Deli-Style Kosher Dill Pickles
Per gallon jar:
8-10 cucumbers for pickling (a medium size)
1-large handful fresh dill with flower heads (or add 1/4 teaspoon dill seed if
flower heads are missing)
4-6 large cloves of garlic, flattened
Water
1/2-cup coarse kosher salt or pickling salt
4 teaspoons pickling spice
1-2 large bay leaves
Pack each gallon jar with cucumbers, sprinkling salt between each layer
Add pickling spice, salt, dill (dill heads) and bay leaves
Fill jar with water but leave two inches of room for brine to form
You may prepare this in large crocks (something non-reactive) and then transfer
to glass jars when finished
Weigh cucumbers down to keep submerged and cover
After 2-3 days, remove scum (if any has formed)
Let ferment 3 more days and check for doneness by cutting off a slice of one
cucumber
Once they are fermented to the right stage (to taste), transfer to a glass jar
and refrigerate
Ferment longer (12-20 days) for pungent sour pickles
Real deli-style Kosher pickles have no vinegar added in the process unlike
regular dills. They get their bite from fermentation. Just like when you go to
the grocery store and see pickles in the refrigerated section, these pickles
must be kept in the fridge. The fermenting will continue unabated if you don't
stop it by putting them in the refrigerator. The cold greatly slows down the
fermentation but won't stop it completely. It will continue to age but at a much
slower rate.