Italian Food Traditions-Preserve Capers in Salt


It’s hot. Not just any hot, but Sicilian hot. Which is why we are out at 8.00 am, before the heat forces us to stay locked indoors until sunset. It’s time to pick capers.

Caper plants thrive in stone walls and rocky crevices, and disdain rich earth – in fact the few that I have managed to grow in a pot are decidely puny, while a cliff of limestone sends the capers into a fit of ecstatic growth. Flower of caper

And then there are the flowers. Exquisitely delicate, they last no more than 24 hours, leaving behind a stem with a tiny seed pod that will grow into a caper fruit, called cucunci in Sicily.

But I’ve gotten ahead of myself. The capers are the buds of the flowers before they open. In Sicily, they are traditionally preserved in salt, which is easy to do at home.

Start by picking as many as you want, choosing the tight healthy buds – leave the large ones that are ready to open into flower so at least someone else may admire it in the next 24 hours.

We like to combine a lovely walk with caper picking in the canyon of Misericordia near Ragusa, where sprawling caper plants drape the limestone cliffs, and we are far from any kind of pollution. A 15-minute downhill walk brings us to a narrow trail that hugs the cliffside, and capers grow in profusion As birds sing we rustle through the caper leaves, the scent of wild mint in the air. The tiny buds break off easily in our hands, and we quickly filling a small bag.

Picking capers in Sicily

Before trekking back to the car, we stop to cool our feet in a clear stream, and Emanuele flicks tadpoles with his toes. The sun is hot on our backs as we continue our walk which has clearly become a trudge, and we realize that we should have started at dawn. At least we had the good sense to park in the shade. A short drive with the A/C blasting and we are back in the kitchen with our caper stash.

Fresh Italian capers

Once they have been cured in salt, capers can be used in many recipes, such as this pasta dish. Here is how to preserve capers in salt so they end up looking like this:salted capers

Recipe type: Breakfast
Author: Anita Iaconangelo
Prep time: 5 mins 
Cook time: 1 week
Total time: 1 week
Serves: As desired

Ingredients:
Capers
Sea salt

Instructions:

  1. Go through the capers carefully, picking off any extra-long stems and stray ants (particularly important if you are vegetarian).
  2. Rinse them in a colander, and pat dry on a dish towel.
  3. Place the capers in a jar, layering them with fine sea salt.
  4. (If you have a lot of capers, it’s better to use 2 small jars than one large one.)
  5. Cover the jar with its lid and shake it to make sure the salt is well distributed.
  6. Remove the lid and cover the jar with a single layer of a paper napkin or tight netting, and close with an elastic band.
  7. Leave it in a place where it will get some airflow, but not in direct sunlight – a breezy countertop is good.
  8. Every day, drain off any liquid that forms, and add another spoonful of salt.
  9. After about a week, or when the capers stop giving off liquid, transfer to a clean jar/storage container and cover with a lid.
  10. The capers can be kept on a shelf for up to one year.

Read More:

Easy Pasta Recipe with Capers

Festival of San Sebastiano in Sicily

19 thoughts on “Italian Food Traditions-Preserve Capers in Salt

  1. I was lucky enough to be in Pollara for the Caper Festival recently but to be able to go for a walk and return with capers to cure yourself would be a real treat.
    Oh to live in Sicily!
    Jenny

    1. @ Jenny Sounds like you had fun at the caper festival. Capers grow in other places in Italy – I have seen them growing out of stone walls in Tuscany – but they seem to be more prolific in Sicily.

  2. Hi Anita,

    Nice post, I see capers all the time in Sicily, and would see them in salt, but never realized that it helps preserve them!

    Nice blog, I found you on twitter. I’ll be surfing it some more.

    thanks
    Larry

    1. Hi Marlene – The capers hould be left as they are,, and rinsed of excess slat when used in cooking. Using brine is a totally separate process for preserving capers, and I find preserving in salt is easier to do.

  3. I bought some capers, that had been stringed, in Turkey. I don’t want to brine them. They are hard and dried. In your photo they are pretty and green. Can I still use your salt method?

    Thanks much!

    1. It sounds like your capers have already been preserved if they are hard and dry (which doesn’t actually sound that good…) Maybe you should rinse them and see how they taste.

  4. Hi I picked some capers yesterday and covered them in sea salt. this morning they are covered in maggots!! yuck!! they were in a large bowl – not covered overnight. do you think the worms came from inside the capers or do you think a fly got into the bowl? have you ever experienced this??

    1. Yuck is right! Fortunately, I have never experienced this. If they were covere din maggots after such a short time it makes me think they came from your capers.

  5. Hi Anita. I’ve followed your instructions for salted capers but my first attempt has produced some very bitter capers, even after 3 weeks in salt. No liquid ever formed to be tipped off. Do you think I picked buds that were too small? They were mostly 5-8mm diameter. Our caper bush is very healthy and is now flowering profusely. Do you have any suggestions for a second attempt? What size buds should I pick? Thanks, Katherine

  6. Last year I picked some caper bud and soaked them for three years changing their water almost 3-4 times a day. After that they were so tasteless, when they were fresh they tasted like watercress, garden cress, broccoli and maybe what people refer to as mustard-like taste.
    I thought maybe when I pickle them that great taste of pickled capers will surface. But it did not.
    Was it because I soaked them for so long and changed their water so often? The ones I picked do not taste bitter or bad. They can be eaten raw as free broccoli or watercress so I don’t see any point in soaking them. I asked one trader and she told me to get the bitterness they dry them for one day and then pickle them in brine.
    Are you sure your capers still were great after one week of soaking in water daily changing the water?

  7. Like olives picked directly from the tree, are capers also inedible (too bitter, or worse, toxic) if consumed directly from the bush, without the process of preserving them?

  8. Anita if I buy a 2lb bucket of salted capers can I can them in smaller jars or freeze them in smaller quantities. I love capers in a lot of dishes and go through a lot but the price is not helping my addiction!! Lol I found a 2lb bucket online of salted capers for $16 and that is definitely worth it but trying to be frugal and not have that big container opened all the time!

  9. We are in Greece (Messini) and we find caper plants on our walks, like you say, growing in cracks in walls and on ‘road allowances’ and gather many capers, even the little fruits, avoiding the ‘get-you’ thorns. I appreciate your salt instruction as we do not always want the brine flavour, and it is easier to transport salted capers. I find they last more than a year in the fridge. Thx

  10. I live on the Greek island of Crete and over the past few years have picked and pickled my own capers. I also brough a couple of seed pods back to my village and scattered them in the streets near my home so this year I’ve been able to easily pick loads of capers in a short space of time! I’ve already pickled three jars this year but would like to take some back to the UK with me next time I go. This means preserving in salt only, so on my way back from the local minimarket, I’ve just picked another batch of capers and will try preserving in salt using this method.

    1. Hi Debbie, I hope your attempt at preserving capers in salt was successful. I actually prefer them to the pickled ones, as the taste is not altered.
      Ciao,
      Anita

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