Pickled cucumbers topcook.tomathouse.com
Preparation:Special equipment 4 1-quart canning jars; a jar stand or kitchen towel; a large saucepan; jar tongs; a funnel (optional) Ingredients:
- 30 - 40 small cucumbers (about 15 cm long and 2.5 cm thick)
- 2/3 cup salt for pickling
- 1/4 of white cabbage, cut into 5 cm pieces.
- 8 cloves of garlic
- 8 fresh grape or blackcurrant leaves, no more than 4 cm in size.
- 12 dried red chili peppers (optional)
- 4 large dill umbrellas, stems trimmed (or 4 tsp dried dill seeds)
Preparation:
- Sterilize the jars.
Wash the jars and screw-on lids in hot, soapy water and rinse thoroughly. Place a mason jar rack (or a folded kitchen towel) in the bottom of a saucepan and fill halfway with water. Place the jars in the water, completely submerging them. Bring to a boil and simmer for 10 minutes. Remove the jars with tongs and place them on a clean tea towel. Place the lids in the pan of boiling water and let them sit until ready to use.
- Prepare the brine.
Combine 1/3 cup water and salt in a large saucepan and bring to a boil, stirring to dissolve the salt.
- Fill the jars.
Place a layer of cabbage leaves, 1 clove of garlic, 1 grape leaf, 2 chili peppers and an umbrella of dill at the bottom of each sterilized jar.
- Fill the jar with cucumbers, placing them vertically as many as will fit.
- Then add another clove of garlic, a grape leaf, a chili pod and an umbrella of dill to each jar.
- Add brine.
Pour the hot brine into the jars (use a funnel if you have one), leaving 0.3 cm from the top. You may not need all the brine.
- Close the jars.
Wipe the rims of the jar with a cloth soaked in boiling water. Tighten the sterilized lids as tightly as possible.
- Pickle the cucumbers.
Once the jars have cooled, move them to a warm place (approximately 25°C) and leave for 1 week. This warm period should allow the brine to become cloudy and the lids to tighten under pressure.
- Then place the jars in a cool, dark place for at least 6 weeks and up to 6 months, after which the pickles are ready to eat.
Note
Be careful when opening the jars: the fermentation process may cause the brine to splatter. And don't worry if the garlic has darkened; it's still safe to eat..
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