new crop to arrive and normalize the shortage, which started taking hold as far back as November.

A reported combination of bad weather, disease, and poor soil conditions reduced the overall cascabella supply as much as 60 percent this year, making the shortage the greatest in industry history. The list of restaurants currently running low or completely out of the chilies includes In-N-Out Burger, Carl’s Jr., and Zankou Chicken.

“Clients are very, very unhappy,” said Dottie Munoz, of A-1 Eastern, an LA cascabella supplier.

Munoz estimated A-1 is meeting just 50 percent of client demand for cascabellas, which account for nearly half the company’s business. A broker representing cascabella farmers has hiked the price of the chilies by a factor of two, she said. This week, supplies were totally depleted.

“It’s been a very big struggle for us.”

Robert Walker, owner of El Pato, which sends cascabellas to Carl’s Jr., said his company was able to meet its clients’ needs, but its supply is “greatly reduced”—and closely guarded from other restaurants desperately seeking a solution to the shortage.

“We get a call from somebody who said, ‘We know you have chile,’” Walker said, “and the answer is, ‘Get in line.’”

Cascabellas look like jalapeños but are smaller, tighter, and have a bright yellow color, like a reflective roadside construction jacket. Picked by hand, the peppers are brined in salt and water for a period of weeks and then finished with vinegar and yellow food dye. Tart, crisp, and scoring between 1,500 and 4,000 on the Scoville scale, cascabellas are often misidentified as banana peppers, pepperoncini, or Hungarian wax peppers.

“There’s a lot of confusion about this pepper,” said Chris Snider of Tito’s Texas, which supplied cascabellas to In-N-Out during its expansion into Texas.

The USDA does not keep data on cascabella production, but it’s clear the love affair with the chile is a story based in the Golden State.

Cascabellas came into vogue relatively recently here, in the last 15 to 20 years, when the bulk of the labor-intensive crop production moved from the US to northern Mexico. Restaurants started offering the chilies as a free condiment off the menu, with demand increasing over time. Along with larger regional chains like In-N-Out, Carl’s Jr., and Zankou Chicken, local LA eateries like Tommy’s, Carney’s, and The Oinkster picked up on the trend, adding a small container of cascabellas to ketchup stations or including two or three in a soufflé cup along with every order.

For many Californians, a cascabella or two on the side is now synonymous with the experience of eating their favorite meal.

“If they don’t get a chile with their hamburger, they don’t want their hamburger,” Munoz said.

Some restaurants have offered cascabella alternatives during the shortage, with little reported success. When his distributor ran out, Chris Stewart, general manager of the third-wave burger shackBurgerlords in LA’s Chinatown, said he tried substituting sliced pepperoncinis, which the clientele roundly rejected.

“They looked at me like I was offering rat poison,” Stewart said.

The shortage has even affected In-N-Out and its famous secret menu. The company circulated a memo to its California stores instructing employees to pull cascabellas from ketchup stations and provide just “one soufflé cup (2 whole chilies) per request,” while supplies last.

“Should your store be completely out of whole chilies please apologize to our customer and let them know that due to an industry wide shortage we are unable to provide chilies on the side at this time,” according to the memo.

Customers have reported many In-N-Out locations are completely out of cascabellas. An employee at an In-N-Out in Studio City said her location was receiving just four gallons of peppers every two days, often running out before the end of the second day, when the complaints start to roll in.

“People go crazy for those peppers,” she said.

Some cascabellas at In-N-Out in recent weeks have had a dark orange or red color, signs of a stressed chile plant, or oxidation, possibly indicating a rushed preserving process or the use of “overripe” chilies that otherwise would be discarded during harvest. Speaking on the condition of anonymity, one industry insider called In-N-Out “desperate” for cascabellas and guessed the scant bright yellow peppers still available in stores might be sourced from expensive retail bottles.

“We hope to have this resolved soon,” an In-N-Out vice president said. “We are also searching for a suitable alternative.”

The next cascabella harvest is reportedly underway. Farms planted more cascabellas than usual this year in hopes of making up for the scarcity. With time for harvesting, preserving, and shipping, observers believe the shortage could start to normalize as soon as some time in July.

Until then, suppliers and restaurants will continue to look for ways to make up for the unprecedented shortage.

“We’re taking whatever we can get,” Munoz said.

TOPICS: Burgerlords, Burgers, Cascabella peppers, hot peppers, in n out burger, In-N-Out, peppers, shortage,Southern California

McDonald’s Japan debuts three new ingredients, limited-time burgers in new “hidden” campaign

   –   RocketNews24

Can you guess the three new toppings to be added to menu staples like the Teriyaki McBurger, Chicken Filet, and Double Cheeseburger?

McDonald’s Japan is pulling out all the tricks in the book to boost sales, from introducing limited-time special menu items to giving away an 18-karat gold chicken McNugget. In its most recently announced campaign, the chain will introduce three all-new burger toppings, each of them for the first time ever in McDonald’s Japan history. Can you spot the three new additions in the picture below?

f you guessed jalapeños, cream cheese sauce, and smoked bacon, then you can either read Japanese or scan McDonald’s Japan’s website on a regular basis! The new toppings can be added to any of the standard menu items for an additional 40 yen (US$0.37) each.

▼ This ad reveals that the jalapeños are sourced from Turkey and the pork for the bacon from Denmark.

4

The new ingredients are being billed as part of a “hidden” campaign in which you can customize any of McDonald’s Japan’s standard burger items with up to three toppings for a total of 285 possible “hidden” combinations — we guess they’re hoping we’ll think we gotta try ’em all?

In addition, McDonald’s Japan has chosen the three particular combinations listed below to highlight at all participating locations:

1. Teriyaki McBurger with sliced jalapeños (350 yen [US$2.34] alone or 650 yen as part of a medium set)

1

2. Chicken Filet with a thick cream cheese sauce (380 yen alone or 680 yen as part of a medium set)

2

3. Double Cheeseburger with savory smoked bacon (380 yen alone or 680 yen as part of a medium set)

3

The three new ingredients and burger combinations are slated to be added to the menu beginning on June 15 and will be available until an unspecified day early in July. Get your spicy, creamy, and savory fixes while you can!

Source: Narinari 
Images: McDonald’s Japan 

Make the Ideal Burger Pickle in 2 Minutes Flat

by    –   Eater.com

Home cooking can seem daunting, but with a resourceful cheerleader in your corner, the kitchen is nothing to fear. Introducing You Can Do This!, a brand new video series from Eaterwhere food tips-and-tricks guru Clifford Endo shares the secrets behind some of his favorite kitchen projects. Today, Endo speeds up the fermenting process with the help of a whipped cream canister, which yields perfectly briny pickles in a flash. Watch the video above for a visual how-to, and follow along with the recipe below.

Flash Pickles

1 cup rice vinegar
½ cup mirin
1 tablespoon sugar
1 tablespoon black pepper corn
1 tablespoon coriander seed
1 tablespoon salt
1 bay leaf
2 quarter inch slices ginger
2 thin slices jalapeno
1 cucumber

Special equipment: whipped cream canister, 2 cartridges NO2, mandolin

In a small saucepot combine all of the pickling liquid ingredient and bring to a boil. Once the liquid has reached a boil strain in to a bowl. Then place bowl in to a larger bowl filled with ice to cool down the liquid.

Cut a whole cucumber in the hamburger bun lengths 3–4 inches. Slice or run cucumber through a mandolin making ¼ inch planks stopping when you reach the inner seeds. Then rotate and continue on the opposite side stopping when you reach the seeds. Repeat with the remaining two sides.

When your pickling liquid is cool pour in to your whip cream canister not going past the fill line. Then add your planks in to the canister with the liquid and screw the top on tightly.

Charge you canister with one of the NO2 cartridges. After the gas stops slightly agitate the pickles by rolling them around the inside of the canister for about a 30–1 minute. Then gas the canister again with NO2. If you are using the small versions, one cartridge is enough. Briefly agitate again and then lay the canister down on its side for two minutes

Place a cup over the nozzle to contain any liquid that might come out. Then release the gas with the canister facing upward. This is to release just the gas and not the liquid inside. When gas is fully released unscrew the lid and dump contents in to a bowl. Pull the pickles out of the liquid and place on top of your burger and have that oh shit, this is actually pretty good moment.

Western Burgers

The Western Burger includes jalapeños, onions and cilantro — and no bun.

Makes 4 servings

1 pound ground beef (93 percent lean or leaner)

1 jalapeño, seeded, chopped

2 teaspoons chopped onion

2 teaspoons finely chopped fresh cilantro

1/8 teaspoon salt

1/8 teaspoon ground black pepper

4 romaine or iceberg lettuce leaves

1 tomato, sliced

1 avocado, sliced

1 onion, thinly sliced

Instructions: Combine ground beef, jalapeño, onion, cilantro, salt and black pepper in large bowl, mixing lightly but thoroughly. Lightly shape into four ½-inch thick patties.

Place patties on grid over medium, ash-covered coals. Grill, covered, 8 to 10 minutes (over medium heat on preheated gas grill, covered, 7 to 9 minutes) until instant-read thermometer inserted horizontally into center registers 160 degrees, turning occasionally.

Place each burger on lettuce leaf. Evenly top with tomato, avocado and onion slices. Wrap lettuce leaves around burgers.

Per serving: 254 calories, 15 g fat, 75mg cholesterol, 137 mg sodium; 8 g carbohydrate; 4.8 g fiber; 24 g protein.

From Texas Beef Council

Spice route to the past

Niche ‘heirloom’ pickles made and preserved using age-old methods are gradually finding space for themselves on store shelves and in our homes, discovers SUBHA J RAO

Think pickles and you’re immediately transported to childhood. When summers meant mothers, aunts and grandmothers working their way through mounds of cut mangoes, measuring out spices, salt and freshly-pressed gingelly oil. Finally, the spicy mix would go into huge, waist-high jars, be covered with a cloth, and tied with a piece of string. The pickle jars were off bounds for most; only the chosen lady of the house would do the honours every day — air out the mix, give it a quick stir with a dry ladle, and re-seal the jars till the contents inside were ready for consumption.

Once we left home, moved cities and took on new culinary influences, relishes and salsas took on new meaning and maagali kizhangu and maainji oorugai became things restricted to a few hundred households.

Now, traditional pickles and thokkus are making a comeback, and how!

Spice Route Gourmet

Express Avenue and Ampa Skywalk

USP: Drumstick pickles, maagali kizhangu

The aroma of a spice mix handed down generations hits you the minute you walk into Spice Route Gourmet inside Express Avenue and Ampa Skywalk malls. You automatically veer towards the source — four aromatic bowls bearing pickles usually never seen outside of a peengan jaadi (porcelain jar) in a home. There’s tender drumstick enveloped in a fragrant masala, amla dusted with spices and left to soak in gingelly oil, a glistening green gongura, and lemon pickle made according to a hand-me-down recipe.

The pickles are usually rationed out, because the demand is high, but the company refrains from mass production.

Founder Kannan Doss fondly remembers a visit to Salem, when he got to sample a lady’s delicious cooking. The meal included a memorable pickle. When he started Spice Route Gourmet, she was roped in to make traditional but rarely-seen pickles. The drumstick pickle and maagali kizhangu are made by her using quality ingredients sourced by Kannan.

“The pickles are replaced every seven days. Usually, they are all sold out by then. We make them in batches of 50 kg for distribution among our outlets, and, sometimes, have to stop people from bulk purchases,” he smiles.

A Telugu lady from Chennai makes maavadu in the Andhra style. “During pickling, she does not allow anyone to enter the room. Luckily, we’ve managed to find these precious people,” he says.

Also popular in their store are the curry leaf pickle and the tomato thokku that follows Kannan’s wife’s recipe. Desi tomatoes are simmered for hours; the masala features Kashmiri and Byadgi chillies, for flavour and colour, and a dash of jaggery cuts through the tartness. As for gongura, it follows the style of Kannan’s grandmother. “She would ferment it for three-four months in the loft (paran). We’d yearn to get a spoonful.”

The store also does a mean organic brinjal pickle, inspired by the ennai kathirikkai.

Balmaadi Estate

Select organic stores

USP: Narthangai, avakkai

Unnamalai Thiagarajan speaks about her friend Manju with fondness. It was she who gave her the recipe for avakkai. Today, the pickles from Balmaadi Estate, made just once a year, are known for their neat flavours. The ingredient list comprises mostly organic fare and no stabilisers or preservatives. The stars, of course, are the Rumani mangoes and narthangais that are plucked from Unnamalai’s garden in Alwarpet. “I started doing this 10 years ago; it was just an attempt to share with others what I do for my family,” says Unnamalai, 56. Last year, she sold 350 small bottles of avakkai and 300 of naarthangai.

Before the summer showers, the fruits are plucked and dropped into waiting nets or gunny bags, before being washed and wiped. The next day, Unnamalai and her domestic help sit around a large sheet and prepare the mango. The men help chop the mangoes, seed intact, in one stroke after placing them on a teak block, while the women ready the masalas. All come together in a huge enamel vessel. By evening, the pickle is ready to be stored in large jars. They are repackaged into smaller bottles once orders come in.

Jyo’s Pickles

Specialty food stores

USP: Coriander and ginger pickles, avakkai

You may have seen the delightfully packaged Jyo’s Pickles in some specialty food stores. The glass bottles are covered with a cloth and tied with a string. “My mom’s idea,” smiles Sweta Garapati, co-founder.

Sweta has fond memories of the pickle-making ritual at her grandmother’s home in Ayodhyapatnam near Vijayawada. Even today, their pickles are made and packaged there.

“It’s a way to ensure the taste stays the same and also provide employment to the women in the village,” says Sweta. “The wives of marginal farmers don’t have much to do when there is no work in the fields. We employ them to clean the ingredients and take care of packaging. My grandmother still makes the pickles,” she says.

The brand makes about 500 small bottles a month, and the range comprises mango, tomato, red chilli, gongura, coriander, and the like. There are no preservatives and they are packed in glass bottles. Their pickles, especially ginger and coriander, work beautifully as spreads and in sandwiches. At the Old Madras Baking Company, the grilled chicken sandwich uses ginger pickle and the three-cheese melt has a liberal dollop of coriander, says Kamalika Krishmy, franchise owner, Egmore.

Jyo’s was also created to cater to friendly demands from friends, and Sweta says they stick to seasonal pickles. Gongura and red chillies, for instance, are made in batches whenever there’s a fresh patch ready for harvest. “Coriander is a common pickle in our house, and only after we starting bottling it did we realise that it’s rarely retailed,” she says.

Jyo’s sources raw materials directly from farmers, and claims it doesn’t add anything artificial. From June, they hope to retail out of Hyderabad too. “What’s most important is that people appreciate the taste; it’s in keeping with the current trend of eating clean and going back to the basics.”

Moturi’s

Available on orders and at Crimson Chakra

USP: Avakkai pickle

For generations, women in the Moturi family, which runs Crimson Chakra, have been making avakkai pickle in their ancestral home at Aargullu near Gudiwada. The mangoes are sourced locally or from their own farm, and the pickle making was a celebratory affair. Women in the village would gather, clean the ingredients that went into the much-celebrated pickle, and step back. The matriarch of the family would do the final mixing. The resulting delicacy, manna to many, would be parcelled off to family far and wide, and some lucky friends as well.

It was these friends who craved more that gave the idea for Moturi’s the brand. “One day, at the dining table, over a five-minute conversation, Moturi’s was born,” says Ashmita Boopathy Moturi.

The pickles are made in Chennai, with most of the mangoes coming from the trees at Crimson Chakra, and a few from a trusted seller in Mylapore. Next up, they plan to launch ginger and cauliflower pickles.

“My mother-in-law Lakshmi makes the pickles, a deeply meditative process for her. The mixing is always done near a tulsi plant, and she meditates once it’s made, because it is a gift from Nature, and the good vibes must be passed on to the end-user,” says Ashmita, who helps market the brand. Lakshmi’s daughter Indrajala handles the packaging and designing.

Even if there is demand, the Moturis plan to keep their enterprise small. “I’m a medical engineer and I believe that food is a powerful language the body understands. As important as the food, is the manner in which it is prepared and the motive behind it. Niche heirloom pickles are more flavourful and you cannot discount the fact that they’ve been made by someone who loves doing so,” says Ashmita.

The first batch of 150 bottles of 500 gm (Rs. 225) each has almost been sold out. They sent out a pack to Bangalore, and some friends carried them abroad as well. “People like the fact that we use virgin gingelly oil and locally sourced ingredients. Our chillies come from Gudiwada, where they are specially ground in a chakki,” says Ashmita.

Once the initial buzz subsides, Ashmita and Indrajala have their work lined up — learning to make pickles from Lakshmi.

Terra Earth Food Store

Neelangarai, Abhiramapuram

USP: Green pepper, kadaranga pickles

It’s difficult to not get caught up in Meera Maran’s enthusiasm as she explains Terra’s approach to pickle making. They began serving pickles along with millet-based dishes, and before they knew it, there was great demand. Now, Terra makes traditional pickles such as maainji, green pepper, kadaranga… “I won’t even call them specialty pickles; they are simple things that are usually found only at home,” says Meera, founder. But, they do add a little twist, because at Terra, ‘variation is our theme’, she laughs. So, an infusion of jaggery reduces the bitterness of kadaranga. “With pickles, you need to stick to a traditional taste palate; pickles trigger nostalgia,” adds Meera, whose team also makes cauliflower and carrot pickles, and a luscious keerai pickle using arakeerai or sivappu keerai. All the pickles use Himalayan salts, and organic, cold-pressed oils, and, sometimes, organic unfiltered apple cider vinegar.

Meera says their pickles work as spreads too, and go well with millet sevai or their upma bread sandwich. The gongura pickles originate from the patch of green at Terra. “Everything is made in a limited quantity. We don’t want to go bulk.”

Prices range from Rs. 90 for a 100-gm bottle of maainji to Rs. 290 for a 300-gram bottle of green pepper pickle.