I lacto ferment various veggies...then toss em in my Vitamix with store bought canned diced jalapeno tomatoes to make salsa. It's Delish!I tried salsa and tomatoes with basil. The salsa is good but I think I prefer regular cooked salsa more. I don't do pickles or beans because I boil them when canning which kills the lacto.
Sounds delicious, I've made sauerkraut. Care to share your technique on the dill pickles?Anyone else lacto ferment dill pickles??
Cheers!
I use a 3.5% salt brine -- 133g pink Himalayan salt to 1gal H20.Sounds delicious, I've made sauerkraut. Care to share your technique on the dill pickles?
Anyone else lacto ferment dill pickles??
Cheers!
Not all lacto-fermented cukes are dill. Also, not all dill pickles are lacto-fermentedAm I missing something? Aren't lacto-fermented cucumbers what dill pickles ARE? (With some dill, of course.)
I put a grape leaf or 2 in each jar to retain crispnes. . . I also just learned that adding a little calcium carbonate into each jar helps keep "pickles" crisp.
Lacto-fermented is the same thing as fermented. The natural fermentation produces lactic acid which, along with salt, preserves the vegetables. I always use grape leaves for crisp pickles.Is lacto fermented different from fermented pickles? We mainly can dill pickles in vinegar solution, but I did try fermenting dills once that were a delicious mushy mess. I loved the zippiness but need to figure out how to keep more firm. Suggestions? BTW, I added oak leaves instead of raspberry or grape leaves.
We make them every year, but around here they are called Fresh dills or Fridge dills. They do last a long time in the fridge(unless the son & grandson come over), then they don't last so long. We put them in ice cream pails or a gallon jar.Anyone else lacto ferment dill pickles??
Cheers!
I've found smallish cukes work best for me and keep a great crunch --about the size of a popsicle stickIs lacto fermented different from fermented pickles? We mainly can dill pickles in vinegar solution, but I did try fermenting dills once that were a delicious mushy mess. I loved the zippiness but need to figure out how to keep more firm. Suggestions? BTW, I added oak leaves instead of raspberry or grape leaves.
The good news is that my first and only failure of fermenting pickles led me to my second venture into fermenting -- wine!!The mushiness tends to be caused by a lack of tannin. As wine makers you may have powdered tannin but I love to use horse radish leaves as my tannin source when using salt to pickle (the brine discourages other bacteria and encourages the lacto) If you use vinegar you might be pickling but that ain't lacto pickles.
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