Hi All,
I thought I would share my story with Olives so far and seek some advice on where to go from here. I have a beautiful Kalamata tree at home that my wife has pruned into a feature for our backyard. We have had it for 5 or 6 years now and I believe it was 3 years old when we bought it. It crops well each year now and I have attempted for several years to cure olives from this tree, finally striking success this year.
My first attempts were to cure in water and brine following instructions from the internet. I tried this two or three times and they were all dismal failures. I found the time frames in the recipes were not remotely correct, and my olives at the end of a process lasting several months were still completely bitter and unpalatable.
Following this I tried with Lye, but I left them in too long. I think this was due to my previous experiences, I thought I would err on the side of longer rather than shorter. Ultimately the olives lost all their colour and became very soft. They didn’t have any bitterness though which was a win. So this year, I used lye again but tried the olives every day until I was happy they weren’t bitter. I used 2 teaspoons of food grade lye per liter of water and changed it each day. Typically the water was jet black after each soaking, an encouraging sign that something was happening. After 3 or 4 days of this the olives were cured. I then soaked them in water for 3 days, changing every day, and then salted them in a brine of 220grams salt in a liter of water. This brine had about a half cup of white vinegar in it too. After just 12 hours the olives were salty, acetic and incredibly yum. I think they are just about perfect – although my wife would like a touch less salt. Overall though, im very happy with these olives.
Now, I have access to large quantities of Kalamatas from a farm (uncured) and I would like to try a side by side comparison of several different cures. I would like to try a water cure, a brine cure and a dry cure (packed in salt). Im open to any recipes basically – so long as they are proven to work. So if you have a recipe that you know works, I would love to hear it. Im going to get these olives in the next couple of weeks and then I will start.
Don