UNCLE BILL'S DILL PICKLES
I have been making this recipe for many years and have had excellent success each and every time. They stay nice and crunchy for a long time.
Provided by William Uncle Bill
Categories Peppers
Time 16h10m
Yield 4 quarts
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- PREPARATION OF DILL CUKES THE NIGHT BEFORE.
- Remove blossom ends and stems and discard.
- Place dill cukes into a large tub or a clean laundry tub.
- Cover with cold water.
- Add 2 bags of ice cubes or 1 block of ice.
- Let chill overnight.
- BRINE.
- In a cooking pot, add water, vinegar, pickling salt and brown sugar and bring to boil.
- Boil for 2 minutes.
- Prepare 4- 1 quart wide mouth canning jars by washing well with soap and water and then rinsing well with hot water.
- Place jars upside down on the rack in the oven and heat at 325 F for about 15 minutes.
- Wash and drain dill cukes.
- Place 1 dill head and stem in the bottom of each jar.
- Stuff the jars with cukes, vertically.
- Stuff a few sliced carrots, 5 garlic cloves and 4 horseradish pieces in the voids between the cukes in each jar.
- Stuff one Jalapeno pepper into each jar.
- Place another dill head and stem on top of the cukes in each jar.
- Fill jars with hot brine to within 1/2" of top of jars.
- Make sure that none of the dill head is touching the top of the jar.
- Push the dill heads down if necessary.
- Wipe tops of jars clean.
- Prepare canning lids according to manufacturers instructions.
- Place lids on jars and screw on screw tops finger tight only.
- Prepare a canner and bring water to a boil.
- Place jars in rack with lids up and immerse in the boiling water.
- Boil or process for 10 minutes.
- Remove jars onto a dish towel and cover with another dish towel to cool.
- Jars are sealed when the lids pop and are concave (curved down).
- Should any jar not seal, just remove the lid and discard and place another prepared lid and repeat the process.
- When cooled and sealed, label jars and store in a cool, dark place.
- Allow 4 to 5 weeks for flavors to develop before using.
- This recipe makes 4- 1 quart jars and requires 12 to 16 dill cukes for each quart depending on the size of the cukes.
- Dill cukes should be 4" to 5" long and as fresh as possible.
HOMEMADE DILL PICKLES
If you make a simple salt brine, add some spices, and submerge Kirby cucumbers in it for about a week, you get some fairly delicious pickles. I'm pretty sure if you measure your salt right and store the fermenting pickles at an appropriate temperature you'll get crunchy pickles.
Provided by Chef John
Categories Side Dish Sauces and Condiments Recipes Canning and Preserving Recipes Pickled
Time P7DT15m
Yield 16
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- Place water, salt, and garlic into a large saucepan. Add cloves, bay leaves, coriander seeds, and black peppercorns. Stir until salt is dissolved. Heat over low for just a few minutes to bring water to room temperature. The water should not be warm.
- Place some dill flowers in the bottom of a jar or crock large enough to hold the cucumbers, spices, and some brine. Place a few of the cucumbers on top of the dill weed. Alternate layers of dill flowers and cucumbers, ending with a layer of dill. Pour pickling brine into the crock. Gently tap or shake the crock to eliminate any air bubbles. Weigh down the pickles with a small ramekin to ensure they stay below the surface of the brining liquid. Top with more brine. Reserve any extra brine to add if necessary during the fermentation process. Cover crock.
- Place crock where it can ferment at a temperature between 65 and 75 degrees F. Let pickles ferment for a week, checking every day to ensure pickles remain submerged. Small bubbles may appear; this is a normal product of the fermentation process. Add more brine if necessary.
- After about 8 days, you can skim off the foam. Test a pickle for flavor and crunch. You can continue fermenting them for a couple more days or, if you like them at this point, transfer pickles to a large jar. Fill jar with the brine from the fermentation process. Cover and store finished pickles in the refrigerator.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 12.4 calories, Carbohydrate 2.9 g, Fat 0.1 g, Fiber 0.6 g, Protein 0.5 g, Sodium 2886.8 mg, Sugar 1 g
POLISH DILL PICKLES MADE IN A CROCK
While my Polish grandmother canned the world's best dill pickles, she made "crock" pickles to use up the over abundance of cucumbers. They were our favorites. I make them in smaller amounts using the ratio of ingredients to the amount of cucumbers. Leave out the grape leaves if you can't find them. Prep time does not include fermentation time.
Provided by Lorac
Categories Vegetable
Time 15m
Yield 1 crock
Number Of Ingredients 7
Steps:
- Place ingredients in bottom of crock with cucumbers.
- Pour mixture (water, vinegar, salt) over cucumbers.
- Throw in a few more pieces of dill.
- Submerge pickles under water by placing a plate on top weighed down by a jar of water.
- When a film appears, just skim it off.
- Try tasting smaller pickles after 5 days.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 1108.1, Fat 8.2, SaturatedFat 2.6, Sodium 114579, Carbohydrate 255.2, Fiber 33.5, Sugar 110.8, Protein 46.4
DILL PICKLES
Make your own dill pickles at home with Alton Brown's easy recipe from Good Eats on Food Network.
Provided by Alton Brown
Time P10DT15m
Yield 3 pounds pickles
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- Combine the salt and water in a pitcher and stir until the salt has dissolved.
- Rinse the cucumbers thoroughly and snip off the blossom end stem. Set aside.
- Place the peppercorns, pepper flakes, garlic, dill seed and fresh dill into a 1-gallon crock. Add the cucumbers to the crock on top of the aromatics. Pour the brine mixture over the cucumbers in order to completely cover. Pour the remaining water into a 1-gallon ziptop plastic bag and seal. Place the bag on top of the pickles making sure that all of them are completely submerged in the brine. Set in a cool, dry place.
- Check the crock after 3 days. Fermentation has begun if you see bubbles rising to the top of the crock. After this, check the crock daily and skim off any scum that forms. If scum forms on the plastic bag, rinse it off and return to the top of the crock.
- The fermentation is complete when the pickles taste sour and the bubbles have stopped rising; this should take approximately 6 to 7 days. Once this happens, cover the crock loosely and place in the refrigerator for 3 days, skimming daily or as needed. Store for up to 2 months in the refrigerator, skimming as needed. If the pickles should become soft or begin to take on an off odor, this is a sign of spoilage and they should be discarded.
UNCLE BILL'S MUSTARD PICKLES
This recipe has been a family favorite for many years. I made some changes to the original family recipe to enhance the flavor of the finished product.
Provided by William Uncle Bill
Categories Cauliflower
Time 14h18m
Yield 8 jars
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- Wash and finely chop cucumbers.
- Seed and dice sweet red and green peppers.
- Place chopped cucumbers and peppers in a large bowl.
- Sprinkle over with pickling salt, cover and let sit overnight.
- The next morning, drain off the liquid and discard.
- Finely chop cauliflower, onion and celery and mix in with the cucumbers and peppers.
- Transfer vegetables to a large cooking pot.
- Add vinegar and sugar and bring to a boil.
- Reduce heat and simmer for 10 to 15 minutes until vegetables are just tender, DO NOT OVERCOOK.
- In a small bowl, mix mustard and turmeric in a half cup of cold water.
- When vegetables are nearly done, mix in mustard mixture and stir until well blended and bring mixture back to just boil.
- Sterilize and prepare canning jars of your choice.
- Fill jars to within 1/4" of the top of the jars.
- Apply lids and screw tops and process according to the method you are most familiar with.
- When jars are sealed and cooled, label and store in a cool, dark place.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 524.3, Fat 2.6, SaturatedFat 0.3, Sodium 2650.5, Carbohydrate 122.1, Fiber 5.6, Sugar 110.4, Protein 5.1
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