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To: Red_Devil 232
I followed this recipe, varying the spices a bit:

Half-Sour Pickles

"If you are looking for a crispy deli pickle, this is the one to make - mildly sour, richly flavored with dill and garlic."

8 c. water
1/4 c. pickling salt
1 gallon small pickling cucumbers
6 garlic cloves
6 dill heads or sprigs of fresh dill
2 Tbsp. dill seeds
2 small fresh or dried hot peppers
2 Tbsp. mixed pickling spices

Combine water and pickling salt in a pickle crock. Stir well to dissolve the salt.

Wash cukes and remove blossom ends. Drain well. Add the cukes to the salted water, mixing in the garlic, dill, hot peppers, and pickling spices with the cukes. stir gently to distribute the spices evenly. Cover with a weight to keep the cukes submerged in the brine. Cover the crock.

Store the crock at 68 degrees F. Check the crock every day. Remove any scum that forms on the top. The pickles should be "half-sour" in about 3 days. Taste the pickles. If the results are pleasing, prepare the pickles for long-term or refrigerator storage.

Pack the pickles in sterilized quart jars. Pour the brine into a nonaluminum pan and bring to a boil. Boil for 5 minutes. Cool to room temperature. Pour the cooled brine over the pickles, seal the jars and store in the refrigerator. (See note below.)

Because of the relatively low salt concentration in the brine, the pickles spoil easily if they aren't refrigerated after a week. Don't use this recipe if you are looking for a very sour pickle.

Yield: 4 quarts

You know when the fermentation process has gone well when the fermentation begin within a day or so of combining the ingredients in the crock and lasts about as long as the recipe specifies. The brine will be clear and tasty, not cloudy or slightly funky tasting.

If the pickles taste good and have a good firm texture, but the brine is slightly cloudy, drain off the brine (reserving it)and strain out the spices. Bring the reserved brine to a boil and cool to room temp. Pack the pickles into clean quart jars. Add fresh spices. Pour the cooled brine over the pickles and refrigerate. These pickles will keep for at least several months.

If you want to process the pickles for long-term storage, drain off the brine (reserving it). Strain out spices. Bring the reserved brine to a boil in a nonaluminum saucepan. Pack fresh spices and the cukes into hot sterilized jars.

Pour the hot brine over the pickles, leaving 1/2 inch head space. Process in a boiling water bath or steam canner for 5 minutes. Adjust seals if necessary. Let cool for 12 hours, then check seals. Store any unsealed jars in the fridge. Label and store the jars in a cool dry place.

Processing does take away a little of the crispness of the the pickles. Obviously, its major advantage is that the jars need not take up valuable refrigerator space.

I started them on Sunday, so I guess I'll be packing them in jars this weekend. Now, I just need more jars and more space to store them in the fridge.

51 posted on 07/29/2011 8:07:43 AM PDT by Tatze (I reject your reality and substitute my own!)
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To: Tatze

Thank you! I may be growin Cukes next year after seeing your barrel pickles.


55 posted on 07/29/2011 8:13:43 AM PDT by Red_Devil 232 (VietVet - USMC All Ready On The Right? All Ready On The Left? All Ready On The Firing Line!)
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