Betty Carter's Refrigerator Pickles
Betty Carter’s refrigerator pickles use a no-cook cold brine of vinegar, sugar, salt, celery seed, mustard seed, and turmeric. Five days in the fridge and they’re ready. Last a year in the jar.
YIELD
68 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
20 minREADY
40 minThis is a large-batch refrigerator pickle for the gardener with too many cucumbers on the vine. The technique is genuinely simple: slice cucumbers and onion, pour a cold no-cook brine over them, and let them rest in the fridge for five days. No boiling water, no canning kettle, no hot brine to manage. Just a mix-and-wait operation.
The cold-brine method is the key technical detail. Most pickle recipes call for hot brine to soften the vegetables and dissolve the sugar; this one trusts time to do the work. Sugar dissolves slowly into the vinegar over the chill period, the cucumbers stay crisp because they’re never heated, and the spices steep into the liquid gradually rather than all at once.
Turmeric tints the brine a vivid golden color and adds a faint earthy bitterness that complements the cucumber’s vegetal sweetness. It’s also the visual signature of the pickle. Without it, the cucumbers stay pale green; with it, they turn that distinctive amber color of classic American refrigerator pickles.
Celery seed and mustard seed are the savory backbone. Both contribute their characteristic warm-sweet aromatic notes that build slowly through the long cold steep. Pre-grinding either spice would lose the slow-release effect.
The five-day wait is genuinely necessary. A fresh jar tastes raw and harsh; a five-day jar tastes rounded and pickle-y. Two weeks is even better. The pickles improve continuously through the first month and hold quality for up to a year if kept refrigerated.
Pro Tips
- Use very small cucumbers, ideally pickling Kirbys. Their thinner skins and denser flesh give the right snappy bite.
- Slice the onion into thin half-moons so the rings break apart and distribute through the jar evenly.
- Sterilize the jars before filling. While these aren’t water-bath canned, clean jars give the longest shelf life.
- Stir or shake the jar every day or two during the first week. This redistributes the spices and dissolves the sugar evenly.
Variations
- Add fresh dill sprigs to the jars for a dill-pickle profile alongside the bread-and-butter spices.
- Toss in sliced carrots and pearl onions for a giardiniera-style mixed pickle.
- Stir in a few hot peppers (jalapeño or serrano) for spicy refrigerator pickles.
Ingredients
Directions
Slice cucumbers and onion and place in gallon jars.
Mix remaining ingredients well.
Pour mixture over cucumbers. Screw lids on tightly.
Place in refrigerator.
Let stand 5 days before tasting. Will keep for a year.
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