You Will Want This Once-Secret Recipe for the Best Pickled Carrots

It’s from The Seaboard Cafe in Raleigh — and comes with a great story

Rachel Wharton
Heated

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Blessed by the holy quintuple: white vinegar, sugar, garlic, onion, and black peppercorn. Photo: Linda Wharton

This is only partially a story about a really good pickled carrot recipe, a recipe that has been kept a secret for the past 29 years by the Seaboard Cafe in Raleigh, North Carolina, a restaurant that happily just reopened after six weeks in purgatory.

The Seaboard Cafe, which opened the same year I graduated from high school a mile down the road, is an accidental Raleigh icon. It’s a sandwich shop hidden inside the old brick railroad station that used to provide a straight shot by train to New York City, where I moved 20 years ago. (Now you have to take the Carolinian an extra hour east, through Rocky Mount.)

I previously thought the Seaboard Cafe was an old Raleigh lunch counter, someplace with recipes handed down by generations of North Carolinians. But it is actually the 1991 passion project of a Mexican American from Houston, Richard Perales.

The cafe has always been an indoor-outdoor affair, with paper plates and stackable plastic patio chairs, in between the blue and white wooden roof of the old train platform and all the flowering potted plants set out for sale. All this gives it a European cafe kind of feel, for Raleigh: a European…

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Rachel Wharton
Heated
Writer for

I’m a James Beard Award-winning journalist and author of the book American Food (A Not-So-Serious History) NC >> NYC >>find more of my work at rachelwharton.net