abe_froeman wrote:I found it at Shop N Save in Des Plaines, a small McCormick bottle. I use it for first aid purposes (on canker sores)...maybe try an Eastern European type grocery store, since it's used in pickling.
dddane wrote:the more i read i don't know if it is needed, some even saying it's not necessarily recommended and can be dangerous.. my chef friend insists it's the only way to get crispy pickles and said our pickles would be mush, and said to forget okra being crispy... it turns out that they were decent... though could've been crisiper. even the okra wasn't bad.
(suggested alternatives?? food grade lime... an ice soak?)
dddane wrote:the more i read i don't know if it is needed, some even saying it's not necessarily recommended and can be dangerous.. my chef friend insists it's the only way to get crispy pickles and said our pickles would be mush, and said to forget okra being crispy... it turns out that they were decent... though could've been crisiper. even the okra wasn't bad.
Binko wrote:Many of the Old Country pickle recipes I've seen include sour cherry leaves,
Diannie wrote:The Home Economist in Skokie has a wide variety of these oddities, typically in packages labeled for the food service industry.
Cathy2 wrote:I find those who grew up eating them do love them. For those who didn't, like me, the texture is a bit weird. I have likened it to styrofoam. However, you are trying to achieve an experience, which I respect.
piesandquilts wrote:I've heard of grape leaves, but not sour cherry leaves. So perhaps I should simply change the focus of my search from lime to leaves!
ViewsAskew wrote:I am looking for pickling lime to add to one of my tomato plants which seems to need a boost of calcium. Calcium nitrate would work, also, but I can't seem to find a local source of it, either.
The best place for me would be somewhere within the city of Chicago.
Cathy2 wrote:Hi,
Why do you think you need lime for the tomatoes? In the Yankee Gardner series, they were always pulling out lime. I bought some lime just because of that show. I later learned, soil in the northeast is acidic with the lime used to raise the pH. In our region, our soil is high on the pH scale and we often introduce materials to lower the pH.
You may want to contact your local University of Illinois Extension Service to discuss with a Master Gardner your tomato problems. I will be very surprised if they suggest lime.
Regards,
Mhays wrote:Views, if you need it, I have a 5lb bag of horticultural lime and you're welcome to some (I bought it at the aforementioned extension office's suggestion that I make homemade Bordeaux mixture for the various fungal diseases my tomatoes were plagued with at my old plot; I also have horticultural copper sulfate for the same reason .) Just shoot me a PM and we'll figure out the how and where - NB:it isn't culinary lime.