2 DIY Pickling Recipes For Beginners

Two dill-icious recipes to try this season.

These aren’t your grandma’s pickles, there’s a whole new generation of picklers. It stems from this wave of people moving towards a more sustainable lifestyle, preserving their foods and reducing their food waste. There’s also a health benefit to pickles that are fermented, which just means there’s a lot of good bacteria that are growing in your pickled foods. When you add fermented foods to your diet, you get the benefits of probiotics, so things like kombucha, kimchi, and traditionally pickled vegetables.

Now, our grandmother’s pickles were typically fermented pickles. The recipe for fermented pickles usually includes salt, sugar and water, which is what helps promote good bacteria. You have to let this ferment for a while, so typically you make this style of pickles in the fall and have them in the winter.

You really can pickle anything, carrots, onion, turnips. But today Julia showed us how to make her very own garlic dill pickles.

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Now for these DIYS, you’re going to need a few jars—mason jars, old jars around the house. A great tip for jars that have a sticky label is to create a paste with baking soda and olive oil and rub-down the label and wash it off.

Quick Pickles

What you’ll need:

  1. Cucumbers
  2. Fresh dill
  3. Fresh garlic
  4. Pickling liquid (equal parts vinegar and water)
  5. Kosher salt
  6. Pickling spice

Method:

Flavouring options:

Pickled Watermelon

What you’ll need:

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  1. 1 lb of watermelon rind
  2. 1 ½ cups cider vinegar
  3. 1 ½ cups of sugar
  4. 2 tablespoons of pickling spice
  5. 6 cups of water

Method: