Shop Products
Houzz Logo Print
matthias_lang

Grape leaves

matthias_lang
9 years ago

I'd like to home can grape leaves for making dolmas. Can any one recommend it?
If so, I'd appreciate directions.

Are the newer leaves of spring best, so that I should wait until next year?

Comments (7)

  • malna
    9 years ago

    Linda Ziedrich has a recipe in the Joy of Pickling. She recommends early summer for picking the tender leaves. I can type that recipe out later if you are interested.

  • nancyofnc
    9 years ago

    You can use grape leaves anytime of the year that they are putting out new vines/tendrils, which usually ends at the end of summer. Pick the third and fourth from the tips which are tender and the right size for rolling. Smaller ones are too small and don't have much flavor, larger older ones are chewy tough even when pickled.

    Definitely use Linda Ziedrich's recipe for safe canning. You can also wash, pat dry, and freeze them in gallon Ziplock bags (scattered flat not stacked so they defrost quicker).
    Nancy

  • seysonn
    9 years ago

    You just pickle them like cucumbers. I would use a 50/50 w/v with 1 TBS salt per 2 cups of solution. Grape lives are quite acidic.

  • matthias_lang
    Original Author
    9 years ago

    I've added Joy of Pickling to my wishlist, thank you. And those are helpful harvesting tips, nancedar.

  • skeip
    9 years ago

    Uh ohhhh. I read somewhere all you need is a real strong brine, 1 cup of pickling salt in a gallon of water, blanch and roll the leaves and pack the jars, pour over the hot brine. Lid up and refrigerate. I've kept them like this for a year. Am I risking some horrible disease? The ones I've bought just list a salt and water brine, not a pickling liquid.

    Steve

  • malna
    9 years ago

    Here's the recipe from the Joy of Pickling:

    Preserved Grape Leaves

    Makes 1 pint

    2 teaspoons pickling salt
    1 quart water
    About 30 grape leaves, stemmed
    1 cup water plus 1/4 cup lemon juice
    -Or-
    1-1/4 cups water plus 1/2 teaspoon citric acid

    Bring salt and water to a boil in a large saucepan. Add the leaves and blanch for 30 seconds. Drain.

    Stack leaves in piles of 6 and roll loosely from the side (not the stem end or tip). Pack rolls into a pint jar, folding over the ends if necessary.

    In a small non-reactive saucepan, bring to a boil 1 cup of water and the lemon juice, or the 1-1/4 cups water and the citric acid. Pour the hot liquid over the rolled leaves, leaving 1/2" of headspace. Close the jar with two piece lids and process for 15 minutes in a boiling water bath.

    Can also be covered with a non-reactive cap and stored in the refrigerator.

    Edited to correct the name of the recipe - it's "Preserved" not "Pickled".

    This post was edited by malna on Wed, Aug 27, 14 at 15:25

  • digdirt2
    9 years ago

    Steve - your leaves are fermented rather than pickled. The safety with them comes from the lactic acid created by fermentation. As long as you keep any scum that forms skimmed off they are fine. Once they are fully fermented - the 1 cup/1 gallon is plenty of salt - then you can add the lemon juice or citric acid if you want to can them or just keep them in the fridge but a year may be pushing the limit on quality.

    Dave

Sponsored
Remodel Repair Construction
Average rating: 5 out of 5 stars9 Reviews
Industry Leading General Contractors in Westerville