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Food

A tale of preservation

Pickled vegetables have been in our diet for 4,000 years - and they are as popular as ever.

January 21, 2010 14:15
Pickled cucumber
2 min read

What is fascinating about the humble pickle, seen on every Jewish table whether as a simple accompaniment to a burger, a family roast-chicken dinner, part of a grand Kiddush or a simchah meal, is that its origins reach as far back as 2030 BCE in Mesopotamia where archaeologists discovered pickled cucumber seeds.

They had been carried to the valley of the Tigris by Indian travellers. The pickle is mentioned twice in the Bible, in Isaiah 1:8 and Numbers 11:5; and ever since then, we have saved our glut of foods and pickled for leaner times.

Cleopatra endorsed the pickle as part of her beauty treatment. Julius Caesar recommended his armies were fed pickles to improve their health; and Christopher Columbus transported pickled cucumbers in galleons to the New World in order to prevent the crew from contracting scurvy. The pickle not only boosted the poor and monotonous diets of our Ashkenazi ancestors, but also gave the women of the villages who prepared them a small additional income.

The English word “pickle” seems to come from “pikel”, meaning a spicy-type sauce to eat with poultry or meat, whereas the Dutch “pekel” refers to the solution, maybe a kind of brine used to keep and season the food.