
I’ve written an easy salt brine pickle recipe for living, lacto-fermented dilly beans, which are traditionally a vinegar preserve. Now that green bean season is in full swing, here it is.

Ingredients to fill a one-quart mason jar:
-1/4 jalapeno pepper. Use more if you like it spicy.
-1/2 bunch of fresh dill
-3 cloves of garlic
-about 1 tsp celery seed
-enough green beans to fill up your jar
-2 cups water mixed with 1.5 tbsp sea salt (non-iodized)

Directions:
Chop off the tough bits at the end of the beans and the rough ends of the stalks of dill. Throw the garlic into the bottom of the jar. Jam in half the beans, standing upright. Stick the bunch of dill and the pepper into the middle of the jar, then fill in the outside edges with the rest of the beans. Pour in the celery seeds and shake them around the jar. Add enough brine to cover the veggies. Keep the veggies submerged and away from the mold-carrying air by placing a smaller jar full of water as a weight as in this post.

Leave them in a dark place for one to three weeks with the smaller jar holding the beans under the brine and a towel draped over the top to protect them from bugs and dust. When they taste the way you like, put a lid on them and stick them in the fridge.
For a traditional vinegar pickle recipe for dilly beans, see the one here in Katz’s book Wild Fermentation.
Tags: celery root, dill, fermented food, green beans, jalapeno, salt pickles, spicy, summer, traditional
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I am on day 7 of fermenting, and they taste awesome. I randomly came across your website, and I’d really like to thank you for introducing me to the fascinating world of salt brine pickling. I finally have something to do with the veggies my neighbor is always giving us from her garden!
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So, I made these. After a couple of weeks I pulled them out of the cupboard. There was mold around the upper edge of the jar. The weighted glass jar plan isn’t air tight, and I’ve heard that a little mold growth can happen with fermentation, so I wiped it off. I sampled a bean – not bad! Then I looked down and saw little wormy things crawling around the edge of the jar.
I had the jar with the weight covered with a cloth and they were situated in a dark cupboard. I suspect the wormies were maggots – maybe fruit fly? (I’m in the tropics, and they are a problem here.)
Is there a reason that I can’t use a lid? Expansion? Explosions? I’d love to try this again, but don’t want bug in the beans!
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WOW!!! OMG, these were amazing! They completely blew my mind. I’ve never made dilly beans before and never even heard of them before seeing them online, but I thought I would try them. I had no idea what to expect when I checked them after a week, but they were so delicious that I ate ten right in a row while standing at the jar. The first jar went so fast, I can’t wait to make more! Thank you so much for this recipe!

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