Pickled Snow Peas Recipe - Viet World Kitchen (2024)

By Andrea Nguyen

I like snow peas but don’t love them enough to eat an entire dish of them. They’re great for accenting stir-fries and soups, in which a little goes a long way. However, when you buy them at Chinese markets – where they tend to be very fresh and well priced -- you usually have to purchase them in one-pound bags. Unless you plan to serve snow peas every day of the week, it’s hard to get through the entire bag.

I am guilty of leaving my Chinese market snow peas to linger for too long in the fridge. Inevitably, the over-the-hill pods are dumped into our greencycle bin on trash night. Enter pickled snow peas – the first recipe I happened to have turned to in The Preservation Kitchen by Paul Virant and Kate Leahy. The title of the book, which I’d received as a review copy, was perfect for my circ*mstance: I needed to preserve the snow peas for a later date!

Pickling snow peas aren’t a go-to Asian use of the vegetable but I was game. I had a bought an ample bag of snow peas from Ranch 99 and had a scant pound sitting around.

I had to do some math with the original recipe, which called for 2 ½ pounds of snow peas. Additionally, I discovered that I was out of caraway seeds for the pickling spices. I used cumin instead and decided to tilt the spices toward India a little further by using football-shaped coriander seeds, a sweet and citrusy version of their round brethren. A little turmeric helped to keep the snow peas from turning too sickly green, which is what they naturally want to do.

Without champagne vinegar on hand, I chose unseasoned rice vinegar, which has a similar mild acidity. However, I ended up adding more sugar than my original estimate because the flavor was a bit too tart for my taste buds.

The thing with The Preservation Kitchen’s recipes is that they’re clearly presented in weight, volume and percentage measurements. If you tweak things like I did, it was simply a matter of using a calculator to figure out the right amount of ingredients to use. You can guesstimate your adaptation with a fair amount of assurance! A book that inspires confident cooking is a huge boon to the cook.

After sitting overnight in the fridge (I prefer the Asian no-canning approach to pickling vegetables), the crisp tangy snow peas were ready to eat or keep for a while. What I found surprising was that the snow peas kept their snow pea-ness. They seem like a delicate vegetable but they retained their identity in the sea of brine and spice.

How to serve the pickled snow peas? The authors described their pickled snow peas as a perfect side for smoked or grilled meat. They also mentioned that pickled snow peas are great added to chicken salad or showered atop a green salad; they were great in a potato salad I made.
I could see them with ribs seasoned with Asian flavors, grilled lemongrass pork, tandoori chicken (see the Asian Market Shopper for my recipe). They’d also be a partner for charcuterie or fried snacks – foods where you need some tang to cut the richness. For dinner, I chopped them up and mixed them into fried rice.

This is an easy pickle recipe that I hope you’ll try out. Next time I buy snow peas at the Chinese market, I'll know that I can use up the entire bag.

RECIPE

Pickled Snow Peas

Use more sugar if you prefer a moderately-sour pickle.

Yield: 1 quart

Ingredients

  • 1 pound snow peas
  • ¾ teaspoon coriander seed
  • ¾ teaspoon brown mustard seed
  • ¾ teaspoon cumin or caraway seed
  • ½ teaspoon fennel seed
  • ¼ teaspoon black peppercorns
  • 1 dried chile de arbol or other dried red pepper, torn into several pieces
  • 1 ¾ cups unseasoned Japanese rice vinegar
  • 1 cup water
  • 1 to 2 tablespoons sugar
  • 2 teaspoons kosher salt
  • Scant ¼ teaspoon turmeric

Instructions

  1. Wash and drain the snow peas. Snap off the ends of each snow pea, peeling and discarding the stringy fiber as you work. Set aside.
  2. In a small saucepan, toast the coriander, mustard, cumin, fennel, peppercorns, and chile over medium-low heat, until very fragrant; a tiny bit of smoking is okay. Put into a 4 to 6-cup jar. Add the snow peas.
  3. Return the saucepan to the stove. Add the vinegar, water, sugar, salt, and turmeric. Bring to a rolling boil. Turn off the heat, wait for the bubbling to subside, then pour over the snow peas. Use a spoon, spatula, or ladle to gently push the snow peas down so that they’ll be submerged in the brine. They should be eventually covered.
  4. Let cool completely, partially covered, at room temperature. Cap and refrigerate overnight before eating.

Adapted from: The Preservation Kitchen (Ten Speed Press, 2012) by Paul Virant and Kate Leahy.

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Comments

  1. nike free 7.0

    Although I would’ve preferred if you went into a little bit more detail, I still got the gist of what you meant. I agree with it. It might not be a popular idea, but it makes sense. Will definitely come back for more of this. Great work.Good work, wonderful blog… really enjoy it and added it into my social bookmarks. Keep up the good work

  2. Ellen

    How long CAN you keep snow pea pickles in the fridge? Will they keep for months, or should I be concerned about spoilage after a certain amount of time?

Pickled Snow Peas Recipe - Viet World Kitchen (2024)

FAQs

How do you eat snow peas? ›

Snow peas can be eaten raw or cooked. However, blanching snow peas will reduce the fibrousness of the edges of snow peas, and boost sweetness and colour. Another good way to cook snow peas is to toss them with a little oil in a hot wok for 1-2 minutes or until tender-crisp. Season and serve.

How do you clean and cook snow peas? ›

Steps to Make It
  1. Gather the ingredients. ...
  2. Break the stem ends off of the snow peas and pull off the strings. ...
  3. Fill a medium saucepan with about 2 quarts of water and 2 teaspoons of salt. ...
  4. Add the snow peas and let the water return to a boil. ...
  5. Boil the pea pods for 30 to 45 seconds. ...
  6. Immediately drain the peas in a colander.
Feb 21, 2024

How to cook snow peas for toddler? ›

directions
  1. Pre heat oven to 400 degrees.
  2. Snip the ends off the pea pods.
  3. Place pods in a single layer in a shallow baking pan.
  4. Combine Oil, shallot, seasoning & salt.
  5. Drizzle over the peas.
  6. Bake uncovered for apprx 8 minutes or unril crisp tender, stir once during baking.

Do you steam or boil snow peas? ›

Snow peas need to be boiled only for 30 seconds to 2 minutes, which is just enough to make them tender. Snow peas are a good source of vitamins A, C and K, as well as iron. A full cup of cooked snow peas contains only 67 calories.

Are you supposed to eat the skin of snow peas? ›

Snow peas are also known as Chinese pea pods since they are often used in stir-fries. They are flat with very small peas inside; the whole pod is edible, although the tough “strings” along the edges are usually removed before eating.

Do you eat the skin of snow peas? ›

Snow peas can be consumed pea-pod and all. However, you should first remove the tough string along the pod side before eating. "A paring knife allows you to hook onto and peel back the fibrous string that runs along the pod's seam," says Welsh.

What is the white stuff on snow peas? ›

Powdery mildew is a late-season fungal disease that can impact peas if weather conditions are conducive. Peas that are planted late are usually more susceptible to powdery mildew than those planted early.

How do you keep snow peas crisp? ›

Snow or Sugar Snap Peas

Blanch small-podded peas 1 to 1½ minutes, medium peas 2 minutes. Blanch one pound in one gallon of rapidly boiling water. If it takes more than one minute for the water to return to a boil after adding the peas, they will cook and be less crisp.

Why are my snow peas tough? ›

Pea shoots should be harvested from the young plants as soon as they emerge. Pinch them off with your index finger and thumb or cut them off with garden snips. If you wait too long, the snow peas will become starchy and tough, and the pea shoots will become fibrous.

What season is best for snow peas? ›

Snow peas are best grown in the cooler months of the year, so any season except summer - as long periods of temperatures higher than 25°C will reduce their flowering and cropping. Snow peas seeds are large, making them easy to handle and great for kids to sow and grow in the garden or pots.

Can you overcook snow peas? ›

Yes! Fresh/frozen green peas can really easily be overcooked. They'll lose the bright green, getting more dull and a bit darker. They'll also get mushy.

What can I do with excess snow peas? ›

Place snow peas or sugar snap peas into freezer bags or containers, seal, label, and store in the freezer. They'll keep up to 8 months. They'll still be “good” beyond that timeframe, but the quality begins to decline.

Can I eat snow peas with black spots? ›

Avoid peas that are dried out or marred by dark spots. Store unwashed in a plastic bag for up to five days in the refrigerator. When you're ready to eat, snap off the stem and pull away the string.

Can you eat snow snap peas raw? ›

Snow peas and sugar snaps are delicious both raw and cooked. Snow peas are common in Chinese and Chinese-American cuisine, and show up in all manner of stir fries and sides, but they are also delicious eaten on their own or blanched briefly and tossed into a salad.

Can you eat the peas out of snow peas? ›

Before cooking or eating raw snow peas, rinse them in water. Then grab or cut the tip of each snow pea and pull out and discard the tough string that runs along its side. Eat the entire snow pea, pod and all.

What is the best way to eat snap peas? ›

Green peas are amazingly good raw, especially if you can shell them and eat them before they get too big and tough. The best way to cook them is to toss them in boiling, salted water for about two minutes, then drain them and toss them in butter. Eat them with a spoon.

What do snow peas taste like? ›

The main difference in regard to flavor is their level of sweetness. Snow peas are a slightly tender — yet crisp — sweet pea. Sugar snap peas are also tender yet crisp but tend to have a sweeter flavor profile, as they're crossed with the garden pea. In fact, they're often considered the most flavorful variety of pea.

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