Gone in a Second Pickles
Submitted by pierro
Quick refrigerator pickles with cucumber slices, garlic, vinegar, and red pepper flakes. A no-canning cold-brine recipe ready in an hour. Spicy, garlicky, and addictively crunchy.
YIELD
24 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
5 minREADY
1½ hrsThese refrigerator pickles earn their name. The brine is so good and the cucumbers stay so crunchy that a jar disappears off a kitchen counter in record time. No canning required, no special equipment, just a simple salt-then-brine technique that takes about an hour from cucumber to pickle.
The two-stage technique is the move that separates these from soggy quick pickles. The cucumber slices first sit in salted boiling water for an hour to draw out their water and tighten the cell structure. After draining, they go into a cold vinegar-and-garlic brine where they pick up flavor without losing crunch.
The boiling salt water step might seem counterintuitive (why heat something you want to stay crisp?), but it actually firms the cucumber cell walls into a tighter structure. Combined with cold ice water in the brine, you get pickles that snap when you bite them.
A full two teaspoons of red pepper flakes is what gives these their signature heat. Six sliced garlic cloves stack the savory side. The result is a refrigerator pickle that punches well above its weight in flavor.
Pro Tips
- Use Kirby or pickling cucumbers if you can find them. Their thicker skins and lower water content keep the pickles crunchier than thin-skinned slicing cucumbers.
- Slice the cucumbers diagonally as the directions specify, half-inch thick rounds. The diagonal cut increases surface area for the brine to penetrate while maintaining structural strength.
- Drain the salted cucumbers thoroughly before pouring on the brine. Excess salt water dilutes the brine flavor and throws off the seasoning balance.
- Wait at least 24 hours before eating for the deepest flavor. They are edible after a few hours but reach peak pickle character overnight.
Variations
- Add fresh dill sprigs to the brine for a classic dill pickle profile alongside the heat.
- Stir in a tablespoon of pickling spice (mustard seed, coriander, allspice) for a more complex flavor.
- Use champagne vinegar in place of regular vinegar for a softer, more elegant brine.
Ingredients
Directions
Cut the cucmbers in half lengthwise, then slice diagonally into ½ inch-thick slices and place in a large bowl.
Mix salt with boiling water and pour over the cucumbers and let stand 1 hour, then drain.
Mix the remaining ingredients and pour over the cucumbers and refrigerate.
Comments