Kosher Pickles

  1. That's it. Everything else is really easy.
  2. Clean and trim the vegetables. Cucumbers keep whole, carrots peel and slice, cauliflower break into flowers.
  3. Clean the pickling pot with a 5% bleach solution or in the dishwasher. Rinse thoroughly.
  4. Put wine/oak/cherry leaves into the pot. The tannin in the leaves will help with keeping your pickles crunchy.
  5. Add dill, garlic, etc. Black pepper work well, so does allspice.
  6. Add the vegetables and cover with water. Be careful to measure the water, you'll need to know the volume so you can add the correct amount of salt.
  7. Add enough salt to create a 5% saline solution - 25g of salt for every liter of water - and stir. Cover the pickles with a clean plate and weigh down with a food grade plastic bag filled with water and salt.
  8. Next, store the pot in a cool place, below 21u0b0Celsius or 71u0b0 F. Above that temperature our good bacteria run the risk of being overrun by the baddies of the bacterial world, spoiling the pot. That's part of the reason why pickles traditionally got started in fall, with the cooler temperatures arrives a better environment for the preservation of food - kind of useful when you think that winter will be next.rnrnCheck the pickles every day. Remove all scum and/or mold that may form at the top. If you've kept your pot clean and your pickles submerged you should have little to worry about, but a little bit of growth is perfectly normal. Remove with a paper towel and make sure to wash your hands - this is an occasion where you need to be scrupulously clean - before touching the pot.rnrnAfter a week or so taste your first pickle. It should be firm and crunchy and taste mildly sour. Over the coming weeks the sour flavour will increase, until the pickles are fully fermented and the flavour will stabilize. When taking pickles out of the brine, always use clean tongs, never your hands. You've got a delicate eco-system in your pot, make sure not to disturb it if you can possibly help it.rnrnVegetables preserves with lacto acidic bacteria have a depth and layerdness of flavour that vinegar pickles can only dream about. As per usual, and this is for Mr. Stephenson, time is the magic ingredient here. Time to allow the flavour to develop, time to allow the vegetables to hanker down for the long, cold winter months.

vegetables, salt, water, garlic, sour cherry, crock pot

Taken from food52.com/recipes/932-kosher-pickles (may not work)

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