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Hands tighten the white plastic lid of a jar of fermented horseradish pickles.

Fermented Dill and Horseradish Pickles

These are possibly the best pickles I’ve ever fermented. Maybe I’m biased because I love horseradish. If you do too you must try these fermented horseradish pickles!

  • Prep: 20 minutes
  • Total Time: 336 hours 20 minutes

Ingredients

  • 460 grams cucumbers*
  • 320 grams water
  • 28 grams sea salt
  • 1 fresh dill sprig
  • 2 tablespoons prepared horseradish
  • 1 tablespoon minced fresh garlic

Instructions

  1. Please see the recipe notes before you begin.
  2. Wash all of your fermentation equipment (jar, weight and lid)
  3. Wash your cucumbers in cool water.
  4. Slice your cucumbers either as ripple cut chips or as spears/halves. Remove and discard the cucumber ends.
  5. Place your kitchen scale on the counter. Turn it on and set it to weigh in grams.
  6. Weigh out the designated amounts of all your ingredients.
  7. Add everything to the mason jar. (It helps if you put anything cut small, like garlic and horseradish, below the cucumbers to keep them from floating)
  8. Place the lid on the jar, and secure it. Shake the jar vigorously for 2 minutes to dissolve all the salt.
  9. Remove the lid. Place your clean fermentation weight in the jar, making sure to submerge the cucumber pieces and weight fully in the liquid.
  10. Secure the lid to the jar (you don’t need to tighten it too much; just close it).
  11. Let the horseradish pickles ferment for 14 days at room temperature. Set the jar in a glass dish to catch any spills.
  12. If you tighten the lid a lot, you should burp the jar daily when it is bubbling. It also helps to open up the jar daily to rinse the lid clean and re-submerge or scoop out any floating bits.
  13. After 2 weeks, remove the fermentation weight and smell and taste test. Your horseradish pickles should smell pleasantly sour and taste tart and salty. (if it’s warmer in your kitchen you can taste test around 10 days).
  14. Too salty for you? Pour off half the brine into an empty jar and top off the pickles with apple cider vinegar! Shake to combine. Save the brine to make my probiotic pickled garlic or probiotic pickled onions.
  15. Store in the fridge. Please leave a five-star rating below if you love this pickle recipe!

Notes

  • The timeline is adjustable based on temperature. Fermentation is faster at warm temperatures. You can taste test at 10 days and see how you like them.
  • This recipe at 1x is for a 32- ounce jar.
  • Pickling, Persian, or cocktail cucumbers work best. Cucumber recommendations are in the first paragraph of this blog post.

Did you make this recipe?

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Nutrition information is auto-calculated and estimated as close as possible. We are not responsible for any errors. We have tested the recipe for accuracy, but your results may vary.