From our food contributor, Diana Bauman.
Okay, so a raise of hands: who here loves the icy cold crunch or sour pucker of a dill pickle on a hot summer day? Me too! Really, nothing says summer like a steaming footlong hot dog or a savory bbq pulled pork sandwich served with a cold pickle on the side. With cucumbers growing in abundance during this season, let’s make some pickles to enjoy at your next family bbq.
Dill pickles, made tangy and sour, are a cinch to make. I make them in a couple of different ways with no canning equipment required. I put up most of my cucumber harvest by fermenting them – brine cured pickles. They’re easy enough to make at home, requiring no vinegar to make, and the end result is a good old fashioned sour pickle filled with probiotics. I love the flavor of a fermented, brine cured pickle. The downside is that although you don’t need any canning equipment to make these pickles, they do need to ferment at room temperature for a good 1-2 weeks. If you’re having a family bbq soon, well, they just won’t be done in time. This is why whenever I make a large batch of fermented pickles, I also put up a few pints of refrigerator pickles that I know my family will be able to enjoy right away.
Refrigerator pickles are easy to make and don’t take much time at all. What’s great about them is that you can use this same simple recipe and pickle any kind of vegetable you may have in abundance. Cauliflower, asparagus, zucchini, carrots, green beans, okra, hot peppers, and one of my favorites… red onions. Really, whatever you may have growing or bits and ends you have leftover from cooking will make great refrigerator pickles.
To make them, all you need to do is cut up the vegetable of your choice and layer them into a pint sized mason jar. I used pickling cucumbers.
Then, add a couple cloves of smashed garlic, about a teaspoon of pickling spice, and then some dill weed, or if you’re growing them or can find them at your farmers market, the head of the dill weed with seeds. Not too much, about a couple teaspoons worth.
Once you’re jars are packed, all you need to do is make a quick brine with apple cider vinegar, water, and salt, and fill the jar.
For refrigerator pickles, I like to use un-pasteurized, raw, apple cider vinegar since it’s filled with immune boosting probiotics. These pickles aren’t just tasty but nourishing. Just make sure to bring the brine just to a simmer, not a full boil. You can find raw apple cider vinegar at any natural food store or the natural food section of your local grocer.
That’s the entire process. Like I said, they are super simple to make, are full of crunch and mouth watering pucker, and will last a few months in your refrigerator…. unless you have a house full of boys that love pickles.
Refrigerator Pickles – Canning Made Simple
Author: Diana Bauman
Prep time: 15 mins
Cook time: 5 mins
Total time: 20 mins
Simple to make, refrigerator pickles recipe that is full of crunch and mouth watering pucker, and will last a few months in your refrigerator.
- 9-10 small pickling cucumbers
- 6 garlic cloves, smashed then peeled (2 per jar)
- 3 teaspoons pickling spice (1 tsp per jar)
- fresh dill weed or dill heads (about a good 1-2 tsp per jar)
- 1 1/2 cups raw, apple cider vinegar
- 1 1/2 cups water
- 2 tablespoons large granule sea salt (kosher or pickling salt)
- Gently clean and remove any dirt and debris from the cucumbers.
- Slice the ends off of the cucumbers and quarter each one.
- Pack them into 3 pint sized mason jars.
- To the jars add the garlic cloves, pickling spice, and dill.
- In a medium sized heavy bottomed pan, bring the apple cider vinegar, water, and sea salt just to a simmer.
- Pour the brine into the jars, leaving about a 1/2″ headspace.
- Screw the lids onto the jars and allow them to cool completely on the counter. Once cooled place the jars in the refrigerator. Let them sit for 24-48 hours before eating.
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Have you ever made refrigerator pickles? Tell me, what vegetables have you used?
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