I love Moroccan food and I go through a fair amount of preserved Lemons in the course of a year. From what I've read, Meyer Lemons are a pretty close match to the sweet Lemons grown in Morocco, and they're in season now. I came across some in the market today and decided to make them myself...
There are half a dozen lemons in each package. I quartered eight of them almost all the way through after cutting off the stem end of the lemons. I left a half an inch at the bottom uncut to hold the qauarters together.
Holding the quartered lemons over a non-reactive bowl, I squeezed most of the juice out of each quarter and caught the juice in the bowl, flicked out the seeds and sprinkled the flesh inside of each lemon with a quarter tbsp of kosher salt, then packed them into a quart jar with a tight-fitting lid. The eight quartered and salted lemons pretty much filled the quart jar. I squeezed the other 4 lemons into the bowl and stirred in a quarter cup of kosher salt until the salt dissolved. I strained out the seeds as I filled the jar with the salty lemon juice, and tightly fitted the cap on the jar.
From here, you just keep the jar in a dark room-temperature place, and shake it up whenever you think of it to redistribute the salt and lemon juice for 30 days. The lemons will ferment and soften. Refrigerate, and the preserved lemons will keep for up to 2 years, gradually soaking up the salty lemon juice and getting softer as time goes by.
There are half a dozen lemons in each package. I quartered eight of them almost all the way through after cutting off the stem end of the lemons. I left a half an inch at the bottom uncut to hold the qauarters together.
Holding the quartered lemons over a non-reactive bowl, I squeezed most of the juice out of each quarter and caught the juice in the bowl, flicked out the seeds and sprinkled the flesh inside of each lemon with a quarter tbsp of kosher salt, then packed them into a quart jar with a tight-fitting lid. The eight quartered and salted lemons pretty much filled the quart jar. I squeezed the other 4 lemons into the bowl and stirred in a quarter cup of kosher salt until the salt dissolved. I strained out the seeds as I filled the jar with the salty lemon juice, and tightly fitted the cap on the jar.
From here, you just keep the jar in a dark room-temperature place, and shake it up whenever you think of it to redistribute the salt and lemon juice for 30 days. The lemons will ferment and soften. Refrigerate, and the preserved lemons will keep for up to 2 years, gradually soaking up the salty lemon juice and getting softer as time goes by.