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pickel processing questions
I am in the process of preparing several five gallon plastic pails of
classic brine pickels. All the posts I see are years old, so I have a few clarifications to ask. First I will detail the process: scrub the whole fresh cucumbers, add diced garlic, several dill stalks, mixed spices, and 2 cups of salt (why uniodized?) per gallon (10% brine) of fresh water, (no vinegar). Place disc with weight ( in ziplock bag) on top to keep everything under liquid. After several days, bubbles, then scum on top ...remove with papertowel. After three to four weeks at around 70 degrees, they are completed garlic dill Kosher barrel pickels. Here is the discussion part: In the old stores when I was a kid, at the Deli, they had real wood barrels and the pickels were NOT refrigerated, just a plastic lid on top. Once the fermentation has completed, how long can they stay unrefrigerated? Does it reach a point where so much acid is produced, that no mold forms? OR, do you add some vinegar to accomplish the above? Currently, I removed completed pickels, cut into spears, place in plain water for several hours to reduced some of the saltyness, drain, add some vinegar, fresh dill, tad of garlic, add fresh water and place in frig ...lasts many weeks (months?) BTW, if you keep flushing with fresh water, you can totally remove all the salt, but then they taste terrible! Any comments on any of the above statements greatly appreciated. Stew Corman from sunny Endicott |
Firstly,, uniodizd salt keeps the rind green.
But most of all, why do you rinse the pickles from the brine????? I have never heard of that...try lessening the salt if you don't like the taste but don't rinse the brine off...it protects the pickle from bacteria. Using unboiled tap water to rinse them off is just puting bacteria back on the pickle....that's a big no-no. After soaking in barrels for the alloted time, boil a less salty, watered down brine with a fresh batch of seasonings and boil jars and caps and store them... and, pickles never lasted long in those barrels at the deli....yours at home will take quite some time for you to consume them all... http://community.webtv.net/R-J-Q/FIRSTANNUALALLYEAR http://www.wtv-zone.com/cal555/index.html |
Firstly,, uniodizd salt keeps the rind green.
But most of all, why do you rinse the pickles from the brine????? I have never heard of that...try lessening the salt if you don't like the taste but don't rinse the brine off...it protects the pickle from bacteria. Using unboiled tap water to rinse them off is just puting bacteria back on the pickle....that's a big no-no. After soaking in barrels for the alloted time, boil a less salty, watered down brine with a fresh batch of seasonings and boil jars and caps and store them... and, pickles never lasted long in those barrels at the deli....yours at home will take quite some time for you to consume them all... http://community.webtv.net/R-J-Q/FIRSTANNUALALLYEAR http://www.wtv-zone.com/cal555/index.html |
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