What is it and what do I do with it?

CucumberCucumber is a member of the Cucurbita family along with melons, gourds, and squashes. There are a wide variety of cucumbers out there, but a question that has come up at recent pick ups is the difference between “regular” cucumbers and pickling cucumbers. There are a host of  ideas out there about the differences, but as I can best surmise there a four key differences that are important for pickling:

  1. Less moisture
  2. Skin is milder in flavor, less bitter
  3. Seeds are smaller and fewer
  4. Smaller in size

Electrolytes, antioxidants, and have 13% of Infusionthe RDA for Vitamin K.  There is no shortage of options for what to do with these items including fresh in salads, cold soups, juicing, pickling, and infusions whether it be in water or vodka. My friend  Gloria is an alcohol infusion mixologist and while here is Portland I had the honor of straining and sampling some cucumber, which takes just three days. I also tried cherry and tea infusions as well. Sublime.

Storage

This gets tricky.  I will be creating a separate post updating new information about storage after I found some interesting information from a UC Davis study. They suggest cucumber be stored on the counter. If refrigerated, it should only be for a few days.Here is the link to the blog page More Respect for the Yield

Preparation

There is not much to offer here as they are so commonly used.  The main point is to eat the skins if the bitterness is tolerable as with so many fruits and vegetables there is a lot of nutritional value and flavor.

Recipes

[catlist name=”Recipes” tags=”cucumbers” orderby=title order=date numberposts=-1]

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