Quick Pickles – Recipe for salty, crunchy kosher dill pickles in a simple salt and vinegar brine. Easy fast method for great refrigerator pickles with homemade pickling spice.
A friend of mine grew up in New York surrounded by kosher delis and appetizing shops. One of his favorite childhood memories was walking down to the corner store, where they kept large wooden barrels filled with pickles. His father would give him a boost so he could reach deep down into the bottom of the barrel to retrieve what he called “armpit pickles,” so named because you’d have to reach into the brine up to your armpit to get the best, most flavorful pickles. Though the name might not sound appealing, my friend looks back on armpit pickles as one of his fondest childhood food memories.
Pickling got its start about 4,000 years ago, long before delis began popping up on the East Coast. Pickling began as a way of preserving food. To create a pickle, fresh vegetables or fruits are immersed in an acidic liquid or saltwater brine until they are no longer considered raw or susceptible to spoilage. In the case of pickled cucumbers, saltwater brine is a common choice, which results in lacto-fermentation. Lactic microbial organisms, much like the kind that cause milk to curdle, develop. These organisms turn the naturally occurring sugars of the foods into lactic acid. In turn, the environment becomes acidic quickly, so that it is no longer possible for any spoiling bacteria to multiply. Cucumber pickles can also be made with a salt and vinegar brine, a popular choice for home cooks.
Kosher dills have their own unique history. In Claudia Roden’s The Book of Jewish Food, she explains that pickled vegetables were a dietary staple for Jews living in Poland, Russia, Lithuania and the Ukraine. The sharp flavor of pickles paired nicely with the bland bread-and-potato diet of these cold weather countries. For several generations, it was a fall custom for Ashkenazim to fill barrels with cucumbers, beets and shredded cabbage (sauerkraut). They were left to ferment in a warm place for several weeks, then relocated to cool, dark cellars. The pickles would last through the long cold winter until spring, when new crops of fresh produce were available.
Sunday morning at Orchard and Rivington, New York City immigrant tenement district ca. 1915. Source: Library of Congress.
When a heavy influx of eastern European Jews arrived in New York City during the late 1800s and early 1900s, immigrants introduced kosher pickles to America. The process of “koshering” pickles required a rabbi who would supervise the entire production, ensuring that each step was done correctly and that the equipment was used exclusively for pickle making. Cucumbers were washed, then piled in large wooden barrels along with dill, garlic, spices, kosher salt and clean water. They were left to ferment for a few weeks to several months; shorter fermenting time produced brighter green “half sours,” while longer fermentation resulted in “full sours.” Pickles were sold on pushcarts in the immigrant tenement district of New York City. Over time, a multitude of Jewish owned shops began selling pickles straight out of the barrel from their storefronts. Eventually, pickling became a profitable business within the Jewish community.
Pickles are deeply ingrained in Jewish food culture, as emblematic of the Ashkenazi Jewish diet as matzo ball soup and brisket. Sadly, nowadays it’s much more difficult to find a classic kosher dill. Most of the small-scale pickle businesses have died off, replaced by mass-marketed pickles sold in grocery stores. If you’re searching for real Jewish pickles, your best bet is to visit a kosher deli. The first thing that should arrive on your table is a dish of pickles—a combination of full sour and half sour cucumbers, and sometimes a few other vegetables. In a true old-school deli, one should never have to ask for pickles. Their sharp, salty flavor and crunch is the ultimate counterpoint to a fatty corned beef or pastrami sandwich. Oy, I’m making myself hungry.
Most folks don’t have the time or patience to produce old fashioned lacto-fermented kosher dills. This Quick Pickle recipe is a super easy method for quickly producing yummy pickles. The prep only takes about 10 minutes. They aren’t true kosher dills due to the small amount of vinegar used in the brine, but they are quite delicious, and they pickle much faster than the old fashioned kind. My own blend of pickling spices, including chili pepper flakes for heat, adds terrific flavor. Keep them in the fridge for a couple of days, and voila! Quick pickles.
I recently had a reader request a recipe for lacto-fermented kosher dills (no vinegar). If you are interested too, let me know in the comments and I’ll try to squeeze it into my end-of-summer blogging schedule. What’s your favorite kind of pickle… kosher dill? Sweet? Half sour?
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Ingredients
- 8 cloves garlic, sliced
- 2 handfuls fresh dill
- 2 bay leaves
- 1 teaspoon peppercorns
- 1 teaspoon coriander seeds
- 1 teaspoon dill seeds
- 1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes (optional)
- 1/2 teaspoon celery seed
- 1/4 teaspoon fennel seed
- 1 3/4 pounds Kirby or Persian cucumbers (small pickling cucumbers, no wax on skin)
- 4 cups water
- 1/2 cup white vinegar
- 3 tablespoons kosher salt
NOTES
Instructions
- Place the sliced garlic in a small saucepan of water and bring to a boil. Boil the garlic for 1 minute, then drain immediately. This blanching process will keep the garlic from turning blue in the pickle jar.
- Place the blanched garlic, fresh dill, bay leaves and other spices into the pickling jar or jars. If using two jars, divide the ingredients evenly between them, half in each. The red pepper flakes are optional, and will add a little kick to your pickles—if you don’t like spice, feel free to omit.
- Slice off the tip ends of each cucumber, then place them into the jars, half in each jar. It’s okay if they’re tightly packed, they will shrink up a bit as they pickle.
- In a saucepan, bring the water, white vinegar, and kosher salt to a boil, whisking till the salt is fully dissolved. Boil the mixture for about 1 minute, then remove from heat. Pour the hot brine through a funnel into each jar, submerging the cucumbers completely in liquid.
- Let the jars cool completely to room temperature (this will take a few hours). Secure the lids and place pickles in the refrigerator. Your first pickle will be ready to eat in 48 hours; they’ll become more pickled and flavorful as they age. Pickles will keep for up to 2 months.
Nutrition
tried this recipe?
Let us know in the comments!
Kimberley Barca says
My Auntie made the best pickles and India relish too!
Vicki Lynn Kammerer says
Kosher, but Haidar has a point and I agree. I love the little Middle Eastern cukes that are pickled.
David Isenor says
3/4 sour but I can´t ever find a recipe for them.
Nanci Hale Hall VeSota says
Bubbies kosher dill is the only pickle I will eat
Mitchell Sternbach says
Full sour! Distant second choice: half-sour. Dill or sweet are not acceptable. “Not the real thing.”
Jonathan Howard Smith says
Yes!!
Cathe Jones-Brunner says
Kosher, and I´m not even Jewish <3
Delilah Brown Methe says
down south we love our pickles
Ellen Epstein Levine says
Sour
Ingrid Thorngren Gordon says
These looks great and since they are kept in the fridge they will be nice and crisp. They do not have enough vinegar for canning/processing (in case you were wondering). I´m lucky enough to be the Oregon State Fair Pickle Judge…..would love to see your fermented recipe too. <3
Natalya says
I’d really appreciate if you would post the no-vinegar kosher dills recipe!
Margaret Contard says
bread and butter pickles
Gabrielle Wolf-Stahl says
Half sour!
Paul McCool says
Bread & Butter, because my grandmothers made them, and Garlic Dills because they taste so good with a Pastrami Sandwich.
Debra Bish says
Pickled Jalapeno Peppers using the Heinz pickling recipe–very basic.
Jeff Pesek says
Polish dill.
Gardening for Geeks says
I love how you incorporate the history! Great blog!
Gary Myers says
kosher dill
Roosevelt Junnie Spillman says
Kosher….cold and crisp
Jim Linton says
I pickle everything. I am a pickle maniac.