dan koshansky’s refrigerator dill pickles
ONE HIGH-SUMMER DAY 30-something years ago, I ate pickles for breakfast with lovely Dan Koshansky, a retired railroad conductor and an organic gardener in suburban Long Island. I was garden editor at “Newsday” newspaper then, and the beat included many a recipe-tasting at harvest time. It’s how I learned to garden, and to cook from the garden: from people like Dan. I want to share his recipe for how to make dill pickles, refrigerator style, with you. Enjoy.
making dan koshansky’s pickles
THESE PICKLES were a hand-me-down recipe from Dan’s mother. And they couldn’t be simpler. Those are from a batch I made many years ago (photo by Kit Latham).
the recipe:
Wash jars: Run gallon or half-gallon canning jars through the dishwasher or otherwise wash thoroughly.
Prepare your brine: To each quart of water that has been boiled and brought to room temperature, add ¾ cup of distilled white vinegar and 4 Tablespoons Kosher salt (Dan would say “heaping tablespoons”). See the link in the box at the bottom of this story on brands of salt and their relative saltiness. Estimate how many quarts to make depending on how many jars you will pack with pickles. Note: Do not use reactive pots (like aluminum) for making brine. Stick with stainless and glass equipment for pickling tasks.
Wash and pack small cukes (or green tomatoes or peppers) into clean glass jars, into which fresh dill has been layered on the bottom first.
Add 1 Tablespoon of pickling spice (a link on what’s in pickling spice is in the box down below, too) and lots of chopped garlic. Trust me, I can still recall the garlic-for-breakfast experience. Up to you how much. And frankly I never chop it, as you can see in the photo. Creative license!
Add a dash of crushed red pepper flakes, or 1-2 small hot red peppers slit open lengthwise, plus more fresh dill. I love having the flowerheads from a variety like ‘Mammoth,’ instead of just the foliage of ‘Fernleaf’ for this task, but you’ll want plenty of both.
Cover with plastic wrap and let stand out until soured, perhaps a couple of days, then refrigerate with lids on.
I think of these unprocessed pickles as a seasonal treat, so I make enough for a few months only. If you want to store pickles all year, use a recipe that calls for water-bath processing (meaning vacuum-sealed lids). It’s not that refrigerator pickles go bad, but they lose that special quality. It’s the crispy freshness that makes Dan Koshansky’s Refrigerator Pickles so fantastic, a real rite of the harvest season, so enjoy them summer-into-fall and then (as gardeners know how to by necessity) start looking forward to next year.
added notes about pickling
- Sometimes pickles get too salty. In summer 2010, thanks to Deb at Smitten Kitchen blog, I found out why. Not all Kosher salt brands are created equal. And:
- What’s in pickling spice? Some recipes.
- Zukes, you say, not cukes? Pickling zucchinis, too.
- Prefer your pickles sweet? Try Viola Whitacre’s 1952 recipe for bread and butter pickles (above photo).
Here’s my contribution to this food fest:
I tried to line up people way back in February to take my zucchini this summer. However I grow a lot of the round varieties like ‘Cue Ball’ so I have to explain, “it’s just zucchiniâ€!
But I don’t give away a lot of cucumbers because I want to eat them all, even though they contain curcubitacin, in varying amounts, that can cause ‘gastric distress’!
My mouth is watering just thinking about making these. They look delish!
I love refrigerator pickles! So easy and satisfying. I’ve always just put them in the fridge as soon as the brine cooled, though. I’ll have to try leaving them out for a few days.
My tip: All that purslane you keep pulling out of your vegetable and flower beds doesn’t have to be tossed with the other weeds. You can eat it, too!
Welcome, Carol, and thank you for being the inspiration for this fest with your Bloom Day events.
@Kitt: Yes, I have also just put them in the fridge right away…but Dan’s way was to leave them out first. Again, creative license!
Happy Cucurbit Thursday, Margaret
from an inveterate summer squash fan. Not just zucchini, but also pale-skinned Lebanese cousa and old-fashioned, these-days-you-can’t-find-so-must-grow crookneck yellow squash.
My favorite zucchini variety (Romanesco), pictures of same, a favorite recipe for using it (crisp-crusted savory zucchini cake) and pictures of that, along with a few cooking and freezing tips are all in this last summer post: https://leslieland.com/blog/end-of-summer-squash.
Just taking you at your invitation’s word! And thanking you again for bringing fellow bloggers into the food fests.
Margaret ~ I love this idea!
Those refrigerator pickles look great and are different from the ones I make. But I really want to share my zucchini recipe for Mock Crab Cakes with you. Enjoy Everyone!
Welcome, Cindy. The “mock” part is really appealing for me, as I am a longtime vegetarian, and these look great. Thanks and come again soon.
Good morning, all! Come by The Bountiful Harvest and try a delicious lentil salad that uses both the zukes AND the cukes. Yum. And Margaret, I’m so glad you posted pickles–over here, we LOVE pickles.
I hate bitter cucumbers. Here are some tips on how to avoid them:
https://tinyurl.com/5klecz
Robin
Gardening Examiner
Pickles are one mine and my sisters’ favorite foods! I am going home to Iowa in about a week to see the lovely family, including my grandmother who is a gardening genius. One of the things she does with cucumbers is cut them up, but them with onions (another one of my favorite foods) and put them in the refrigerator for quite a few hours in a liquid (maybe vinegar?!) I think those are refrigerator pickles, right?
Hope she has some waiting for me. Thanks so much for this garden fest!
As I anxiously await friendly neighbours to feel free to deposit their harvest on my doorstep, I was so thrilled to come here on my daily visit and discover so many great recipes.
Here is one of my favourites, plus there are links in the post to more zucchini recipe suggestions.
Zucchini Ginger Scones
Ah yes, Zucchini season! I’m growing Zuchetta Trombocino which is very interesting. It actually vines and could be trained up a trellis-plus it has a very long neck with a bulb at the end which has the seeds-so plenty of nice seed free meat.
Recently I blogged about a quick Zucchini soup that I threw together with items out of my pantry. It was delicious both hot and cold.
Last year I talked about what to do with too much Zucchini (make sure you read the comments, my readers had some fantastic ideas) and preserving the Zucchini harvest by canning sweet (bread and butter style) pickles.
Fabulous Asian cucumber recipe is now posted on BumblebeeBlog:
https://tinyurl.com/6dyje5
And check out my Armenian Yardlong Cucumber!
Robin
Gardening Examiner
Welcome, Alison (and all of you). I hope your visit home is great, and includes refrigerator pickles (and yes, that’s what those are indeed…no processing in a canner of boiling water).
@All of you: Have been downstairs cooking all morning for company coming to see the garden and have lunch (not zukes and cukes, but chard-parsley-potato fritatta, warm potato salad w/green beans, roasted peppers w/parm). Of course a giant storm blew through and so there is also more sweeping to be done (over) and so on. And the table to set, and and and and and and …
Here at Purdyville we favor yellow crookneck squash over bona fide zucchini, but any summer squash will work in my recipes. I offer up a mix of kid-friendly main dishes and baked goods (including 2 kinds of chocolate zucchini cake), as well as a few firm opinions.
Welcome, Bamboogrrrl. So basically what you are saying is that you, too, are making pickles…pickling the gardener. Later today you will find me LYING, not sitting after a glass of this) on the deck surveying my inner landscape. Love it. :)
When the long days of summer get hot and steamy and the vegetable bin in my refrigerator is overflowing with cucumbers, I like to make Cold Cucumber Soup With Watermelon. It is light and refreshing, easy to make, and most importantly, it uses up cucumbers quickly.
I blog about growing and cooking seasonal, local food. Look at my recent post The Cucumbers That Took Over My Garden for information about the varieties I have been successful growing. And for information about fighting cucumber beetles organically look at Cucumber Beetles. However some readers might find this posting objectionable, due to the violent nature of the content.
Welcome, Tamra, and thank you for the great food and gardening links. And as for the violent-content warning, I think you arte among (homicidal) friends when it comes to cuke beetles (and Japanese beetles, and slugs, and …).
Ah…what to do with all those cukes?
One of the best things about summer
is cucumber vodka. A couple of years ago, I had one of the best cocktails ever at a restaurant called Equinox in Portland, OR. The most important ingredient is cucumber-infused vodka. It’s very simple – get a large jar (mine is about a gallon) and fill about a third full with thick cucumber slices. Top with the vodka of your choice. Let sit for at least several days, the longer the better.
For two drinks: 4 oz. cucumber vodka, juice from half a lime, and maple syrup to sweeten. We use the last ingredient because we make our own here in the Hudson Valley. Muddle some basil and add. Serve in a sugar rimmed glass.
Then, sit out on your deck and survey your garden and plan new projects.
An old Ukranium woman who I used to talk to on her rambles in Stanley Park used to say always to add a perfect grapevine leaf to the brine of each bottle of pickles. They ward against slimy pickles. Works like a charm especially if you are processing them for the cupboard shelf! I just use the concord grape leaves on my arbor.
Can’t wait for next week’s bean fest as my flat Italian climbers are the most delicious thing ever- they won my heart away from Scarlet runners.
Hello, Margaret,
I’ve been reading your blog for about a month and love the information and entertainment :). Today’s pickle recipe is one my grandmother used and passed along to my sisters and me…it brought back many wonderful memories of her garden and the resulting home canning. Thank you!
hi..i joined the party.. visit my blog http://www.napafarmhouse1885.blogspot.com for a roasted zucchini and tomato recipe with balsamic reduction..and a recipe for potato and zucchini hash browns…
Thank for your these summer Food Fests. I enjoy reading both A Way to Garden and Everyday Food’s Dinner Tonight. I’d like to contribute a recipe for Crock-Style Kosher Dill Pickles. Another refrigerator pickle recipe, yes, but we had fun experimenting with using grape leaves in this one.
https://www.eatingwellanywhere.com/?p=94
You’re always rubbing our arctic Zone 5A noses in your tropical Zone 5B abundance. Cukes? Zukes? What are they? We’d be lucky to be able to make fried squash blossoms this week. : )
However, in another couple of weeks we’ll make our notorious West Indian Burr Gherkin Pickles. (Or, as one friend calls them: “Brined Alien Pods” – for their spiny, ovoid appearance.)
We grow all our Cucurbitaceaes (“Cucurbitaceai?”, “Cucurbitaceases?”) along “Melon Lane” in the BEEKMAN 1802 Heirloom Vegetable Garden.
Luckily, our neighbors are proprietors of the venerable D Landreth Seed Company (https://www.landrethseeds.com/), which is the fifth oldest corporation in America, and has sold seeds to every president from George Washington to FDR. They supply almost all the seeds for our organic 52 bed Heirloom Garden – and even more valuably: the knowledge that keeps them growing.
This year we’re growing seven different heirloom varieties of cukes (and relatives) dating from 1793. We’re very excited about our first year growing Loofahs – which will extend our garden’s reach from the kitchen to the bath.
But right now, it’s all the stuff of vine-y dreams. At least for another couple of weeks. All of these submitted recipes sound delicious, and make our anticipation that much sweeter.
To take a “virtual walking tour” of the heirloom garden, stop by: https://beekman1802.com/The_BEEKMAN_1802_Heirloom_Garden.html.
(You’ll notice, however, that we’ve banished zucchini. as a kid, I spent too many hot Wisconsin summers hauling those zeppelins around in a wheelbarrow.)
Love all the cucumber fun! I was inspired to make a new salad for the Food Fest:
Cucumber Tomato Herb Salad