Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Deli in your own home

     It's easy to make your own Deli-style pickles.  Here's a simple recipe provided by Fine Cooking magazine:


Half-Sour Dill Pickles

3/4 oz pickling salt (1 Tbs. plus 1 tsp), or Kosher salt (2 Tbs Diamond Crystal, 1 Tbs plus 2 tsp Morton), or unrefined sea salt

1 lb firm pickling cucumbers, such as Kirby (6 to 8)

4 sprigs fresh dill

3 large cloves garlic, halved

1/2 tsp cracked black peppercorns

Pinch crushed red pepper flakes (optional)

In a 2-cup measuring cup, dissolve the salt in 1 cup of hot tap water.  When dissolved, add 1 cup cold tap water.  Trim the small round scab from the blossom end of each cucumber.  Tightly pack the cucumbers vertically in a quart jar.  Fit the dill sprigs and garlic around the cucumbers.  Sprinkle the black pepper and crushed red pepper, if using, on top.

Add enough of the salt water to the jar to completely cover the contents, leaving about an inch of airspace at the top of the jar.  If you have any brine left, save it.  Cover the jar with cheesecloth or a kitchen towel secured with a rubber band, or partially screw on the lid.

Put the jar in a cool room (about 65F) away from direct sunlight, and let the pickles ferment for 4 days.  During this time, bubbles of carbon dioxide gas will become visible inside the jar.  Check the pickles daily to make sure they are submerged, and if necessary, top them off with the reserved brine.  If they begin to float, weigh them down with a small heavy object, like a stone wrapped in plastic or a small glass jar filled with water.  It's OK if the liquid clouds slightly.  If it becomes dark or extremely cloudy, mold or fungus is growing in the jar, and the pickles should be discarded.

After 4 days, taste a pickle.  It should be crunchy, lightly sour, and salty, with an aroma of garlic and dill.  If you prefer a more sour flavor, let the pickles ferment, up to 3 more days, tasting daily.  When you're happy with the flavor, refrigerate the pickle jar.  The pickles will remain half-sours for up to 2 weeks.  Within a few weeks, they will have progressed to fully fermented pickles and will keep for years in the refrigerator.

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