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Chow Chow recipe
I want to make chow chow or piccalilli from my green tomatoes, but the
recipes I have both use sugar. Can I use Spenda in place of the sugar, or does the pickling process require the real thing? I got these recipes from a pickling book. Does anyone have a good recipe that they have used for years and know it to be very good? Thanks in advance. Dwayne |
Melba's Jammin' wrote:
> In article >, "Dwayne" > > wrote: > > I want to make chow chow or piccalilli from my green tomatoes, but the > > recipes I have both use sugar. Can I use Spenda in place of the sugar, > > or > > does the pickling process require the real thing? > > I got these recipes from a pickling book. Does anyone have a good recipe > > that they have used for years and know it to be very good? > > Thanks in advance. Dwayne > > I believe you can. Edrena here uses a lot of Splenda, I think. Maybe > she can give a good reply. > -Barb You betcha cupcake. Dwayne - from the books I've read, sugar, salt & spices contribute to the keeping quality of pickled items but are not the main keeping factor. Acidity is, as well as heating as in washing, BWB/lower heat pastuerization. If I were you, I'd make a small batch replacing 3 or 4 parts sugar with 1 Splenda, then upwards to taste. Splenda has been saying y'all can replace it one for one, but I believe I get an unpleasant aftertaste. Oh yeah-cut the salt by half, then add more if needed *after* you put in the Splenda. Something about that balance of vinegar: sugar: salt is changed with Splenda-at least that's my experience. I've made several different pickles with Splenda and been very satisfied with the results following the balancing act: bread & butters, pickled b**ts, mixed sweet pickle, relish, green beans, & carrots. Let us know how it turns out! Edrena |
Melba's Jammin' wrote:
> In article >, "Dwayne" > > wrote: > > I want to make chow chow or piccalilli from my green tomatoes, but the > > recipes I have both use sugar. Can I use Spenda in place of the sugar, > > or > > does the pickling process require the real thing? > > I got these recipes from a pickling book. Does anyone have a good recipe > > that they have used for years and know it to be very good? > > Thanks in advance. Dwayne > > I believe you can. Edrena here uses a lot of Splenda, I think. Maybe > she can give a good reply. > -Barb You betcha cupcake. Dwayne - from the books I've read, sugar, salt & spices contribute to the keeping quality of pickled items but are not the main keeping factor. Acidity is, as well as heating as in washing, BWB/lower heat pastuerization. If I were you, I'd make a small batch replacing 3 or 4 parts sugar with 1 Splenda, then upwards to taste. Splenda has been saying y'all can replace it one for one, but I believe I get an unpleasant aftertaste. Oh yeah-cut the salt by half, then add more if needed *after* you put in the Splenda. Something about that balance of vinegar: sugar: salt is changed with Splenda-at least that's my experience. I've made several different pickles with Splenda and been very satisfied with the results following the balancing act: bread & butters, pickled b**ts, mixed sweet pickle, relish, green beans, & carrots. Let us know how it turns out! Edrena |
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