Fermented Dill Pickles
MAKES: 1/2 GALLON TIME: 15 MINUTES
Ingredients
For pickles:
4-6 grape, oak, horseradish, or bay leaves
6-9 cloves garlic, peeled
2 large heads of dill
Spices to taste: black peppercorns, red pepper flakes, mustard seeds, etc. (Secret ingredient: for an extra bite, add a few strips of fresh horseradish to the spice mix!) we recommend picklingspices
Enough pickling cucumbers to fill a ½-gallon jar
For fermented pickle brine:
1 ½ cups distilled white vinegar (you can also use apple cider vinegar)
2 cups of chlorine-free water
¼ cup sugar
4 tsp of kosher salt
Instructions
Make a brine by dissolving 4 tablespoons sea salt in 2 cups of chlorine-free water. (Note: this recipe will possibly make more than what is needed, you may save extra brine to be used in future ferments.)
In a half-gallon jar add a couple of the tannin-containing leaves, a few cloves of garlic, the heads of dill, and ⅓ of the spices.
Pack half of the cucumbers tightly on top of the spices. (The longest ones work best at the bottom.)
Repeat a layer of leaves, garlic, and spices. Add another tightly packed layer of cucumbers and top them off with more garlic and spices.
Pour the pickling brine over the pickles, leaving 1-2 inches of headspace. Place another tannin-containing leaf on top of the pickles as a cover between the pickles and the surface of the brine. Use a fermentation weight to keep the pickles under the liquid, if necessary. Cover the jar with a tight lid, airlock lid, or coffee filter secured with a rubber band.
Ferment at room temperature (60-70°F is preferred) until desired flavor and texture are achieved. If using a tight lid, burp daily to release excess pressure. The brine should turn cloudy and bubbly, and the pickles should taste sour when done.
Eat right away, or store in a refrigerator or root cellar for months and enjoy them all winter long.
Source: Cultures for Health