• Dave's Dill Pickles

    From Ben Collver@1:124/5016 to All on Tue Aug 5 10:35:59 2025
    MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

    Title: Dave's Dill Pickles
    Categories: Pickles
    Yield: 1 Batch

    4 lb Pickling cucumbers
    8 Dill heads
    8 cl Garlic
    8 c Water
    2 c White vinegar
    1/2 c Pickling salt
    1/2 ts Crushed red pepper
    4 ts Whole mustard seed

    For whole pickles, select cucumbers that are 3" in length or less. If
    you can only get larger cucumbers, quarter them lengthwise into
    spears for best results. You should not use cukes longer than 6" for
    these pickles. Wash and dry the cucumbers. If making whole pickles,
    prick each cuke a few times with a fork. Place half the dill in the
    bottom of a scrubbed and sterilized gallon jar. Bruise the garlic and
    drop the cloves into the jar and add the crushed red pepper and
    mustard seed. Pack the whole cucumbers or spears into the jar and top
    with the remainder of the dill. You may have some cucumbers left over
    when you're done here; depending upon the size of the cukes, there's
    a chance that not all of them will fit.

    Meanwhile, bring water, vinegar, and salt to a boil in a large
    saucepan. Boil for a few minutes, then allow to cool to room
    temperature. When the brine is cool, pour it over the cucumbers
    making sure they are completely covered. Screw the lid on the jar and
    put it in the back of the refrigerator to cure.

    How long to cure:

    For classic deli half-sour dills, allow the pickles to cure for 3
    weeks. For the taste of a fine Polish dill, allow to cure for at
    least 6 weeks. Because the pickles are never cooked, they're nice and
    crunchy!

    This recipe will also be successful if the ingredients are divided
    among smaller containers. I prefer having one gallon jar in the
    fridge over several smaller jars; it takes up less shelf space.

    A note about the dill:

    I make these pickles right through the winter because the
    supermarkets here carry "baby dill", small dill plants which get
    barely 8" tall before they are harvested. You can use 2 baby dill
    plants in place of each dill head and the recipe comes out just as
    fine.

    Sterilizing the jar:

    My pickle-curing jar is a big plastic jug. I cant boil it to
    sterilize it, so after scrubbing it in hot, soapy water and rinsing
    it well, I put in a splash of chlorine bleach, fill the jug half way
    up with cold water, screw on the lid, and shake it around. Then I
    pour off the bleachwater and rinse well again. Using this method,
    I've never had a batch of pickles "go bad" on me

    Recipe by Dave Sacerdote

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