With their sweetly salty garlicky smack, these quick pickled ramps are exactly what you want to make during those precious few weeks each spring when you see ramps for sale and obsessively gather up armloads of the elusive spring lovelies before they suddenly disappear for the next 12 months. The conundrum arises the moment you realize you can only eat so many of them morning, noon, and night.

A canning jar filled with quick pickled ramps and some fresh ramps lying beside the jar.

Quick Pickled Ramps

4.34 / 6 votes
These quick pickled ramps preserve the spring onions in red wine vinegar, water, sugar, and salt and pepper. The pickled ramps are ready to eat within an hour and last in the fridge for months.
David Leite
CourseSides
CuisineAmerican
Servings20 servings | 1 quart
Calories24 kcal
Prep Time30 minutes
Cook Time5 minutes
Total Time1 hour 30 minutes

Equipment

  • A 1-quart jar

Ingredients 

  • 2 cups red wine vinegar
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 1/4 cup turbinado sugar
  • 1 teaspoon kosher salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon black pepper
  • 15 to 20 small ramp bulbs* (trim any small roots and the green floppy leaves and reserve the greens for sautéed ramps)

Instructions 

  • In a deep pot, combine the vinegar, water, sugar, salt, and pepper and bring to a boil. Fill a bowl with ice cubes and add just enough water so the ice floats.
  • When the liquid is boiling, plunge the ramps into it and make sure they’re fully submerged. Cook for 15 to 30 seconds, depending on how skinny or fat your ramps are, and then grab tongs or a small strainer and gently remove them from the pickling liquid and dump them into the ice water until completely cool. Remove the pickling liquid from the heat and let it cool completely.
  • Drain the ramps and pat them completely dry.
  • Arrange the ramps in a 1-quart jar and pour the room-temperature pickling liquid in over the ramps. The ramps need to be completely submerged. Store in the refrigerator and eat at your leisure. They're ready to nibble within hours although they keep for months in the fridge. The longer the ramps remain in the pickling liquid, the more pronounced the pickle tang.

Notes

*What are ramps?

Those of you who are unacquainted with ramps, allow us to explain. Technically known as wild leeks, ramps are actually a species of wild onion with floppy green leaves narrowing to a slender white bulb, and all parts of the plant pack quite a garlicky wallop. They grow only in select conditions and certain areas from South Carolina to Canada. Because of their fussy nature, ramps are only available for a few weeks early each spring in a handful of places. Typically only found at farmer’s markets, road stands, or by foraging them yourself, this makes them something of a delicacy and their devoted followers are quick to snap them up in obscene amounts during the short season. And that’s exactly why we think you need to learn how to preserves these beauties for later. 
Breakfast cookbook.

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Nutrition

Serving: 1 pickled rampCalories: 24 kcalCarbohydrates: 5 gProtein: 1 gFat: 1 gSaturated Fat: 1 gSodium: 58 mgFiber: 1 gSugar: 3 g

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Tried this recipe?Mention @leitesculinaria or tag #leitesculinaria!
Recipe © 2015 George Weld | Evan Hanczor. Photo © 2015 Bryan Gardner. All rights reserved.

Recipe Testers’ Reviews

These special treasures will be happily enjoyed as a condiment, savoring each bite with the knowledge that these are a once-a-year treat.

The recipe itself is straightforward, easy, and quick. Because I had super-skinny ramps, I needed to be especially gentle when removing the ramps from the boiling pickling liquid. Also, the cooling process was barely a couple of minutes. The ramps fit nicely in a quart jar. I put them in the refrigerator after about an hour and a half. I tasted one the next day and it was delicious—a little pickley, a little oniony, a little garlicky.

This quick pickled ramps recipe was partly the thrill of the chase—I thought they would be easy to come by, but, after a number of failed attempts, I located the most beautiful, pencil-thin, super-fresh ramps in Denver. The sign on the ramps said, “Only available for a few weeks!” Two weeks later, tonight, at the time of this writing, I just spotted ramps in a store here in Chicago that looked equally fresh but much bigger than the ones I had purchased out West. The biggest difference between the photograph above and my beautiful pickled ramps is that my pickling liquid is VERY deep and beautifully red from the red wine vinegar I used and not at all the pale Champagne color of the liquid in the photo. I look forward to testing these special treats in several months.

Speaking of treats, when I shared with a friend that I had made these ramp pickles, she shared in return that she has enjoyed a jam made from pickled ramps in a super-special grilled cheese sandwich, and I’m maybe going to need to try this before I’m out of stock of pickled ramps!

I am a self-professed onion and garlic lover. I love onions—white, green, red, sweet, or plain old yellow. The same is true with garlic— shallots, scallions, leeks, all members are welcome in my kitchen. And there’s so much hype about ramps! With all the talk of their limited availability, I was so excited when I went to Whole Foods and saw a large display as soon as I walked in. This recipe was pretty straightforward, with no real surprises. The resulting pickled ramps were delicious with a great texture.

Once the ramps were cleaned and cut down, there wasn’t much left. I would have purchased twice the amount since there was quite a lot of liquid (just over a quart). The ramps were perfectly blanched in less than 30 seconds but still had a nice bite to them. I used an 18-ounce confiture jar to store the ramps. I tried the ramps after the pickling liquid cooled and I had poured it over the ramps in the jar. The flavor of the brine went nicely with the sweet, mildly leeky, garlicky flavor of the ramps. I felt almost guilty not using the leafy greens in the same recipe, I felt like they were so valuable (and not cheap).

Although I wish I had bought twice as many since they were addictive and I could have eaten the entire batch. I can now add ramps to another member of the onion and garlic family that I love.




About David Leite

I count myself lucky to have received three James Beard Awards for my writing as well as for Leite’s Culinaria. My work has also appeared in The New York Times, Martha Stewart Living, Saveur, Bon Appรฉtit, Gourmet, Food & Wine, Yankee, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, The Washington Post, and more.


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7 Comments

  1. 3 stars
    I made the quick and easy picked ramps BUT…Why does it say quart jars?! You do not need quart jars! Pint jars would do fine. The recipe was fine for about 14 ramps per jar! You need to correct the jar size or recommend more ramps per jar. Thanks.

    1. Thanks, Evie. I’m glad you were able to make it work with a pint jar. The recipe does allow for some variation in the number of ramp bulbs as well as for some variation in their size. I know I’ve experienced the frustration of sterilizing a jar only to discover that it’s not big enough and that there’s too much brine.