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Refrigerator Kosher Dill Pickles

Cookbook author Sylvia Thompson pays homage to screenwriter Irving Brecher, author of the Marx Brothers' "Go West" and other classics, in her adaptation of his kosher dill pickle recipe in her book, "The Kitchen Garden Cookbook," 1995. These dill pickles are about half-fermented then stored in the refrigerator, which leaves them quite crunchy and bursting with the garlicky, sour taste of a fine kosher pickle. Persian cucumbers work well in this recipe.


Recipe Ingredients

  Pickling Spice
6 tablespoons 90mlMustard seeds
12   Bay leaves - crumbled
4   Dried hot red peppers - (3" long) - crumbled (small)
48   Allspice
48   Black peppercorns
4 teaspoons 20mlGround coriander
1   Fresh ginger - (2" long) - unpeeled, grated
  Pickles
6 lbs 2724g / 96ozPickling cucumbers - (to 7 lbs) - uniformly 3" to 4" l
6 sections  Dill - (or more) - cut in short pieces
10 sections  Garlic cloves - thinly sliced (large)
6 1/2   Water
1 1/2 cups 355mlCoarse salt

Recipe Instructions

Combine mustard seeds, bay leaves, red peppers, allspice, peppercorns, coriander and ginger in small bowl.

Soak cucumbers in cold water 10 minutes to clean. Drain. Line bottom of 3-gallon clay crock with dill sprigs. Sprinkle with 1/2 Pickling Spice and garlic. Place cucumbers on top in double layer (do not pack too tightly). Repeat dill and cucumber layers until all cucumbers are in crock, topping with any remaining dill and remaining 1/2 Pickling Spice and garlic cloves.

Stir 6 quarts water and salt together until salt has dissolved and water is clear. Pour brine into crock, covering cucumbers by at least 2 inches. Take dish of smaller diameter then mouth of crock and place on top of cucumbers.

Fill a resealable plastic bag with 1 1/2 cups water, seal and set on top of plate. This should hold cucumbers beneath brine. Cover with cloth and set in a well-ventilated place at room temperature.

In 3 days, add 1/2 quart water to brine. In 6 or 7 days, cucumbers should have changed color and have the flavor of mildly salty and sour pickle. If you prefer strong flavor, ferment several more days. If scum is present, skim and clean plate and plastic bag.

When pickles reach desired flavor, put them in jars covered with brine and spices and store in refrigerator up to 6 months.

This recipe yields 4 to 5 quarts, 6 to 8 pickles per quart.

Each of 80 servings: 9 calories; 178 mg sodium; 0 cholesterol; 0 fat; 2 grams carbohydrates; 0 protein; 0.28 gram fiber.

Source:
The Los Angeles Times, 09-01-1999

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