No Cukes in the Garden, But Making Pickles

Making homemade fermented pickles, but don’t have my own cucumbers to use.

Homemade fermented cucumbers for pickles

After a while gardeners come to realize where to spend their time so it pays off. Why waste efforts to bring in no food? I feel this way about growing cucumbers.

I’ve planted cukes over and over. I’ve tried growing them early, covering them at night, picking off the worms. And all that might be worth it if I got a nice crop, but that has never happened.

My dill plants are mostly gone by, but a few were still green enough to use the flowers for adding to fermented cucumbers.

Fermenting

I’ve done some fermenting in the past. Cabbage and Daikon radish come to mind. When I had an abundance of green beans I tried twice to ferment those without luck. What I really wanted was cucumbers.

For the most part I shop at Aldi. It is the most affordable, but their produce can be old. Instead of getting the little packs of small cucumbers I chose two of the long, wrapped ones.

making pickles in saltwater brine

I love my Weck jars (Amazon paid link). I use them for everything from storing food, to making sourdough starter, and fermenting. The link goes to Amazon, but I buy my Weck jars from the Weck website. It can be hard to figure out what sizes to buy, so let me tell you which ones I prefer.

Weck Jars

In the photo above I am using the Tulip (paid link) in two sizes. The Tulip jar has a wide opening and all Weck jars come with a glass lid. The smaller jars, and I have a few different types, have smaller openings and also come with glass lids. The Mold jars also work well for fermenting.

I buy my Wecks from the website. They come in packs, such as 6 large Tulips, or combo packs. They are cheaper than Amazon, but there is a shipping charge. I prefer to know that I am actually getting the real Weck jars and with Amazon, there is always a possibility they will not be.

What I do to make my ferments using Weck is this: I use a large jar then put the smaller glass lid down inside to cover the food and keep it submerged. I add the large lid to sit loosely on top.

If you know anything about fermenting, it is that the food must stay submerged in the saltwater brine. If it pops up, mold can form and everything had to be thrown away. This is why everything needs to be packed in tight. Once the food begins to ferment, it bubbles and everything wants to float. The smaller glass lid keeps that from happening. The cover lid is not tight – it is just sitting on top, so any overflow from the bubbling can easily escape. This is why my pickle jars are sitting in bowls.

If you want to try this yourself, just ask – these days Chatgpt and AI knows everything. For my two jars I used 1 1/2 Tbsp. sea salt mixed into 4 cups of water. I only used about half to cover both filled jars.

This is day four for my pickles and I plan to try one soon. They can stay out on the shelf for weeks, but the taste will change. A warmer climate speeds up the ferment. The longer they stay out on the shelf, the softer they get, supposedly.

I also have a pH food meter to test my ferments, just to be on the safe side.

Although I would love for these pickles to be made from fresh backyard cucumbers, I have to make do. It is impossible to grow cucumbers in this climate, but I can grow dill. I added some whole, dill flowers to each of the jars for flavor.

I have not made this type of pickle before, but fermenting adds good bacteria to food. It is a bit like eating yogurt for the healthy gut bacteria, but in yummy pickle form. If I love these pickles, I plan to make more, but my dill will be gone. I have saved some dill seeds, which might work too.

Are you growing cucumbers this year? Will you make fermented pickles?

More gardening stories from my Florida yard.

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Author: Pam

New England native, Florida resident. Blogging about boating, beach-combing, gardening, camping, and knitting. Work for Zazzle as a designer since 2008.

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