The cucumbers are ripe in the Small Footprint garden, and with the amount in my garden and my CSA box, it seemed like a good time to make pickles. And with so many things ripe in the garden right now, once I got started, I caught a “pickle bug” and just couldn’t stop.
Here are four types of pickles that, if made with vinegar, can be ready to eat right after making them—speed pickles. Or, for probiotic bounty and digestive health, you can leave out the vinegar and make these pickles traditionally by fermenting them in brine—in which case they will be ready in a week or two.
Small Footprint Sour Pickles
- 1-2 lbs. cucumbers, either sliced into 1/4″ rounds, or use small, whole gherkin type (I like to use huge, sliced Armenian cukes for this one)
- 2 cups pure, unchlorinated water
- 1 Tbsp. mustard seeds
- 2 Tbsp. Herbes de Provence (a traditional mix of dry, crumbled oregano, thyme, basil, sage, savory, lavender flowers and rosemary, recipe here.)
- 1 tsp. black peppercorns
- 1 tsp. bay leaves, shredded
- 1 Tbsp. coriander seeds
- 1/2 tsp. dried, crushed red pepper
- 1/2 tsp. cloves
- 2 Tbsp. sea salt
- 1 head fresh flowering dill or 2 Tbsp. dried dill
- 1 head of garlic, peeled
- 2 fresh grape, cherry, oak or horseradish leaves (if available)
- 1 cup raw cider vinegar (Optional for speed pickles. Do not use if fermenting.)
- Rinse cucumbers, and if large, slice them into 1/4″ thick slices. Otherwise leave them whole.
- Dissolve sea salt in water to create brine solution. Stir until salt is dissolved, then add vinegar, if using.
- In a clean 1 quart jar, place all spices, dill and garlic.
- Add cucumber slices or whole, small cukes.
- Pour brine over the cucumbers until jar is almost full. Add more water if necessary. Leave about an inch of room at the top.
- Lay grape (or oak, cherry, etc.) leaves over the top of the mixture to keep the cucumbers submerged under the liquid. The tannins in the leaves help keep the cukes crisp.
- Close the jar and leave on your counter for 3-7 days (or longer if you prefer) until naturally pickled by fermentation. Or, if using vinegar for speed pickles, refrigerate for about an hour until chilled.
- Enjoy!
Garlic Pickled Mustard Greens
(Adapted from Herb Companion)
- 2 cups mustard greens (or kale, if you wish), washed, de-veined and shredded
- 2 to 4 cloves garlic, sliced
- 1 Tbsp. sea salt
- 1 Tbsp. mustard seeds
- 1 cup pure, unchlorinated water
- 1/3 cup raw apple cider vinegar (Optional for speed pickles. Do not use if fermenting.)
- Tightly pack greens and garlic into a clean, 16-ounce glass jar until about 3/4 full.
- Dissolve sea salt in water to create brine solution. Stir until salt is dissolved, then add vinegar, if using.
- Pour liquid into jar to cover greens and garlic. Add more cold water if necessary. Leave about an inch of room at the top.
- Close the jar and leave on your counter for 3-7 days (or longer if you prefer) until naturally pickled by fermentation. Or, if using vinegar for speed pickles, refrigerate for about an hour until chilled.
- To serve, gently rinse pickled greens in a colander and then toss with a little olive oil.
- Enjoy!
Herbal Heirloom Tomato Pickles
(Adapted from Herb Companion)
- 2 cups firm, heirloom tomatoes, vertically quartered (try mixing different kinds, including green or cherry tomatoes in your batch!)
- 2 to 4 garlic cloves, sliced
- 1/2 cup fresh herbs of your choice, chopped (I like to use lemon basil and oregano)
- 1 Tbsp. sea salt
- 1 cup pure, unchlorinated water
- 1 Tbsp. fresh juice of lemons or limes (optional)
- 1/3 cup raw cider vinegar (Optional for speed pickles. Do not use if fermenting.)
- Place tomato slices, garlic and other herbs into a clean, 16-ounce glass jar until about 3/4 full.
- Dissolve sea salt in water to create brine solution. Stir until salt is dissolved, then add vinegar, if using.
- Add lemon or lime juice to the mixture, if using.
- Pour liquid in jar to cover tomatoes and herbs. Add more cold water if necessary. Leave about an inch of room at the top.
- Close the jar and leave on your counter for 3-7 days (or longer if you prefer) until naturally pickled by fermentation. Or, if using vinegar for speed pickles, refrigerate for about an hour until chilled.
- Enjoy!
Rosemary and Sage Zuke Pickles
(Adapted from Herb Companion)
- 1 small red or white onion, very thinly sliced OR 1 1/4 cup chives, chopped
- 2 cups zucchini or yellow summer squash, sliced
- 2 to 4 sprigs rosemary
- 4 to 8 sage leaves
- 1 Tbsp. sea salt
- 1 cup pure, unchlorinated water
- 1/3 cup raw cider vinegar (Optional for speed pickles. Do not use if fermenting.)
- Slice zucchini into ¼-inch rounds.
- Tightly pack sliced zucchini, onion and herbs into a clean, 16-ounce glass jar until about 3/4 full.
- Dissolve sea salt in water to create brine solution. Stir until salt is dissolved, then add vinegar, if using.
- Pour liquid into jar to cover zucchini and herbs. Add more cold water if necessary. Leave about an inch of room at the top.
- Close the jar and leave on your counter for 3-7 days (or longer if you prefer) until naturally pickled by fermentation. Or, if using vinegar for speed pickles, refrigerate for about an hour until chilled.
- Enjoy!
Photo credit: Howard Lee Puckett – Herb Companion
This post is part of Real Food Wednesdays hosted by Kelly the Kitchen Kop!











{ 6 comments… read them below or add one }
Beautiful picture! These recipes sound so delicious – I have really gotten into fermenting veggies lately and mixed veggies are the ones that I enjoy most. I am really intrigued with the mustard greens recipe – I have been trying different ways to add more greens into our diet since we are folic acid deficient and this sounds like a fun way. I’m not a big fan of traditional sauerkraut, but cabbage with a variety of veggies and herbs I really enjoy.
Whoa, whoa whoa…. those are some amazing sounding pickle recipes!! I’ve never seen anything like the rosemary and sage zucchini pickle. I might just have to try that! I like fermenting my cukes with just dill seed, garlic and chile flakes, but sometimes like mustard seed in there too.
I’ll let you know when I try any of these!
Oh, also, at my blog (www.realfoodmyway.blogspot.com) there is a tutorial on making brined pickles. It was written in July and is called Of Probiotics and Pickles. Enjoy!
Thanks! I can’t take full credit. Herb Companion is a great inspiration for me. I hope you enjoy them.
beautiful picture!
Wonderful sounding recipes.
I shared my long brined crock dills with vinegar to can on Real Food Wednesdays today. Not the optimum way to go but when you become inundated with dozens and dozens of pickling cucs and there’s no way you can eat them up in a reasonable amount of time – canning them was the best solution for me.
I really like the way you fermented the many different veggies. Picture is beautiful. Going to give some of these a try with more veggies as they continue to come before the growing season is over till next year.
But could you please explain the parts in the recipes…..using vinegar then saying optional for speed pickles – do not use if fermenting??? I would just like to understand better what you are saying here.
If you use vinegar in the recipe, you have speed pickles–pickles that are ready to eat that night. If you brine ferment them, omit the vinegar, it is overkill. The veggies in brine alone will naturally sour better without vinegar over a week or two, and continue to sour even in the fridge.
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