pickles, food preservation, canning, beans, recipe Lindsay McCoy pickles, food preservation, canning, beans, recipe Lindsay McCoy

Pickled Dilly Beans

These are my favorite pickles, hands down. It’s been that way since I first started gardening back in 2009. The brine is peppery and savory with just the right amount of sweetness, and the beans, if harvested at the right time and pickled fresh, are perfectly crunchy. We often eat a single jar in one sitting.

I like to eat them straight up as a side dish with burgers or steak, or on a salad (I’ve heard they’re particularly good in Nicoise salad). Sometimes I’ll chop them up and add them to tuna or egg salad, or add them to a charcuterie board. They’re also fantastic in a Bloody Mary. Enjoy!

Dilly Beans

Dilly Beans

Author: A Wooden Nest

Ingredients

You
  • 8-10 sterilized wide-mouth pint or pint-and-a-half, lids, and bands.
  • 5 pounds green beans, washed and trimmed to 4 inches long
  • 1 small white or red onion, sliced
  • Two heads of garlic, cloves peeled and separated
  • Whole peppercorns
  • Whole mustard seeds
  • Dill, dried or fresh
  • Pepper flakes or whole dried chiles
Brine
  • 5 cups water
  • 5 cups distilled white vinegar (5% acidity)
  • 5 tablespoons non-iodized salt
  • 5 tablespoons sugar

Instructions

Notes

Tips:

  • If any of your seals didn't take, you can store those jars in the refrigerator and snack on them periodically to test the progress of the flavor. The'll stay good so long as you've got them refrigerated.
  • Using straight beans will help you pack in those beans nice and tight. You can also tilt your jar to the side.
  • Make sure your beans are freshly picked. The fresher they are, the tastier and crunchier your dilly beans will be.
  • If your beans are long, use wide mouth pint-and-a-half jars rather than pint jars.


Adapted from McCormick


 

PIN IT FOR LATER

Read More