what’s in pickling spice? some recipes

Like bouquet garni or Old Bay seasoning or even “curry powder,” pickling spice is actually a mix of herbs and spices, not a single ingredient. As such, its precise combination depends on the brand you purchase or the flavors you favor–hotter? sweeter? spicier?–if you blend your own.

You can purchase such a mix at most supermarkets (or online) from a common brand like McCormick or Ball, though you may do better with one-pound packages from Frontier (organic version available, too) if you’re making a big batch of pickles for use all year long. Or go the homemade route, using a recipe like one of the following:
pickling spice recipes
- Marisa McLellan of the popular site Food in Jars [dot] com shared her recipe (free of cinnamon sticks, by the way) on NPR.
- From Epicurious, the recipe includes dill seed and nutmeg, in addition to the basics above.
- A New York Times recipe includes a piece of dried ginger root, and there is pounding of the ingredients involved.
- Leite’s Culinaria calls for lightly toasting the ingredients in a small, dry skillet (admittedly as part of a corned beef recipe, but it’s pickling spice nonetheless).
- At Taste of Home, they do without the mace.
pickle recipes and such on a way to garden
- My refrigerator pickles, handed down to me from a retired Long Island Rail Road conductor more than 25 years ago, and made by generations of his family before that.
- Viola Whitacre’s circa 1952 bread and butter pickles.
- Putting up flavored vinegars and herbed salts.

