
I only remember going down there once as a kid, but in my grandma's basement there were shelves lined with jars full of pickles, and whenever we came to visit (usually once a year) she would send us home with a few. They were my favorite pickles, and I was always sad when they were gone. I was always a little weirded out by the spidery looking heads of dill in the jars, but I knew that was what made the pickles taste good.
Fast forward to being an adult and developing a taste for the refrigerated, non-shelf-stable kind (because it's the only thing that came close to tasting like the ones my grandma made), and then finding myself with an overabundance of cucumbers in the summer (not sure what possessed me to buy an entire ice cream pail full of pickling cucumbers at the farmer's market, but I did). I was really excited when I found out I could make pickles without having to can them, and they were the kind I liked the most!
It feels good to pick up and carry the pickle torch forward into the future (ha).
Notes:
- You want to pack the jars tightly enough that the cucumbers don't move around much (they will float if they're not packed tightly), but not so tightly that there's not enough brine in the jar to flavor them.
- I don't leave them at room temperature for a couple of days like the recipe instructs; I wait until they cool to room temperature, then transfer directly to the fridge. They still taste great.
- Sometimes the garlic will turn blue in the brine as it sits in the fridge, but this is harmless!
Verdict: I love them. This is my first time posting about them, but I've made this recipe for quite a few years and it has become my go-to when I'm not in the mood for sweet pickles.
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RECIPE: Refrigerator Garlic Dill Pickles (The Creekside Cook)