I thought I had missed the pickling season entirely when Jeff got his job and we had to move at the end of August. I was resigned to making due with leftover pickles. Last year I made two kinds of pickles a hot water bath dill pickle from the Ball Blue Book of Canning and Preserving Recipes and a refrigerator garlic dill from the blog Food in Jars. We ate all the refrigerator garlic dills because they were delicious and crisp. We still have half a dozen jars of the soggy, too clove-y and sweet dills from the Ball Blue Book. Even if we had no other pickles I'm not sure we would finish those jars. But, I won't have to find out. I got some pickling cucumbers!
Several folks told me about Hawkins Family Farm which runs a co-op just outside of North Manchester. Before we moved I contacted them and they seemed very open to the idea of me working for food. I've driven out two mornings so far and this exchange is going swimmingly. Last week I did a bunch of weeding in the beans and pea; harvested peas, beans, corn; and thinned radishes. Their cucumbers are kind of at the end of the season, but I found enough to pick to make seven quarts of refrigerator garlic dill pickles.
This recipe is based on Garlic Dill Pickles from Marisa's blog Food in Jars. I did change the recipe up a bit. The origonal recipe uses dried spices. I had access to fresh, so everything but the black peppercorns are straight from the garden. I also sliced the cucumbers into spears rather than fat coins. I liked the coins just fine and they are much more forgiving because the length and width of the cucumbers doesn't matter. However, Jeff likes spears. Actually he likes the whole little pickles even better, but I couldn't fill seven pints with just whole baby cucumbers. I did manage one jar of whole ones just for him, but the other six are spears. also used quart jars rather than pints because they are more space efficient in the refrigerator.
The pickles are excellent. They have a nice salty cider vinegar brine with some spice from the jalapeno and black pepper as well as the richness offered by the fresh garlic and dill. Plus they only took two hours to make start to finish. That includes all the time for me to scrub the cucumbers and take lots of pictures. The only thing I'll change up next year is to double the jalapeno. I'll go for a whole one rather than a half. I like a little more spice.
These pickles are crisp. This is why refrigerator pickles are better than hot water bath pickles. They don't get soggy from seven minutes at a boil. Sure they take up some extra space in the fridge, but they are worth it. They are the perfect accompaniment to sandwiches like the BLTs, Mushroom Burgers or hearty soups like Yellow Split Pea. I even got the ultimate complement when Jeff said they taste like his grandma's pickles!
Refrigerator Garlic Dill Pickles
Makes approximately 4 quarts (or 8 pints - total yield varies depending on size of cucumbers)
4 overflowing quarts of pickling cucumbers, sliced into fat coins or spears or use whole little baby ones4 cups apple cider vinegar
4 cups water5 tablespoons pickling salt16 garlic cloves, peeled (5 per quart jar)4 jalapenos (1 per quart jar)8 heads of dill that have just finished flowering but haven't set seed (2 per quart jar)
4 teaspoons black peppercorns (1 teaspoon per jar)
- Start by preparing your jars. The National Center for Home Food Preservation recommends "sterilizing empty jars, by putting them right side up on the rack in a boiling-water canner. Fill the canner and jars with hot (not boiling) water to 1 inch above the tops of the jars. Boil 10 minutes at altitudes of less than 1,000 ft. At higher elevations, boil 1 additional minute for each additional 1,000 ft. elevation."
- Wash and slice the cucumbers into which ever shape you wish. A quick tip when cutting spears, if the center of the cucumber has lots of seeds you can trim the seedy part out. Here's how I did the spears:
- Arrange jars on counter and dole out the spices (garlic, dill, black peppers and jalepeno) into each. Pack the cucumbers firmly into the jars. You don’t want to damage the cukes, but you do want them packed tight. (The first time I made pickles I failed to do this and wound up with not enough brine and fewer pickles than I would have liked.)
- Make the brine by combining the cider vinegar, water and salt in a large sauce pot. Bring to a simmer. Immediately after the brine comes to a simmer pour into the pickles jars leaving 1/2 inch head space. It is important to not let the brine simmer very long because the evaporation will change your ratios and make the liquid extra vinegary and salty.
- Wipe the rims with a clean towel and apply lids and rings. You could also use the zinc reusable freezer jar lids. Let the jars cool to room temperature, label them and then put them in the fridge.
- Wait until at least overnight before you try them. The flavors will become stronger as the pickles sit. These will keep for at least a year.
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