This recipe for bread and butter pickles is the best fermented veggie I've had. Grown-ups love them, my kids love them, even people who don't typically eat fermented veggies love them. These pickles are crispy and delicious! Even if you've disliked every fermented veggie you've tried, give these a shot!
I originally posted a recipe for Bread and Butter Pickles last year. Since then, I learned that these pickles are crispy and delicious even without soaking the cukes in ice water or putting in oak leaves. And, you can even reuse the brine and spices for another batch once the pickles are gone! So this is the updated recipe.
Fermented Bread and Butter Pickles
Makes 1 quart
- 3-4 medium cucumbers (OR zucchinis*)
- 1 tsp mustard powder
- ~20 celery leaves, a stalk of celery, OR a generous pinch of celery seed
- 1/2 cup raw mild honey
- 1/2 cup raw apple cider vinegar
- 1.5 Tb celtic sea salt
- 2 Tb whey
- 1 Tb pickling spice**
- Equipment needed: quart mason jar, rock for weighing down the cucumbers (boil the rock in water for several minutes to make sure it is very clean), cloth tea bag (optional)
- In a medium bowl, combine mustard powder, honey, vinegar, salt, and whey. Stir well to dissolve the honey and salt. You may need to leave this sitting for an hour or two to get everything to dissolve and combine well.
- Wash the cucumbers and celery leaves/stalk well.
- Remove and discard the ends from the cucumbers. Slice the cucumbers evenly; I've used my favorite knife, a mandoline,
or the food processor and they all worked wonderfully.
- Add the celery leaves/stalk (if using) to the bottom of the jar.
- Put the pickling spice and celery seed into a cloth tea bag. This makes it so that you won't have spices stuck to the pickles when it is time to eat them. If you don't have a cloth tea bag, you could just put the spices in the bottom of your jar.
- Add the cucumber slices to the mason jar, packing them down tightly into the jar. Put in the cloth bag of spices around the middle of the jar and then keep packing in the cukes.
- Pour the honey/vinegar mixture over the cucumber slices.
- Pack down the cucumbers so that they are covered by the liquid. If your cucumbers keep floating up to the top, try weighing them down. I use a rock from my yard to hold the cukes down (I originally boiled the rock in water for a few minutes to make sure it was nice and clean, and then cooled it down before putting it on top of the cucumbers.) There should be at least 1-inch of head space at the top of the jar.
- Scrape any spices or cucumber bits that are stuck to the jar back down into the liquid. Then use a clean cloth or paper towel to wipe the inside of the jar above the liquid. (This will help in making sure that the ferment works well and no funky stuff grows at the top of the jar.)
- Put a lid on the jar and leave at room temperature for 2 days; then transfer to the refrigerator. You can taste-test a pickle slice to make sure they are ready before moving them to the fridge. If you'd like them a little more pickled, leave them out for another day.
- Enjoy! Once your pickles are all gone, don't throw out that brine and the remaining spices. Rather, chop some more cucumbers, pack 'em into a clean jar, pour the brine/spices over them, and ferment again! The flavor of the second batch will be a little muted, but still totally tasty!
**I buy Frontier brand mild pickling spice from the bulk section at the natural foods store. The pickling spice is a mixture of organic yellow mustard, organic cinnamon chips, organic allspice, organic dill seed, organic celery seed, organic bay leaf, organic mild chilies, organic cloves, organic caraway, and organic ginger root.
This post is part of Monday Mania and Pennywise Platter!
Hi, these sound wonderful! However, we have a severe milk protein allergy and can't use whey. What can I use in its place? I have veggie culture starter that usually use for my ferments. can I use that and would it just be 2tb like the whey? Thanks so much! Amy
ReplyDeleteHi Amy,
DeleteUsing a cultured veggie starter should work fine, although I've never used that method. From searching around, it looks like most of them come in packets, and you would use one packet for a quart jar. I hope this helps!
Sarah
Thank you for the response! I will try it! We LOVE pickles!
DeleteI tried pickling with whey once and my pickles turned out mushy and not good. I'm scared to try again! Any ideas on why this happened?
ReplyDeleteI've had the same problem with most fermented pickle recipes. I think the difference with this recipe is that the vinegar helps the pickles stay crispy. Try it! They're not at all mushy.
DeleteWhen I make cultured pickles using whey, I also add a few grape leaves. The tannins keep the pickles crisp. Some black tea would also work but may alter the taste of the pickles. I am lucky to have a few wild grape vines growing in my back yard.
DeleteI'm so excited to try this! My grandma has always made bread & butter refrigerator pickles. When I asked for the recipe, it called for 2 cups of sugar, and I couldn't bring myself to make them. These sound like they'll satisfy my pickle cravings. :)
ReplyDeleteHow long would these last in the refrige?
ReplyDeleteThanks, Betsy
Since they are fermented, they should actually last indefinitely. I've had no problems with having them for several months in the fridge.
DeleteThese pickles sound wonderful- they remind me of something we had as kids - my mom would make pickles of all kinds. How thick did you slice your cucumbers? We got a bunch of organic cucumbers at the farmer's market today, and I so want to make these in the next day or so. I have fresh kefir whey in the fridge just waiting...thank you for sharing, Ina
ReplyDeleteI slice them fairly thin; less than 1/4-inch thick. I hope you like the recipe!
Deletethanks for posting.
ReplyDeleteThis recipe makes great, crunchy pickles! Although I do have to make 1.5 recipes to fill the one qt. jar. I just made my 2nd batch, this time I put in zucchini, celery and carrots as well as cucumber.
ReplyDelete