iconLog In  |  Register

The art of Giardiniera

There were so many things I wished that I had paid more attention to when I was growing up. I always thought that there would be plenty of time to learn how to make noodles and pie crust from scratch, as well as grape jelly that sparkled like amethyst. Then the person that I counted on to teach me these things was gone.

Like many families, our food traditions weren't always written down. Those that were, were often just lists of ingredients with no instructions. They offered no more help than last week's grocery list.

Last month when doctors thought my aunt had Alzheimer's, I wanted to kick myself all over again. Why didn't I spend more time learning about her, my mom, and the food they used to make together?

Thankfully, she does not have Alzheimer's and there is still time to learn these things, including how to make the giardiniera that she and my mom would spend hours cutting vegetables for and canning at the end of the season.

Giardiniera varies tremendously depending upon whether you are in Italy or Chicago. The Italian version contains onions, celery, carrots, cauliflower, and sometimes zucchini pickled in vinegar. It is used as an antipasto or eaten with salads. In Chicago, it is a condiment that is used to top sandwiches, usually "Italian" beef. The Chicago version also uses carrots, cauliflower, and celery, sometimes olives, but most notably it contains peppers. The peppers can be sweet bells, or hotter varieties like serranos, spicy cherry peppers, or even habaneros. Unlike the Italian version, the vegetables in Chicago giardiniera are marinated in olive oil or vegetable oil, or a combination of the two.

I love both types, but my mother and her sister always made the Italian version, albeit with the spicy peppers they fell in love with when they lived in Chicago in their teens.

There is beautiful cauliflower from Moore Family Farm at the market right now, sweet carrots from Blue Moon Farm, and celery from Claybank Farm. For those who dare, there also are plenty of hot peppers to be had. These directions make six pints. But, you can scale the recipe down if you just want a single jar for your fridge. Be sure to let the vegetables marinate in the jar for three weeks so that you get the full flavor.

However, if your family ate Chicago giardiniera, you'll probably want to check out this recipe instead.

Giardiniera

  • 2 celery stalks, cut crosswise into 3/4-inch lengths
  • 1 t kosher salt
  • 1 to 1 ½ pounds cauliflower, cut into small florets
  • 1 to 2 carrots, peeled and cut into 3/16-inch thick rounds
  • 1 cup peeled whole small onions, aka cocktail onions
  • 1/2 pound Italian whole sweet or hot cherry peppers, left whole but slit twice lengthwise (use a milder variety of jalapeno if you can't find these)
  • 12 garlic cloves
  • Oregano sprigs (optional)
  • 4 t kosher salt
  • 2 3/4 cups white vinegar (5% acidity)
  • 2 1/2 cups water

Wash the vegetables. Sprinkle celery with 1 teaspoon of the salt and allow to stand 1 to 2 hours to help set color and firm. Drain. Combine celery with remaining vegetables in a large bowl. Add 2 garlic cloves to each of six, sterile pint jars. Pack the jars with the vegetables, adding an oregano sprig to each jar if desired. Shake the jars to settle the vegetables.

In a nonreactive saucepan, bring vinegar, water and 4 teaspoons of salt to a boil, making sure that the salt is dissolved. Pour the hot brine over the vegetables, leaving 1/2-inch space at the top of the jar. Wipe jar rims. Seal with sterile lids and rings. Place sealed jars in a boiling water bath for 20 minutes making sure that water level is above lids.

Remove jars from water bath and allow them to cool. Refrigerate any jars that do not seal. Store sealed jars in a cool, dark place for at least three weeks.

Add A Comment

A note about our commenting policy.


Comment
  1.  captcha arrow

Most Recent Food Comments

emma reaux avatar

I joined on 09-09-09 after living here over a year, and having to listen to my dad tell me how his best friend is, like, #27 or something crazy like that, and how said friend never lived further than 50 feet from the Illini Inn while going…

{username}

Looks like you are also all members of the killer sideburns club.

Joel Gillespie avatar

@Annie: Yeah, my bad. That was the best part! Drinking + memory exercises = fun @Rob: According to Ask the English Teacher, “My dictionary says ‘drunk’ is an archaic past tense of ‘drink.‘“ We’re all about the new grammar around here.

Rob McColley avatar

“more beer is drank”   Awesome. Way to go “editors.“

Annie Weisner avatar

You left out the best part—you have to REMEMBER your number after the beer chugging!     Yeah, I’m a member.

{username}

Great article, man. Like you, I didn’t really know Daniel all that well, but I felt the impact of his death. I too was inspired by him and it pleases me to see that he continues to live on in the spirit of the community.

Justine Fein-Bursoni avatar

Thanks you guys…I love living in a community that can connect, share, and create through food. It’s inspiring…

{username}

<div> A beautiful recap of the evening and thank you for sharing why you find what the Fund is doing is inspiring. I haven’t been able to write too much about my feelings about the community’s loss of Dan yet either, but Dan has also inspired me…

{username}

Seth and Justine, thanks so much!  Through your writing and your photos, everyone can get at least a taste of what was served up Sunday night.  Dan would very much have liked that! As you say, our community is very much “fertile ground,“ and Dan had such…

{username}

That is perhaps the best article you have ever written… a love letter to Champaign-Urbana and the people who call it home.

Most Recent Comments

{username}

Illinois has simply had no luck at all in these Mizzou games. None. I think maybe we’re do for a couple of bounces to go our way. If we get one or two (or sever or eight) breaks, I think it’s a win. 

Dan Schreiber avatar

Jason, Savoy could easily join the CPL tax district, which is probably closer to most Savoy residents than the Tolono library is.  But my impression is that Savoy residents as a whole don’t want to pay the cost of the CPL (Tolono’s library taxes are cheaper), even…

{username}

Sorry, but I am lagging behind on updates to the map. Also, some construction projects were delayed from their original start date. On a more positive note, I am putting together a map of haunted houses in Central Illinois. I have a few plotted already, and I…

{username}

I’ve never gotten the privilege of all the services CPL cardholders get.  I just want to be able to go out of my way to drive to the CPL to check out books, pay fines, maybe buy some coffee, and enjoy the library.  None of those activities…

{username}

These days, there is more to using a library than checking out books. At one time, paying into the Lincoln Trails system probably would cover the expenses incurred by other libraries in the system. Now, with Internet, videos, coffee shops, wireless Internet hubs, etc., I suspect the…

{username}

(speaking as a Savoy resident)  By paying taxes to support a member of the LTLS, we are paying our “fair share” to use any LTLS library—Tolono, Champaign, Urbana, etc.  This is how library systems work.  The 6% of CPL’s circulation represented by Tolono users is NOT significant…

Rob McColley avatar

I read Timbo’s argument. I think the key word is “speculating.“

{username}

I would be interested to hear more about the “word on the street”—how are individual hauling companies fulfilling their promise to recycle?

{username}

Timbo makes a smart, sound argument. Reread it.

emma reaux avatar

I joined on 09-09-09 after living here over a year, and having to listen to my dad tell me how his best friend is, like, #27 or something crazy like that, and how said friend never lived further than 50 feet from the Illini Inn while going…

Dan Schreiber avatar

And, I might add, no one is being prevented from using the Champaign library. They are just being asked to pay their fair share if they are going to use it as their primary library.

Dan Schreiber avatar

The equation is pretty simple here. If you want social services, then pay the taxes required to run those social services. These things only work if everyone puts in their fair share. As a heavy user of the Champaign Library, I say bravo to this new policy.

Timbo avatar

Curtis Orchard is always good for an hour or three, especially if you have rugrats.

Timbo avatar

What is the increased marginal cost of serving a resident of Savoy or Mahomet? I suspect negligible. What is the increased revenue to be realized by this new policy? I suspect very little. Aside from these financial aspects, what are the most probable results from this new…

{username}

Looks like you are also all members of the killer sideburns club.

{username}

Thanks for the article, Ben.  I was not familiar with this band until now and even though I won’t be able to attend the show on Friday they are now on my radar.  A *good* jam band is hard to find, and these folks appear to fill…

{username}

Nice article, love the Dead quote in the beginning. If they can get down here to Central FL I’ll definitely be heading out to the show. Some of my friends have finally stopped wincing when I say “jam band.“ I’ve now tried my best at more descriptive…

Joel Gillespie avatar

@Annie: Yeah, my bad. That was the best part! Drinking + memory exercises = fun @Rob: According to Ask the English Teacher, “My dictionary says ‘drunk’ is an archaic past tense of ‘drink.‘“ We’re all about the new grammar around here.

Tracy Nectoux avatar

Katie, have the residents of Savoy and Tolono thought about having their taxes raised a little to help their public library expand? That’s a possibility for them. And then everybody wins.

Ben Valocchi avatar

good call on that Herring recording, Josh. Love that version of Exit Music….here’s a clip of the Cinco de Mayo show (from about six months prior). As I recall, this Shakedown went on for roughly a half hour, while getting into the Trampled Underfoot jam in the…

Log In



Auto-login on future visits

Forgot your password?