Author Notes
Adapted from Alice Waters' The Art of Simple Food II, Clarkson Potter 2014. —Marian Bull
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Ingredients
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1 large or 2 small rutabagas (about 1 pound)
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3 cups
water
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3/4 cup
white wine vinegar
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1/4 cup
white wine
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1 hefty pinches
peppercorns
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1 hefty pinches
coriander seeds
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1 hefty pinches
mustard seeds
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2 large
(or 4 small) cloves of garlic, peeled and halved
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2
chile pods
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4
thyme sprigs
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4
marjoram sprigs (or 1 pinch dried marjoram)
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Salt
Directions
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Peel the rutabagas, then cut them into 1/4-inch slices. If you want a little more stability, cut them in half and then slice them into half-moons.
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Measure all other ingredients into a medium-size pot. Add enough salt so the liquid tastes salty (but not inedible) -- one generous pinch is a good start. Bring everything to a boil, then simmer for 3 minutes. Be warned: your kitchen will smell like vinegar.
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Add the rutabaga slices, trying to get all of them submerged. Cook them until they're tender, but not too soft -- a knife should pierce them easily but you don't want them to fall apart. This should take about 15 minutes.
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Let the slices cool in the liquid. Serve as is, or drizzled with salsa verde -- Alice says they're better the next day, and I agree. You can store them in the liquid for up to a week or so.
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Note: You can really put anything you like into the cooking liquid. Experiment with other herbs and spices, like fennel seeds, bay leaves, ginger, etc. Express yourself!
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