Thread: Capers
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casa bona[_2_] casa bona[_2_] is offline
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On 7/3/2013 12:12 AM, Julie Bove wrote:
> "Janet" > wrote in message
> t...
>> In article >, says...
>>>
>>> I do not have much experience with these. Used them some time back in a
>>> recipe and don't recall a problem. Then put them in that rice salad that
>>> I
>>> made last night. I ate one and noticed a medicinal quality to it but
>>> since
>>> there were only 2 T. for the recipe, I thought it would be okay. Well...
>>> It wasn't! The salad tasted fine when I first made it. But after it
>>> sat?
>>> The capers sort of took over the whole thing and all I could taste was
>>> those. I fear I am going to have to dump it all out. I could only
>>> manage
>>> to eat a few bites. Even after trying to pick around the capers, they
>>> had a
>>> very aggressive quality to them.
>>>
>>> Did I get bad ones? I bought the store brand but the other kind was
>>> about
>>> twice as expensive. Are they supposed to taste really strong and bitter
>>> like that? I don't remember the others being like that. I think they
>>> tasted more like a pickle.

>>
>> 2 tablespoons sounds an awful lot of capers in anything; are you sure
>> it wasn't 2 teaspoons?
>>
>> Janet UK

>
> Here's the recipe. This is for 1 cup of rice, cooked.
>
> Ruth Douglass's Rice Salad (Tadpole Salad), c. 1910
>
> Turn the rice into a big bowl. Mixing with two forks, add 1/2 cup chopped
> green onions, 1/2 cup chopped parsley, 1/2 cup chopped tomatoes, and 2
> tablespoons capers, drained. Salt, pepper to taste. Dress with oil and lemon
> juice.
>
> So, yes. Two Tablespoons.
>
>

As another poster said, that's a LOT of capers!

I'd drop it back to 2 teaspoons, drained and rinsed.