A quick and simple weekday pasta recipe for the entire family is made with orzo, lemon, basil, bacon, peas, and baked sockeye salmon.
Prep Time: | 15 mins |
Cook Time: | 5 mins |
Additional Time: | 2 days |
Total Time: | 2 days 20 mins |
Servings: | 16 |
Yield: | 2 quarts |
Ingredients
- ½ gallon water
- 2 pounds Kirby cucumbers
- 1 cup tap water
- ⅓ cup kosher salt
- 5 cloves fresh garlic, or more to taste
- 1 bunch fresh dill, stems trimmed
- 3 dried chile de arbol peppers
Instructions
- Pour 1/2 gallon water into a large container or pot. Cover loosely and allow to sit for 24 hours to allow dissolved chlorine to escape.
- Crisp cucumbers by storing in the refrigerator or soaking in very cold water for 1 hour.
- Bring 1 cup water to a boil in a saucepan. Add salt and stir to combine. Set aside to cool.
- Wash cucumbers in cold water and remove any blossoms clinging to them. Quarter large cucumbers lengthwise; cut medium cucumbers in half lengthwise; leave gherkin-sized cucumbers whole.
- Peel and gently crush garlic cloves, but don’t splinter them into fragments.
- Pour cooled salt water into a 1/2-gallon mason jar. Add cucumbers, garlic, dill, and dried chile peppers, arranged attractively. Pack cucumbers tightly; they will shrink as they pickle. Fill the jar with dechlorinated water until cucumbers are just covered to avoid overly diluting brine.
- Loosely cover the jar and set it aside at room temperature; set the jar on a dish if it is full to catch any dribbles. Let sit undisturbed until fermentation begins, 12 to 24 hours.
- Refrigerate pickles in brine and loosely covered as they approach the pickling stage you prefer: new, half-sour, or sour. Don’t overshoot the mark, as refrigeration slows but does not stop fermentation.
- Letting tap water sit for 24 hours removes the chlorine, which inhibits fermentation.
- Ideally, choose small cucumbers of a similar shape and size.
- Fermentation results are more variable than those of any other food preparation method. They can be affected by the ratios of salt to water, brine to cucumbers, cucumber size, cucumber quality (freshness, growing conditions, weather, cultivar/variety, etc.), ambient temperatures during fermentation, and the mysterious behavior of lactobacilli. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Pickles are fickle!
- Try to keep the cukes immersed in the brine. Submerge, rotate, or upend the top pickles daily, as needed.
- If the pickles ferment too fast, refrigerate or add a little more kosher salt. If still not fermenting after a day or so, cut off a piece of submerged cuke and taste it. If too salty, add more plain water. (Salt slows and impedes fermentation.) Remove some brine to make room for the additional water. Allow 24 hours for the adjusted saltiness to equalize.
Reviews
These pickles are delicious! Fermenting veggies at home has never been easy for me but these came out quite well after some fiddling. I got off to a rocky start, though. Read the notes. As written, they were way too salty and I had to work on adjusting the brine. After a week though, they came out very tasty. The brine gets pretty cloudy but reasearch confirmed this is appropriate. I used fresh hot peppers, which didn’t give the heat I wanted. I pierced them and after 2 days they got super spicy. I was happy with the heat, finally. They are a bit too garlicky for me so I will reduce that ingredient in my next batches. They do not stay crunchy. I read that adding a grape leaf (for the tannins) will keep the crunch. I’ll try that next time, too. Thanks for a fun and delicious recipe.