Skip to main content

Home Made Additive Free Gherkins: Delicious Natural Pickles Made With Bread, Sunshine and Some Herbs

Gherkins, or pickles, appear in the cuisine of many countries. They are delicious as a relish, a salad vegetable, give extra bite to sandwich fillings and salads, and they are also used as an accompaniment to hot dishes – a pleasant contrast to the warm food. They are also an excellent, healthy snack food.

Additive Free Gherkins

You can easily make your own additive free pickles, free from artificial colorings, flavors, or preservatives. This is a simple Hungarian recipe that doesn’t require much effort. The gherkins will taste, of course, slightly different to the store brought variety, but that’s because they are completely natural.

Summer Treat

This particular recipe is not good for long term storage – that is, keeping them over winter This recipe is one of what is called “summer treats”, along with the elder flower drink. It is made at the beginning of summer when the dill and the tiny cucumbers just begin to ripen. It can be made – and eaten – continuously over the summer as long as the small cucumbers and dill can be obtained. Spices are all to taste, so you can alter amounts as you wish.

SUMMER GHERKINS

Ingredients

  • 1 clean big glass jar, approx 1.5 litres or use several smaller jars, with screw lids
  • 1 kg gherkin cucumbers, left whole
  • 2 large fresh cloves garlic, peeled
  • 4 to 5 fronds of fresh dill or 1 coffee spoon dill seeds (according to taste)
  • 1 litre warm water – out of the tap
  • Salt – approx one teaspoon, or less if desired

Method

  1. Wash the gherkins
  2. Top and tail them
  3. If they are very thick, insert a sharp knife about 1 cm from the top, stick it right through the gherkin, and draw down to 1 cm from the bottom; turn the gherkin, and do it again, so there’s a cross through it
  4. Additive Free GherkinsPack the gherkins into the jar.
  5. Add enough salt to the water so it tastes like sea water
  6. Fill the jar/s with the water until it reaches the point where the glass curves in to the top
  7. Poke in the dill, or scatter in the seeds, and the garlic cloves (if you use smaller jars you may have to cut the cloves up and put a bit into each jar)
  8. Cut a thick slice of white bread and stuff it into the top of the jar so the water covers it
  9. Cover the bread with a saucer/s upturned on the top of the jar/s
  10. Stand in the sunshine for three days to ferment – you might have to top up the water during the three days. The mixture will go cloudy and tiny bubbles will form as it starts to “work”
  11. After the three days, take out the bread and put a normal lid on the jar

Let stand inside for three days to settle and for the flavors to set, and then eat.

If there is a lot of bread sediments in the water you can sieve the liquid if you like, but the sediment doesn’t affect the taste if you leave it in there; it just looks a bit cloudy.

The post Home Made Additive Free Gherkins: Delicious Natural Pickles Made With Bread, Sunshine and Some Herbs appeared first on Downtown Homestead.



from Downtown Homestead http://downtownhomestead.com/home-made-additive-free-gherkins/

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

How to Create an Evening Oasis of Bloom and Fragrance

I think it is equally important to turn your outside space into a place to feed your family, but not overlook the chance to escape into it. We have a suburban house, that has a backyard backed up to 5 other yards, so we wanted to create a perfect little oasis for ourselves to escape into. So, we are creating a moonlight garden, to give us a perfect little escape for those late-night bonfires.   Many plants bloom in the evening, particularly in warm climates, and their delicious fragrance can be smelled on the breeze perfuming the whole area. The flowers are usually white or light yellow.   One vine that I especially like is an annual called, appropriately enough, moonflower. It’s in the same family as morning glories and the large white flowers can be up to 6 inches across and very fragrant.   The great thing about this plant is the way it opens its flowers. The large buds look like furled white beach umbrellas. But look again. Did you see the bud move? As the twili...

What Changes Can I Make to My Garden to Be More Natural?

Gardening has changed a bit in recent years as people’s philosophy of gardening is starting to change to go back to more natural and organic methods. For those who have been gardening for a number of years, these new practices might be a bit hard to understand at first since the traditional ways of doing things is adding chemicals to the soil or plants to take care of problems and grow larger plants. Organic methods work a bit differently. Traditional methods use chemical fertilizers to add nutrients to the soil. Organic methods use compost . This is organic matter and carbon matter mixed together. This would be things like fruit peels, vegetables, grass, hay, leaves, and other types of waste mixed together. Over time it breaks down into rich soil that doesn’t need any fertilizer at all. A good compost is natural and doesn’t require extra chemicals. Pest control is a bit more difficult since you don’t want to use chemicals on your plants that end up killing everything. There are a fe...

Biochar – Promising Way to Reduce Greenhouse Gases

Imagine this: You have a garden or yard full of trees. Each year you prune and cut dying branches to make room for new growth. Each autumn you rake in several pounds of dead leaves, fallen fruits and other garden “leftovers.” What are you going to do? Ordinarily, you would just leave them alone scattered on your yard, where they would just decay or be buried in winter frost. You probably would clear out a fallen branch or two as well.   How to make Biochar Clear your garden of all living, organic material. Dig a trench approx 12 inches deep. Use a fork to loosen and turn the soil at the bottom. Pile brush in the bottom of the trench, approx 8 inches deep. Light the brush on fire, and allow it to smolder until the smoke thins and turns bluish-gray. Cover lightly with an inch of dirt and let it continue to smolder until it turns to charcoal chunks. Put out with water. Turn and mix the charcoal with the soil turned underneath and then fill in the trench. Continue the proce...