Quick Pickled Vegetables โ It’s so easy to make quick pickles! These pickled vegetables take just 10 minutes to prep and are ready to eat after 24 hours. I made pickled carrots and parsnips, but you can use any veggies you have on hand!
Easy Pickled Vegetables
I love vinegar and vinegary foods.ย Pickling carrots and parsnips is how I’ve been getting my vinegar groove on lately.
If you’ve never pickled anything, don’t fret. Quick pickling is so fast and easy, and you have nothing to fear.ย It’s a 10-minute project, and a perfect way to bottle up summertime.
The pickled vegetables become tenderized and softened after a few hours, but the full effect and flavor of the pickling sets in a day or two later as the flavors marry.
The vinegar brine is tangy and sweetish, with a gentle kick from the mustard and peppercorn. Sweet with heat, of sorts.ย And vinegar has plenty of health benefits. I’ll consider myself super healthy then with all that I’ve been consuming lately!
What’s in Quick Pickled Vegetables?
For these quick pickles, you’ll need:
- Carrots
- Parsnips
- Granulated sugar
- White distilled vinegar
- Favorite grill seasoning blend
- Dry yellow mustard seeds
- Salt (optional)
I used carrots and parsnips because they’re quite firm to begin with and I wanted the finished veggies to be firmer and not mushy. They retain plenty of texture, crispiness, and crunch. Cauliflower, rutabaga, beets, and turnips are next!
How to Quick Pickle Vegetables
To make the pickle brine, I simply combined equal parts white vinegar and sugar in a saucepan, brought the mixture just to a boil, and poured the brine over raw carrot and raw parsnip spears that I’d packed into jars.ย To each jar, I also added a few tablespoons of dry yellow mustard grains and some salt-free citrus pepper blend (a blend of lime, orange, and lemon rinds paired with black peppercorns).
Most people add salt to pickle vegetables, but I avoid cooking with or adding salt to our food as much as possible for health reasons. With the right blend of other seasonings, there’s plenty of flavor and a bit of a kick from the mustard grains and peppercorns. No salt needed.ย Plus, parsnips naturally have a peppery kick, and the spice blend enhanced it.
Tips for Making Pickled Vegetables
Think outside the box when flavoring your quick pickles. Try Jerk seasoning, chipotle seasoning, mesquite grill seasoning, or Indian spices like curry or garam masala. Remember: pickling doesn’t just have to mean Kosher dills!
Also, when adding the sliced veggies to your jars, make sure to really pack them in. You shouldn’t be able to fit any more veggies into the jars, that’s how full they should be.
Once you pour the brine over the vegetables, screw on the lid and gently shake the jars to distribute the seasonings. And let the pickles cool to room temperature on your counter before placing them in the fridge. If you place the hot glass jar in the fridge, it might crack!
More Easy Vegetable Recipes:
- Herb-Roasted Tri-Colored Carrots โ Lightly caramelized around the edges, crisp-tender in the center, and seasoned with rosemary, thyme, and parsley!! A trusty side that youโll make again and again for holidays or easy weeknight dinners!
- Grilled Mexican Corn (Elote) โ Learn how to make this EASY and FLAVORFUL grilled Mexican street corn at home in minutes!! Fresh sweet corn is covered in crema, cheese, and finished with chili, lime juice, and cilantro!
- Cheesy Roasted Asparagus โ Even picky eaters will LOVE asparagus when itโs roasted with onions and covered with melted CHEESE!! A fast and EASY side thatโs perfect for busy weeknights!
- Rainbow Roasted Vegetables โ Trying to eat more vegetables? Seeing the rainbow should do the trick!! FAST, EASY, and as HEALTHY as it gets!
- The Best Broccoli Salad โ So many textures and flavors in every bite including crunchy broccoli, crisp celery, salty bacon and sunflower seeds, juicy grapes, and sweet raisins.
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Quick Pickled Vegetables
Ingredients
- 1 or 2 extra large raw carrots, peeled and sliced into 4-inch by 1/2-inch spears*
- 1 or 2 large raw parsnips, peeled and sliced into 4-inch by 1/2-inch spears (I did not โcoreโ the parsnip, I used the whole thing)
- 2 cups granulated sugar
- 2 cups white distilled vinegar
- 4 tablespoons Salt-Free Citrus Pepper Blend, or a favorite all-purpose or grill seasoning blend, divided**
- 2 tablespoons dry yellow mustard grains, divided
- salt, optional and to taste
Instructions
- Place trimmed and sliced carrot spears in one glass jar and parsnips in another glass jar (or mingle them, if preferred); set jars aside. My jars were very well-packed and very stuffed; I couldnโt fit in any more spears.
- In a medium saucepan, combine sugar and vinegar and heat over medium heat to dissolve sugar, stirring constantly. Allow mixture to come to a boil and then shut the heat off.
- Pour the mixture over the vegetables, divided equally, or until the liquid comes up to nearly to the top of the jar. I find itโs easiest to pour the vinegar-sugar mixture into a heat-safe, large, glass measuring cup rather than trying to pour from a saucepan directly over the vegetables since more seems to spill onto the counter than get into the jars.
- Add 2 tablespoons citrus pepper blend and 1 tablespoon mustard to each jar. If adding salt, add it to each jar, to taste.
- Seal jars and shake gently to disperse spices.
- Allow jars to cool on counter before transferring to the refrigerator. Do not put hot glass jars into a cold refrigerator, they could crack. Vegetables will be โreadyโ after about 2 hours, but the full effect of the pickling will set in about 48 hours later. Vegetables will keep refrigerated in jars for many weeks; let common sense and your tastebuds be your guide.
Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
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Even More Summer Vegetable Recipes:
Mexican Grilled Corn and Zucchini Salad โ A healthy EASY salad thatโs ready in 15 minutes and so flavorful!! Corn, zucchini, cilantro, queso fresco and more are tossed in a DELISH creamy lime sauce!
It’s nice to see a post on pickling vegetables since it seems to be becoming a bit of a lost art. I think I would have to do a big batch of them because I would probably finish a jar in a day or two! These would be great for little party appetizers, too.
It’s getting kind of trendy again though. Many of the food magazines, Bon App, Saveur, etc. frequently do stories on them. Like in this month’s issue in B.A. there’s a recipe for some!
I am a pickling maniac this week with garden harvest, so was super glad to see this on your blog today!
Sounds like you’re an old pro at pickling!
Loveeee pickles-never pickled! This sounds super easy. Hope youre well
I’ve always wanted to pickle stuff! It’s been on my bucket list for years! And I’m really loving the mustard grains in this.
Iยดm a vinegar person, no doubt! Love pickles and mustard and chutneys. And I like that the salt here is optional. Really good recipe Averie.
Too often salt is all I taste in recipes like this – so kept it out!
I just posted yesterday about the quick pickles I made a couple days ago! I’m not even surprised any more.
I also just put some pickled broccoli stems in the fridge yesterday. I don’t even bother with heating the brine anymore – I just mix the vinegar with equal part water, add some spices and some stevia directly in the jar, shake the jar up, then throw in the veggies. That’s it. For cukes, you only have to wait about 2 hours, but the thicker roots and heartier veggies are better after a couple days.
Not a day goes by that I don’t eat pickled or fermented veggies in some way. I made a gigantic batch of kimchi last week that I just put in jars and refrigerated yesterday too. I’m set for a while now. Or a week anyway. Maybe. ;)
We are ALWAYS on the same wavelength :) And great info about what you do! Need to try stevia next time!
Just looked over your recipe again – no water at all?! Wow.
I used this method above again today with some small pickling cukes from the farmers market – about 2-3 inches each. I’m pickling them whole, so I’m guessing they will take a bit longer to really soak in the flavors.
I also threw in a few cloves of garlic in each of the jars. Can’t wait to eat these!
No water at all! Just the vinegar, sugar, and natural water the veggies will leech anyway. I bet your veggies will turn out great!
I’m so excited, I love pickled veggies but I’ve never made them! Thanks for this recipe, Averie! Have a good weekend :)
And super easy! enjoy!
I also love vinegary foods. Actually the pickle was my very first food! LOL
These sound and look awesome!
Oh that cracks me up about your 1st food :)
This is great, I will definatly use this for cucumbers!
Great post!! I love pickled veggies as an addition to sandwiches or salads. Pickled red onions are an obsession of mine! Pinning this post to try when I get home from vacation! :) Have a great weekend, Averie!
Thanks for pinning! :)
Jason has tried pickling cucumbers a few times. Not always a huge success but it gives him something to do LOL
Something to do…love it. LOL :)
I love vinegary foods too! Great recipe….hope u had an amazing 4th :)
And I hope you and your fam enjoyed the day, too. Can’t believe it’s NOT the weekend though today. So weird!
I never knew pickling veggies was so easy! I love this recipe and look forward to giving it a try!
I tried refrigerator pickles, but it has been so long I can’t remember if they were sweet or dill! Knowing me, they were probably sweet pickles. I love this recipe and will have to give it a try this weekend. Beets also sound wonderful –I think I’d like those in a sweet balsamic pickle bath!
Beets with a sweet balsamic bath sounds heavenly! Better you than me with the red hands and fingers (I think wearing gloves would be a must for that one…haha!) but gosh, that sounds so good! LMK if you pickle anything this weekend!
If you coat your hands with vegetable oil before handling the beets, there are no stained hands!!
oh it would be so great to be able to do this myself! thanks so much for sharing!
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