Giardiniera
Although commonly made with vinegar, this fermented giardiniera recipe is even more delicious and healthy since it is made using simple fermentation techniques. I had been waiting for a few weeks for this giardiniera to ferment fully and when I tasted my first bite, I exclaimed aloud, “oh my God, that’s good!” Whenever I catch myself exclaiming out loud after tasting something new, I know I’m on to something! This Italian giardiniera (or giardiniere as the French call it) carries a tart flavor with a nuance of heat, and a perfect texture nestled nicely in the sweet spot between crisp and tender.
Most giardiniera recipes (some folks mistakenly call it gardinera without the extra “i”) rely on vinegar for flavor and preservation. Fermenting giardiniera in this old-world way is very easy and you’ll find it quite satisfying to make. Compared to other fermented giardinera recipes, this recipe calls for significantly less salt. I have found that when using an airlock such as this, there is much less opportunity for contamination and thus we can do with less salt. You are welcome of course to use up to 3x the salt as some recipes call for but I think you’ll find that this reduced salt is more than sufficient when using an airlock.
Giardiniera
Easy recipe for naturally fermented giardiniera. Delicious.
Ingredients
- 1/2 head Cauliflower cut/broken into smaller florets
- 2 medium Carrots
- 1/2 white Onion or 20 small pearled onions
- 1/2 Jalapeño
- 2 Bell Peppers, colors of your choosing
- 20 whole peppercorns
- 8 cloves garlic
- 1 Tablespoon sea salt
- 1 quart water
Instructions
- Prepare the vegetables - Cut or break off cauliflower pieces into smaller florets. Slice the carrots on an angle into 1/4" thick slices. Cut the half onion into 1/2" wide slices. Remove the seeds from the jalapeño and cut it into ringlets. Cut the bell peppers into long flat slices approximately 1/2" wide. Peel the garlic and slice each clove in half. I'm such a fan of these Shun knives. Pricey but beautiful and so worth it. Their nicest most beautiful knife is this one.
- Dissolve the salt in the water - be certain to use non-chlorinated water.
- Layer the vegetables - place the prepared vegetables, including the garlic and peppercorns, into the fermentation vessel(s). It's nice to use glass for this since it's truly beautiful to view through the glass. This is your chance to get artistic with the layering of the ingredients if you like. For this recipe, I used a 1/2 gallon Mason Jar. If you want to double the recipe, use two jars or combine into a fermentation crock. Although I often use a 1 gallon jar for many of my ferments, this giardiniera puts off a little more scent during the fermentation process so best to use a fermentation vessel that has some sort of airlock to keep the scent at bay.
- Add salt water - Pour enough water in to reach to the top of the veggies. No need to fully submerge as the vegetables will begin to release some of their own liquid during the fermentation process and the water will eventually more than amply cover the veggies.
- Place airlock on - I made two separate batches in experimenting with this recipe and used two different airlocks. There are many fine airlocks available. I've been enjoying this airlock lately.
- Wait impatiently! for a few weeks while the fermentation takes place and enjoy.
Nutrition Information:
Serving Size: 1/4 cupAmount Per Serving: Calories: 54.23Total Fat: 0.4gSaturated Fat: 0.12gSodium: 900.97mgCarbohydrates: 11.61gFiber: 3.26gSugar: 4.77gProtein: 2.44g
Nutrition information relies on third party software and isn't guaranteed to be perfectly accurate
Other Articles of Interest
Why Everyone Should Ferment with an Airlock
Measuring and Using Salt in Fermenting
What Equipment and Supplies Do I Need for Fermenting?
pH Corner
For those of you who like to check the pH of your ferments as they go forward, this ferment started at a pH of about 6.75 and after three weeks had reduced to 3.5 which explains it’s nice tart flavor. For you more techie/scientific types who may want to measure the pH of your ferments, I can recommend this pH tester.
Serving Suggestions
When you make this giardiniera recipe, you’ll have a delicious condiment with many uses. Especially delicious when served on eggs, with sausage, on bruschetta or diced up in your tuna or potato salad. Where I grew up in Chicago, one would often find a Chicago-style giardiniera being offered as a condiment for Italian Beef sandwiches. In many ways that giardiniera of my youth is similar to this. If you are looking for a little more heat, simply toss in an extra sliced-up jalapeño.
Buon Appetito!
I love the sound of this recipe, I definitely will make it; wonder how it would be with some Broccoli mixed in?
If you try, let us know. I imagine green beans would work well too.
You mention to let the giardiniera ferment for a few weeks. In your experience, is three weeks optimal for flavour or does it need more time? I look forward to making this. Another healthy snack in my fridge….
Three weeks seems about right for this one. It’s plenty tart in that time which to me is what we’re striving for taste-wise. I’m sure you could go longer. In fact, I’m running another batch which I plan to let go for 6 weeks just to test a longer ferment.
Thanks! I will start with 3 weeks and will experiment after that….
This has always been one of my favorite treats!! Starting a new batch of red cabbage and beets today, this will be right along side of it!! Thanks!!!
You used 1/2 gallon jar, but I want to make in quart suze jars. Just use 1/2 the recipe per quart? thanks
Harry
Just put in as much as you can get to fit in the jar. I found about 2 to 2 1/2 pounds of ingredients worked for a 1/2 gallon container so approx a 1 to 1 1/4 pounds of ingredients is probably about right for a quart. So yes, halve the ingredients for a quart. Good luck!
Do you refrigerate while fermenting or just shelf it?
I ferment at room temperature, which in my case is roughly in the 70 degree farenheit range. I then refrigerate once the taste is around where I want it to be.
I have a question, first time using only salt, have used whey in all my other projects. There is a rim of white all around the top right at the top of the liquid, is this normal?Is it just a salt thing? I put this up on the 19th and it just showed up a couple days ago.
It is very likely kahm yeast that is growing on top of your ferment. Along with the bacteria needed for fermentation, the vegetables we use also often are home to natural yeasts. That yeast sometimes can take hold in a ferment as well.
I can’t make any guarantees as to food safety, especially at a distance, but when ferments go bad, it’s usually because a mold has set in and that often gets fuzzy and can have an unpleasant odor. Kahm yeast is generally harmless in consumption, but you need to make your own decisions as to what is good or harmful for your own body.
I’ve been running further experiments with the giardiniera and ended up with a kahm yeast growing on one of mine as well.
To remove kahm yeast, i generally just place a paper towel atop the film and let friction and absorption pick up most of it. I then swipe around the edges inside the vessel with another paper towel to remove more of the yeast.
I made mine just short of two weeks ago and also have the white film at the top of the liquid. I also seem to have a white sediment in the bottom of the one gallon glass container I am using. I have sampled a few pieces of the vegetables, and they seem fine: getting crunchy and tart. Is it likely this same kahm yeast that I am seeing at the bottom? Do I need to worry about it?
I replied to a comment on this same recipe not too long ago which referenced the same issue. I too had some Kahm yeast on another batch of giardinera. I don’t know about what is at the bottom of your ferment. I’ve only seem Kahm yeast on the surface. Use your taste and instincts on this. Food safety is always best left to the individual as I can’t really assess safety from a distance. Good luck!
Wow, that sounds so much tastier being fermented! Just found your site, and I am loving all the recipes! Definitely going to try one… or twenty.
Am I crazy to double this recipe? I have a nice 1 gallon jar I picked up at my local international market, and I would like to make a big batch of the giardiniera. Am I overreaching for my second go at vegetable fermentation?
Absolutely go for it! It’s a delicious one!
Made a 5 liter crock full. Substituted the onions in the recipe with pearl onions. Also, just checked after five full weeks and found it’s not quite tart enough. Nice and tender crisp, but still a little bland. I’ll give it another week before transferring to quart jars and vacuum sealing then storing in the fridge. Any ideas for increasing the tartness sooner?
Given that you made more than I did in this recipe, it’s possible that you ended up with more water in yours and thus diluted the acidity a little more and thus the tartness hasn’t appeared as you might have liked. No harm in leaving this one out as long as you like to continue to mature and get more tart. If it were me, I’d leave it out indefinitely until the taste comes around to your liking. It will of course continue to get more tart over time in the refrigerator as well, albeit more slowly. No other suggestions really.
I’m making this in a taller Kilner fermentation jar with airlock – after a few weeks, once it’s ready to put in the fridge, can I transfer to smaller jars and is it necessary to keep the liquid brine?
I would definitely transfer the liquid brine to the smaller jars if you transfer. Good luck!
For Chicago Giardinera I believe you want to use appropriately-sized and chunked Serrano Chile’s. I’ve never seen a Jalapeño in a jar of local giardinera.
Hello, thank you for the recipes. Ive made several now with great success! However, I just made my second batch of giardiniera, and it did not turn out. I’m wondering if you could provide some insight as to why?
I got a lot of white film/yeast on the top of my jars this time, and the liquid was quite cloudy. I did wipe off the white film once using clean paper towels. Today was the two week mark, and I checked them since it is summer here in CA. The cauliflower was almost mushy, and there was a strong unpleasant odor. I am super bummed, since I made a double batch this time!
My house is probably about 75 during the day, and 60 at night. I was expecting a quicker ferment time, but any tips/tricks on what went wrong? Perhaps my vegetables were contaminated with different bacteria? Or did I not have enough salt?
I know that some white film/yeast is to be expected, but like I said, the smell was off putting. I ended up throwing the whole batch away 🙁
Hard to say what happened there. Must have been a different bacteria set up shop in your ferment and crowded out the others. Mushy and slimy ferments happen every once in awhile. I generally chalk it up to cleanliness issues or simply some stray bacteria that got a little too overzealous.
I made this and I like the flavours and I would like to make again except I did not like the bell peppers. They were mushy! Everything else was a great texture. Did I do something wrong?
It’s hard to say what went wrong. I’ve had similar issues with bell peppers in my giardiniera at times, but at others, they came out just fine. You could of course make this without the bell peppers, or just enjoy the color that they add and keep your fingers crossed. Wish I had a better answer for you on this one!
Could you use Brussels sprouts or okra in the mix? I know that is not true “Chicago style” giardinara but sounds fun
Dawn, I imagine brussel sprouts and okra would work just fine. Let us know how it goes if you should try.
Hi .I just have mason jars can I use them.
Of course. Best to use an airlock like I’ve suggested in the recipe, when fermenting with a mason jar.
LOvely recipe, and yes, referring to a comment right at the top of the page, sure; beans do really well. You can also add small white turnip, and flavour with peppercorns as well. I’m Italian, and my wonderful Nonna used to make this by the ton! It had as much prestige in our Italian family as Kimchi does for Koreans! At the risk of sounding patronising, if anyone would like the correct pronunciation, it’s about as close as I can get, phonetically, to this:
Jar-Dean-Yeah-Rah.
Thanks for the recipe! I love making this and the recipe brings back wonderful memories!
A Tavola, si mangia!!
This stuff is KILLER! I even gave some to my Chicago-native friend and she loved it and wanted to make some for her giardiniera-loving mom.
Thanks Erika! Glad you’re enjoying!!
I’ve just started and am loving the fermented vegs! I’m using the rubber tops that look like a baby bottle top. The recipes I’ve used say open once a day to release gases. Am I doing the right thing? Everything has turned out.
Thanks for writing, Jodifer. NO need to open to release pressure on a daily basis if you are using an airlock such as the one you are using. Airlocks are designed to release the gas pressure as it accumulates. Glad everything is turning out well.
Looks like a great recipe to try. This is a great website! Thanks!
Thanks. Yah it’s a yummy one. Good luck with your kraut business.
We’ve been experimenting with fermentation. Sauerkraut turned out great. Carrot sticks – yum! The Giardiniera is done. Brine drained off, veggies chopped and in jars. At this point, can we cover in olive oil? That’s how we see store bought / prepared Giardiniera.
The store bought giardinera was very likely not fermented but simply pickled in vinegar. I honestly don’t know what would happen if you took a fermented giardinera and covered in olive oil. The probiotic microbes would almost assuredly die if surrounded in oil, but haven’t tested that out.
This makes me think of escabeche which I haven’g made in years but now, after seeing this recipe, crave.
Nice idea! I’ll give a lacto fermented escabeche a try. I do something similar with jalapeño in making fermented Curtiss, recipe found on this site.