Preserved Lemons Recipe (2024)

Why It Works

  • Preserved lemons add a big punch of flavor, instant umami, and complexity to any dish.
  • Rinse the salt off before using preserved lemon in place of fresh in recipes.
  • The cured lemons will last up to a year in the back of the fridge.

Fresh lemons are a workhorse in my kitchen, finding their way into everything from ice cream and tarts, to bitters and homemade cheese, to my go-to household cleaner. In fact, I thought I'd pretty much exhausted my uses for lemons—that is, until a fall afternoon in 2006, when I met a friend for lunch at the then-new-to-me Café Mogador in New York's East Village. She knowingly ordered us matching chicken tagines without even glancing at the menu. The dish was unlike anything I had ever tasted: intensely lemony, with a depth I couldn't place. It was so much more than the lemon chicken it appeared to be on the plate. I later learned that its unique flavor came from preserved lemons, which added an irresistible complexity to an otherwise straightforward chicken.

Boston chef Ana Sortun has a name for that: lemon umami. "Preserved lemons add a fermented quality that a regular lemon would not," she says. Sortun, who first encountered preserved lemons when she worked for the Tunisian-born chef Moncef Meddeb some 22 years ago, was so taken with the condiment, and Eastern Mediterranean cooking in general, that she opened her own restaurant, Oleana, to honor the cuisine. Chef Michael Solomonov, best known for his landmark Philadelphia restaurant Zahav, agrees: "Sometimes it just doesn't cut it to squeeze a lemon on top of a dish, and that's when preserved lemons come into play. They add a big punch of flavor: heavy citrus, heavy floral notes from the oils in the peel, and ultimately heavy umami. It's that extra something in the background of a dish that piques your curiosity."

Israeli-born chef Einat Admony, of the Middle Eastern restaurant Balaboosta, in New York, is similarly effusive in her praise. For her, preserved lemons are, simply, "insane." So much so that she "literally uses them in everything."

So what is this lemon that is not quite a lemon—that is more than a lemon? Let's take a look.

Once Upon a Lemon: A Brief History of Preserved Lemons

Originally, lemons were preserved for the same reason all things are preserved—to store and eat them past their season. Mary Ellen Snodgrass, author of the Encyclopedia of Kitchen History, traces their earliest reference to an 11th-century account of Arab Mediterranean cuisine (that is, cuisine from Algeria, Tunisia, and Morocco). An actual recipe surfaces in the 12th-century Egyptian treatise On Lemon, Its Drinking and Use, by the Arabic-speaking court physician Ibn Jumay. Jumay's recipe, now some nine centuries old, is almost exactly the recipe of today. According to Toby Sonneman's Lemon: A Global History, the recipe called for "slitting the fruit and filling the gashes with salt, then pressing them into a jar, covering with lemon juice and letting them ferment for weeks."

Over the past thousand years, these salt-cured lemons have made a meandering journey north and west, joining the cuisines of Israel, Iran, Turkey, and India. But it wasn't until far more recently that they began to appear in English-language cookbooks. Though there are cursory mentions in 18th-century texts, like The Experienced English Housekeeper, preserved lemons were most likely introduced to American audiences in the mid-1970s, through Paula Wolfert's James Beard Hall of Fame cookbook, Couscous and Other Good Food From Morocco, and Claudia Roden's subsequent A Book of Middle Eastern Food.

And yet, despite making their way into some American pantries 40-odd years ago, they have retained their aura of exoticism in the United States. Admony laughs as she tells the story of how, when she moved to New York in 1999 to work at Tabla, she showed her Tunisian-cum-Israeli style of preserved lemons to the restaurant's celebrated chef, Floyd Cardoz—in her estimation, a master of spices—and his kitchen staff "had no clue; they had never seen them before."

While you're most likely to find preserved lemons in traditional preparations—Algerian couscous dishes fragrant with olives and raisins, Indian curries, Tunisian chickpea stews, and, yes, the Moroccan chicken tagine—they're a worthy addition to a wide spectrum of meals.

Salt and Patience: DIY Preserved Lemons Basics

Depending on your neighborhood, or how far you're willing to travel, you can likely buy a jar of preserved lemons ready to eat. It's just as easy, however, to make them yourself. The simplest and most delicious method calls for nothing more than lemons, salt, and patience (our own take also adds a touch of sugar for sweetness). It goes like this: Start with a handful of lemons. Cut each fruit into quarters lengthwise, without slicing through the base, and transfer them to a large bowl, tossing them with salt (and sugar, if using), before covering and refrigerating them overnight. The next day, the lemons will have released quite a bit of liquid, and you can transfer the entire contents of the bowl to a canning jar, pressing the lemons down firmly until they're completely submerged. Seal the jar tightly and store it in a cool place for a month or longer—this is one of those things that get even better with age. The result is a lemon with a velvety peel and an intense yet mellow lemony character—whose "texture is soft and flavor is deep," says Sortun.

From there, the options are manifold. In On Food and Cooking, Harold McGee suggests that a solution of 5 to 10% salt is needed to achieve a good North African–style preserved lemon. (As a reference, olives call for the same percentage.) A proper Indian pickled lemon calls for double that amount, as well as turmeric, fenugreek seeds, and chili powder. Or take a tip from Sortun, who encourages you to make a batch with fragrant, sweet Meyer lemons when they're in season. You can also add cloves, mustard seed, or mace—just a few of the spices popularized by the British in the 19th century. Meanwhile, Admony uses a 70% salt to 30% sugar mix and adds chili and paprika, for a smoky, spicy twist, and turmeric, for color. She also lets her lemons ferment for a full three months. But if you're in a hurry, Paula Wolfert has a five-day pickled method. Admony notes that she's "even seen some chefs make a sous vide version in 12 hours," which, she laughs, isn't as good as the real thing, but certainly works in a pinch.

Beyond Tagine: All the Ways to Use Preserved Lemons

Preserved Lemons Recipe (1)

Three months—or even one—may seem like quite the time investment, but being, well, preserved, the cured lemons will last in the back of your fridge for up to a year. And a little goes a very long way to adding that touch of umami and an alluring depth to your cooking.

You don't need to become an expert at couscous or find room in your kitchen for a stoneware tagine to make use of preserved lemons. Pluck one from the jar, rinse it off, and add it to everything that calls for lemon—and everything that doesn't. (As Paula Wolfert notes in her headnote on preserved lemons, "fresh lemons are never an adequate substitute" in recipes that call for the preserved variety, though preserved lemons are a fine—perhaps better!—substitute in recipes calling for fresh.)

Swap out regular lemons with preserved ones in your go-to recipes for roast chicken and fish or grilled meats. For an easy weeknight meal, toss pasta with some good olive oil, a little garlic, and chopped preserved lemon peel. Impress your friends at brunch by mixing a little of the zesty preserving liquid into Bloody Marys and swirling chopped peel into yogurt with a little honey. And impress them again at dinner by adding a twist on the peel in your Martini. Use preserved lemons to liven up potato or grain salads, or to enhance your salad dressing, hummus, or even, Admony suggests, guacamole. Solomonov even likes to freeze his, then grate the peel for granita. (He also adds a pro tip: Don't toss the leftover preserving liquid. Instead, "sprinkle it on vegetables or fish before baking. It ups the ante and brings out all of its surrounding flavors.") Or follow North African tradition and simply put a bowlful out on the dinner table—it might just become your newest favorite condiment.

Recipe Details

Preserved Lemons Recipe

Ingredients

  • 8 to 10 whole lemons

  • 1/2 cup kosher salt (90g Diamond Crystal or 124g Morton's)

  • 1/4 cup (50g)granulated sugar

Directions

  1. Trim 1/4 inch off the top and bottom of each lemon. Split each lemon lengthwise into quarters, keeping quarters connected at base. Transfer to a large bowl. Toss with salt and sugar. Cover with plastic and refrigerate overnight.

    Preserved Lemons Recipe (2)

  2. The next day, the lemons will have released a lot of liquid. Transfer entire contents of bowl to a sterilized canning jar, pressing lemons down firmly until they are completely submerged in liquid. Seal jars and store in refrigerator for at least 2 weeks and up to 6 months.

    Preserved Lemons Recipe (3)

Special Equipment

Sterilized quart-sized canning jars

  • Middle Eastern
  • Lemon
Preserved Lemons Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Do you rinse preserved lemons before using? ›

Preserved lemons add a big punch of flavor, instant umami, and complexity to any dish. Rinse the salt off before using preserved lemon in place of fresh in recipes.

Why did my preserved lemons go mouldy? ›

If there is too much room in the jar, the uppermost lemons will not be covered in juices and can develop mold.

What if preserved lemons are not enough liquid? ›

Add another tablespoon of salt and then another lemon. Repeat this step until all of the lemons are in the jar. It will be tight but that's what you want. If you find that after you put the last lemon in and there's not enough juice, add fresh lemon juice to ensure that the fruit and peels are covered completely.

Do preserved lemons need to be submerged? ›

Be sure to submerge the lemons so that the lemon juice covers the very top). Now, cover the jar tightly and refrigerate for 3 weeks and up to 1 month before consuming. The lemons will soften and mellow as they sit in the pickling liquid.

Should you use the pulp from preserved lemons? ›

While many recipes advise discarding the pulp, you can use the pulp. It is quite salty, so add preserved lemon pulp to a dish slowly, as you would salt, and taste as you go.

Do preserved lemons need to be refrigerated after opening? ›

There's no need to refrigerate after opening.

How to tell if preserved lemon is bad? ›

Tell-tale signs that your preserved lemons have spoiled includes a foul smell that's different from their usual fermented, citrusy aroma, a slimy or excessively soft texture, or the presence of mold. In these cases, it's safer to discard the preserved lemons.

What does 2 year old preserved lemon taste like? ›

The flavor of a preserved lemon needs no justification. It's mellow yet intensely lemony, with none of the nose-tickling bright high notes of the fresh lemon.

Do you eat the skin of preserved lemons? ›

The peel is perfectly edible—in fact, it's the prized part of the fruit, with many discarding the flesh even though it's not strictly necessary. They're pretty potent, so cookbook author and former BA staffer Zaynab Issa recommends adding no more than half of a preserved lemon to a soup or braise if you're unfamiliar.

Do you use the inside of preserved lemons? ›

Both the flesh and rind of preserved lemons are edible. Preserved lemons that are cut before they're preserved will absorb more salt than those that are packed whole. Some recipes call for discarding the super-salty flesh and using only the rind or for rinsing the preserved lemon before cooking with it.

Can you use the brine from preserved lemons? ›

Preserved lemons taste delicious in hummus, pesto, salsa and even guacamole. Be sure to taste as you go when adding this pungent ingredient! Either add the brine in place of some of the fresh lemon juice called for in the recipe or whir in the rind and pulp.

Are preserved lemons supposed to be slimy? ›

Unlike fresh lemons, you really only use the peel, pith and all, of preserved lemons. The pulp gets kind of a slimy texture and is usually discarded. In most cases, you want to rinse the lemon you're using, halve it and cut into julienne, or thin strips, removing the flesh with your thumb.

Why are my preserved lemons bubbling? ›

During the first week of fermentation you may notice bubbles forming. Just open and close the lid to release any gases that have formed. Keep an eye on the jar and if any lemons start to rise about the brine just push them back under and re-arrange the weight.

What should preserved lemons smell like? ›

If you know the comforting smell of lemon-scented wood soap or furniture polish, you'll recognize the same fragrance in preserved lemon. It has all the sunny aroma of fresh lemon, but is somehow more deeply complex.

Can you vacuum seal preserved lemons? ›

Preserved lemons can also be prepared using sous-vide technique. Divide the lemons, salt and spices evenly amongst 3 small vacuum sealing bags. Place into the vacuum sealing drawer and Seal on setting 3 and Vacuum on setting 3.

How to use up preserved lemons? ›

They can be used in stews or tagines, or chopped finely and added to couscous dishes or salads.

Do you use the skin of preserved lemons? ›

The peel is perfectly edible—in fact, it's the prized part of the fruit, with many discarding the flesh even though it's not strictly necessary. They're pretty potent, so cookbook author and former BA staffer Zaynab Issa recommends adding no more than half of a preserved lemon to a soup or braise if you're unfamiliar.

How do you use dried preserved lemons? ›

Add to dips and sauces

Preserved lemons taste delicious in hummus, pesto, salsa and even guacamole. Be sure to taste as you go when adding this pungent ingredient! Either add the brine in place of some of the fresh lemon juice called for in the recipe or whir in the rind and pulp.

Should you wash lemons before using them? ›

To be safe, no matter how you are eating your citrus fruits, it's always a good choice to give them a thorough clean.

References

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