Pickled Hot Hungarian Peppers
When I’m not making one of our favorite hot sauces with the hot black Hungarian peppers I grow, I also enjoy pickling them.
My journey of cooking, gardening, preserving and more
When I’m not making one of our favorite hot sauces with the hot black Hungarian peppers I grow, I also enjoy pickling them.
Hot cherry peppers are among my favorite peppers. Every couple of years I grow at least 6 plants in my garden; we enjoy them grilled, I can a big batch of my pickled hot cherry peppers, and I make at least one jar of this …
My “How to make Fermented Pickles” is one of my most popular recipes so I want to share with you a different, easier way to make crispy fermented pickles: by the quart jar. I started making mine this way when I planted fewer cucumber plants one year and I was forced to make my fermented pickles in smaller batches. I know technically mine are halves pictured here and you can go either way; either spears or halves depending on the size of your cucumbers.
It’s certainly not to say you can’t make small batches of fermented pickles in a crock but this method of fermenting them by the jar is faster and requires less maintenance and I think we’re all on board for that.
This method of fermenting by the jar also doesn’t require any fancy equipment, such as a pickling crock. All you need besides cucumbers are a quart jar, some garlic, spices, and distilled water and even some of these things can be changed up and/or omitted. I’ll talk about these options after the post in the “options” section.
As always when fermenting food, you want to start with clean, clean, clean veggies, containers, and utensils. I don’t go so far as to sterilize my jar or any of the utensils but I do make sure everything is clean and dry before starting.
Makes 1 quart
Ingredients
Directions
You can start taste testing on day 2 if you’ve got sufficient foam and cloudiness. A number of things can factor into how long they need to ferment, the first and foremost being how you want them to taste. These are a few things that can affect the fermentation time:
Options
As I mentioned early in this post, there are a number of options here that you can use and/or omit in this recipe:
These are so, so good! I doubt by now I need to tell you how great fermented foods are for you but it’s always worth remembering. I still ferment pickles in larger quantities in my crock when I have an overload of cucumbers but this is always my go-to when just a small batch is needed.
Hopefully, I’ve not missed anything but please comment if you have any questions. Once you’ve tried these quick and easy, crispy fermented pickles by the jar you may never go back to buying store-bought pickles again!
Enjoy!
In the last few years, shishito peppers have easily become one of my favorite peppers to grow in my garden. They are compact pepper plants as far as pepper plants go but despite their small garden footprint, they are very prolific. I typically grow 2-3 …
Before you tell me this technically isn’t sea glass because it’s not made in the sea, yes I realize this. 🙂 I have a dual 3 lb. rock tumbler that I enjoy making beautiful, shiny rocks and quartz with that I use for different projects …
What to do with blueberries, lemons, and cream cheese that you need to use up in the middle of a pandemic? Make muffins, of course! I was having a rare craving for something a little sweet but something a little tart and, after scrolling through a gazillion recipes and pins online, I finally just mashed up my own rendition of these lemony, cream cheesy, packed with blueberries, muffins.
I’ve seen a lot of variations on these so by all means, feel free to add a bit of cinnamon, nutmeg, almond extract, and/or coconut. Food is meant to be played with, after all. 🙂
Directions
Preheat oven to 400°
That photo above isn’t a cleaned-up beauty shot; these muffins are so moist and creamy that they hardly make any crumbs at all.
My husband and I love all things lemon and these didn’t disappoint. The cream cheese almost makes them more like cupcakes than muffins but I’ll go with muffins since I just enjoyed one for breakfast. 🙂
Feel free to swap out the blueberries for a different fresh berry; I’ll be making these with raspberries next time.
Enjoy, stay safe, and stay well!
This is how to easily repaint and makeover an inexpensive chest of drawers using stain blocking primer and a deep dark color. Amazing, isn’t it?