In the food section of Washington Post online, I found a recipe for 
scrapple (a fairly "refined" version) and sent it to my wife. Since she created 
Auntie N's no-crapple scrapple,  I thought she would be most interested in this recipe. As she was  looking through the scrapple recipe, she also came across a recipe for a  dressing which is based on (store-bought) "chow-chow", 
Pennsylvania Dutch  pickles.  Although she is not Pennsylvania Dutch, she grew up in the  Pennsylvania Dutch country. She tells me that chow-chow was ubiquitous  and appeared everywhere. It was even served in the school cafeteria.
Chow-chow is one of the classic Pennsylvania dutch "
Seven Sweets and Seven Sours"  which by tradition should be included in every dinner served to  company. The seven sours included: pickled vegetables (such as pickled  cauliflower, beets, or cabbage), coleslaw, dill pickles, green tomato  relish, meat jelly and spiced cucumbers in addition to chow-chow. (For  those who are interested the sweets included: jelly (currant or apple),  apple butter or apple sauce, preserves such as quince, candied  watermelon rind or wild strawberry, two or three pies such as 
schnitz, 
shoofly, 
funeral or 
montgomery  and cheese cake). As a kid, my wife particularly liked chow-chow  because she could pick out the veggies she liked best from the wide  selection that made up the dish. Although my wife knew chow-chow as  exclusively PA dutch, we found out that it is also a 
southern dish.  The Pennsylvania version, however, is said to be much sweeter than the  southern.  Over the years my wife has looked for but never found a  recipe that reproduces the chow-chow of her childhood.  She searched on  line and found this one based on an old Pennsylvania dutch cookbook from  the 1930's.
 

 
Vegetables:  Red and yellow pepper, cut in strips (one each), Cauliflower (one head,  separated into small florets), celery (two stalks cut in to 3 inch  buttons), green beans (on hand full), corn (kernels from 2 cobs,  uncooked), kidney beans (one 15 oz can), black beans (one 15 oz can),  Lima beans (one package, frozen thawed) (picture below upper left). The  cauliflower and beans were precooked by steaming.
Pickling liquid:  She used sushi vinegar (1 cup), (this is obviously her  modification--sushi vinegar is not traditional to Pennsylvania Dutch  cooking. She said she used it because it is milder than the traditional  cider vinegar), sugar (1 cup), water (1 cup), kosher salt (2 Tbs.),  ground turmeric (1 tbs), black pepper corns (1 tbs), cinnamon stick  (one), whole all spice (1/2 tbs). She simmered these ingredients in a  pot for about 30 minutes. (top right picture).  
Then she  strained the syrup to remove the spices. She poured the strained syrup  back into the pot and added whole bay leaves (3), hot red peppers  (dried, 2), yellow mustard seed (2 tbs), celery seeds (1 1/2 tsp) and  simmered the mixture for another 10 minutes. 
She arranged  the vegetables in a glass baking dish (top left picture, since we did  not have a glass pickling jar) and poured the hot liquid over the  vegetables, stirred well and covered. After it cooled she put it in the  refrigerator. The recipe said 'wait at least a week before  serving. Because of the way these pickles were made they are considered  "refrigerator pickles" meaning that they should be kept in the fridge  and will not last more than a couple of weeks. The traditional PA dutch  method is, of course sterilized, "heavy duty" canning.

 
After  waiting a week my wife tasted the chow-chow...she was ecstatic!! This  was the traditional taste of her childhood that she had been looking for  all these years.  She was so excited she called me at work to tell me  the pickles were a success. She said that the minute she tasted them she  was instantly transported back to her childhood--summer picnics,  dinners at friend's houses, cafeteria lunches, community suppers at the  firehouse. As she said, Proust really knew what he was talking about  with those 
madelaines.  
 
This  is a very mild pickle with a pleasing sweet and sour taste. If truth be  told, it is a little too sweet for me (my wife says that she probably  liked it as a child because it was sweet--she said she still likes it a  lot). All the additional spices give it a distinctive depth of flavor.  The veggies are still very crisp and the diversity of ingredients makes  it very interesting. Chow-chow is sometimes referred to as "the end of  summer pickles". It includes such a variety of vegetables because these  are all the veggies that are left over from pickling individual  vegetables from the summer harvest. I suspect my wife will be making  this again. It is certainly worth the effort.