Sour pickles with Calcium Chloride?
I've read that putting grape leaves with your brine will help pickles stay crunchy. But those are hard to find. I've also heard that Calcium Chloride does the same thing. Bubbies uses it, in fact. It's on their ingredients.
I got a can of Pickle Crisp (it's just Calcium Chloride) and the directions say to add it to boiling liquid - maybe this stuff isn't for brine/sour pickles. At least, I haven't been using boiling water.
Can anyone tell me if I can put Calcium Chloride in my non-boiled brine?
Best Answer
Yes! You can use Calcium Chloride to keep your pickles nice and crunchy! I have used Pickle Crisp. I've have had pretty good results. I have also just used generic food grade Calcium Chloride, which I also use in cheese making.(I order this online through my cheese making supplier).
The best tip for crunchy pickles is to avoid over cooking them at high temperatures. I use a thermometer in my hot water bath, to ensure that I do not go over 185 to 190F at which time the cucumber starts to break down. I know, I know people get so upset that I don't "boil" it, but I maintain the temperature for slightly longer at lower temps to achieve the same safety. I've never had a problem and if the ph is acidic enough it shouldn't be a problem. If you feel concerned with safety you can always make them as refrigerator pickles. Which I do sometimes.
I'm not sure of the process you are using, but I do pack the raw cukes into the jars, and fill the jar up with hot brine that was previous boiled. The Calcium Chloride goes into this brine.
P.S. You can buy calcium chloride in both dry form and liquid form. I prefer the liquid form. Hope this helps!
Pictures about "Sour pickles with Calcium Chloride?"
Should I use calcium chloride in my pickles?
Calcium Chloride is a generic firming agent that can be used in pickling. Many people like it and swear by the results; a few still say that nothing will ever replace the crispness of an actual limed pickle. Going into the preserving process, it can help to maintain the crispness that produce has.How do you add calcium chloride to pickles?
To use, add a small amount to each jar of pickles before sealing. Follow the manufacturer's directions on the jar. Calcium chloride is an ingredient in some commercial pickle mixes and is found in some canned vegetables.Can you use calcium chloride in refrigerator pickles?
Refrigerator pickles tend to be crunchier and fresher tasting since they aren't boiled in the jar for 15 minutes. But there are a lot of ways of keeping the crunch of canned pickles, so don't write them off! To keep all cucumber pickles crunchy, I swear by calcium chloride.Why does calcium chloride keep pickles crisp?
Calcium chloride is used for several purposes, but in pickles it is mainly a firming agent. On searching the Web for more information, I learned that Pickle Crisp had been marketed by Jarden, the company that makes Ball jars, but was no longer available.Brad Makes Crunchy, Half-Sour Pickles | It's Alive | Bon Appétit
More answers regarding sour pickles with Calcium Chloride?
Answer 2
I have made fermented pickles for several years now. The resulting pickled vegetables, KimChee and even butter pickles are far superior in taste to boiling and brining, although true, we tend to trade the spritzy flavor and better health for a less crisp pickle. Calcium chloride trades easily as a salt for sodium chloride (normal table salt), and I think is probably better for you, but I'm no Dr. But the calcium chlorine is way too expensive for the mild brine used in fermentation.
So what I do - I use rock salt salt and water (3/4 to 1 cup/gal) for the initial brine solution and fermentation, and then 4 air excluded weeks later, when the good micro flora have run their course, add about 1/4 tsp/ gal of the calcium chloride and let sit in the fridge a couple weeks.
Result - a crispy fermented pickle of old fashioned taste, which the crunch my family was trained to like from the bid sterile commercial guys who dumped their brine.
My brine goes into the next batch to keep,the good flora going! (add a bit of salt to bring the specific gravity up if you do this).
Try the CaCl on sauerkraut (cut in 1/2 in slices) for a good treat!
Happy fermentations!
Ranzal the pickler
Answer 3
Better living through chemistry. Calcium Chloride is just about everywhere. We use it in our pickles, both refrigerator and canned. Peppers too. Dilly beans..yep.
I buy it at the home center/hardware in 20-50lb. bags...it's the non-salt ice melt. Read the label tho...there's another non-salt made from magnesium chloride. You don't want that one. I've used calcium chloride in concrete mix also to give it the ability to cure when the temp won't be going above freezing for quite some time. That's a standard additive for that application.
It's all the same stuff.
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: makafood, Марта Тюзова, Karolina Grabowska, PhotoMIX Company