How The Perfect Pickle Beer Is Made

In one of America’s greatest beer towns, you’ll find the briny goodness of the best pickle beer we’ve ever tasted.

by Matt Allyn   –   Popular Mechanics

Getty & Tarick Foteh

Getty & Tarick Foteh

What turned out to be this summer’s hottest beer ingredient? Well, hops by the truckload as usual. But after that, came a bit of a surprise—cucumber.

But if you’ve ever had a thirst-quenching glass of cucumber-infused water, you’ll likely understand why. As Tyler DuBois, co-founder of The Real Dill pickle company, explains, “cucumber has a mild melon-like flavor and it’s very refreshing.”

Building up over the last two years, hundreds of cucumber-laden beers have been brewed into existence. But until recently, none impressed us enough to dispel these brews as just a passing fad. Then we tried the tart, salty Birth of Cool, and everything changed. Where so many cucumber beers taste like hoppy or bready melon water, this ale carried the essence of biting into a crisp pickle, complete with a briny finish.

Spangalang's Birth of Cool

Spangalang’s Birth of Cool

The beer was the brainchild of DuBois, who’d previously partnered with Great Divide Brewing’s Taylor Rees to make IPA-inspired pickles with barley and hops. The two became friends, and when Rees eventually opened his own operation in 2015, Denver’s Spangalang Brewing, DuBois suggested he try making a pickle beer for the brewery’s first summer.

Luckily, it turns out there’s a perfect beer style for handling such a briny brew. Called a gose, this centuries-old German wheat beer was practically extinct a decade ago. But the hazy, acidic concoction has experienced recent resurgence thanks to the booming popularity of sour beers. Part of the appeal for brewers is that while some tart ales can take up to three years to mature, the gose needs just two weeks due to a lactic fermentation that takes just two days (or less).

Several beer styles use a lactic fermentation, but the gose is set apart by the addition of salt. This gives a gose the same sort of satisfying appeal of another mildly sour and salty drink, the Bloody Mary.

“It was a no brainer when Tyler suggested it,” says Rees. “The fresh cucumber plays well with the acidity and lacto character, and the tartness and salinity of the style lend it to a pickle character.”

Compared to your average ale, there are two big difference in how a pickle beer like the Birth of Cool is brewed. First, to create the lactic acid sourness, Spangalang boils the wort (unfermented liquid with sugars from the barley) for just 10 minutes to sanitize it. Then, instead of boiling another 50 or 80 minutes and adding bittering hops, they cool it to 118 degrees, remove the oxygen by pumping in CO2, and then add a lactobacillus culture — an anaerobic bacteria that produces lactic acid. After 48 hours of letting the bacteria do its work, they fire the kettle back up, add hops, boil, and send the wort to the fermenter with yeast to become beer.

The second unusual steps begins a week later. DuBois and his crew put 120 pound of Kirby cucumbers through their juicer to create a potent juice. They let the liquid sit for five days to let the pulp settle out, and then Rees’ team adds it to the nearly-finished beer, along with pickling salt and coriander. The pickling salt, says Rees, also happens to lend itself to beer because the finer grain dissolves more easily. And coriander, like salt, is simply a traditional ingredient in gose beers.

That fresh-juiced cucumber, however, is what sets the Birth of Cool apart from its green gourd-infused peers. The liquid joins the beer just a day before it’s kegged and served.

Unfortunately, if you want to enjoy a glass of the pickle-epitomizing beer, you’ll have to visit the tap room in Denver. The young brewery operates on a small scale, producing just 20 kegs per batch. But know that if you make the trek, you’ll at least be rewarded with the most refreshing drink in one of America’s greatest beer towns.

Halloween jalapeno poppers

by Rebekah Ditchfield, KUSA

Halloween Jalapeno Poppers

Halloween Jalapeno Poppers

FIX THIS – Who doesn’t like a delicious treat that you can also turn into a festive holiday appetizer? I’ve got 2 versions of these Halloween jalapeño poppers to share with you!

So let’s start with what you need:

  • 10 jalapeños
  • 1 scallion (diced)
  • 2 garlic cloves (diced)
  • 1 cup colby jack cheese
  • 8 ounces of cream cheese
  • candy eyes
  • crescent roll dough
  • red food dye

Directions:

 

1.  Color the candy eye balls. This is for our spicy jalapeño poppers. Place about 20 eyes into a small bowl, then add a couple of drops of red food coloring. Mix them together, then place them on a piece of wax paper to dry.

 

2. Chop the peppers. Slice each pepper in half length wise, then scrape out the seeds and membrane. However, if you want the peppers to be spicy, leave as much of the white membrane as you can! Since I’m making both spicy and mild jalapeño poppers, I’m going to do both.

 

An inside tip… Use a melon-baller as a fast and easy way to scrape out the insides of jalapeños.

 

Also, if you’ve never cut up jalapeño peppers before, there’s a couple of things you should know. If you don’t use rubber gloves, or you are not super vigilant about the part of the jalapeño you’re touching, let’s just say that “I just set my mouth on fire” feeling you have after eating one, will be on your hands… and anything else you touch before washing your hands. So, wear gloves, or be super vigilant and thoroughly wash your hands before touching anything else while working with jalapeños.

 

3. Mix together the filling. To make the mild, combine the cream cheese, colby-jack, scallion and garlic in your stand mixer. Want it hot? Have some extra membrane left over? Put that in there too. Mix it until well combined.

 

4. Fill each jalapeño half with filling.

 

5. Wrap these up mummy style! Take your crescent roll dough, pinch together the diagonal seams and cut 5 strips with a pizza cutter.

 

6. Use one strip to wrap around each jalapeño popper, leaving room for the eyes.

 

7. Cover your baking sheet with parchment paper so the poppers don’t stick to the pan as they cook.

 

8. When you’re done wrapping, place the jalapeño poppers in a 400 degree oven for 10 minutes.

 

9. Once they’re done, take them out and add the eyes!

 

Enjoy and happy Halloween!!

Thief adds pickles to burglary’s loot

Moultrie, GA as reported by the Moultrie Observer

MOULTRIE, Ga. — A Wednesday burglary sounds like the thief went for the usual valuables — video game systems and video games — but then had a craving for something to eat, in this case a “big jar of pickles.”

The pickles, valued at $5, were among the property Thomas Allegood reported stolen from his residence in the 200 block of Indian Lake Drive, Norman Park.

Also taken were an Xbox 360 system, PS4 system and seven games, and Nintendo DS game system.

Allegood identified a possible suspect to police.

Chickpea Jalapeño Salad [Vegan]

chickpea-jalapeno-salad-2-1200x750

Mashed chickpea salad is a wonderfully nutritious and filling dish that is a breeze to make and incredibly versatile. This particular garbanzo salad is made with tangy red onion, spicy jalapeño, creamy avocado, and fresh lime juice. This mixture is the perfect toasted sandwich filling and creative salad topper.

SERVES

4 cups

COOK TIME

10

INGREDIENTS

  • 1 15-ounce can of chickpeas, rinsed and drained
  • 1/2 cup chopped red onions
  • 1/2 cup chopped jalapeño, seeds removed
  • 1 medium avocado
  • Juice from 1 lime
  • 2 tablespoons chopped cilantro
  • Salt and pepper, to taste

PREPARATION

  1. Place drained chickpeas in a medium bowl and mash them using the back of a fork or potato masher, leaving some chunks.
  2. Slice avocado, then scoop it out using a large spoon and place in a small bowl. Squeeze lime juice over the avocado and mash using the back of a fork, then add to the chickpeas.
  3. Add onions, jalapeño, and cilantro, then stir to combine.
  4. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Serve on a sandwich or on a salad.

AUTHOR & RECIPE DETAILS

photo

Hello I’m Celeste a Lacto-Ovo vegetarian who loves to run, cook and eat good wholesome food, I’m the face behind The Whole Serving, a blog about celebrating and enjoying whole foods that nourish the body, and not feeling bad about eating The Whole Serving!

Fried Cheesy Pickles

by Molly Yeh   –   The Splendid Table

Chantell Quernemoen

Chantell Quernemoen

Just as some parents of little ones are required to check for monsters in the closet, my mom was required to check for pickles on my burgers. Despite always ordering a very plain cheeseburger, an itsy bitsy pickle occasionally managed to wiggle its way on there and terrify me. Like, spider on my face in the middle of the night terrifying. And no, I don’t really know why.

Luckily I’ve since gotten over my fear and embraced the pickle and thrown parties in its honor, and not just because they were cool in Brooklyn (okay maybe that was exactly why). And it’s a darn good thing I warmed up to pickles, because cheesy fried pickles at the Toasted Frog in downtown Grand Forks are the quintessential late-night food around here. Just like Steak ’n Shake was quintessential in Glenview, just like pizza was in New York.

When the Ladies of Grand Forks Brunch Club convenes during the week, it’s not breakfast for dinner, it’s gin and tonics and pickles wrapped in Havarti cheese and egg roll skins and fried and then dunked in Sriracha ranch. They’re so good. The chewy egg roll skin is what makes them addictive, while the crunchy sour pickle inside kind of creates the illusion that you’re being healthy by eating a vegetable.

Ingredients

  • 12 dill pickle spears
  • 12 slices Havarti cheese
  • 12 egg roll wrappers
  • Flavorless oil, for deep-frying
  • Ranch dressing mixed with Sriracha to taste, for dipping

Directions

Drain your pickles and use a paper towel to pat off any excess moisture. Wrap each pickle in a slice of cheese and then wrap each in an egg roll skin. Seal it well, using a bit of water on the edges.

Pour 2 inches of oil into a large pot. Clip on a deep-fry thermometer and heat the oil over medium-high heat to 360ºF.

Working in batches, fry the pickles until golden brown and crispy on all sides, 2 to 3 minutes. Transfer to a plate lined with a paper towel and let cool slightly. Slice in half crosswise and serve with Sriracha ranch.

Rosendale International Pickle Festival set for Nov. 20

By William J. Kemble, news@freemanonline.com

ROSENDALE, N.Y >> Town Board members have given conditional approval for the 19th annual Rosendale International Pickle Festival on Nov. 20 at the community center on state Route 32.

The festival site plan was reviewed during a meeting Wednesday, with the requirement that it received authorization from fire officials and the town Recreation Commission.

Festival Chairman Billy Liggan said up to 110 vendors are expected to be at the festival, which last year attracted about 8,000 people.

“Last year’s Pickle Festival did a donation to the Recreation Center of about $17,000 to $18,000 for a new floor,” he said. “So all the money the Pickle Festival makes goes back into our community in one way or another.”

Organizers are seeking to have the festival move toward family farms while still providing a wide variety of products.

“We have migrated away from the large pickle producers to smaller independent pickle producers from Vermont, Delaware, Manhattan, and the Hudson Valley,” Liggan said.

“We have the favorites from past festivals,” he said. “We expect vendors will include Pickle Licious and Gary’s Pickles … and we will also have international foods in a category for groceries. There will also be crafts people, so you can do some early holiday shopping without the dangers of Black Friday.”

The event will include competition for pickle producers for best product as well events for visitors. Included will be a pickle triathlon that starts with a pickle eating contest, a pickle juice drinking competition, and pickle tossing contest that has teams that have a pickle pitcher and another person who attempts catch the pickle with their mouth.

The festival is scheduled to take place from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. with a $5 admission at the door. Information is available at (845) 204-8827.

Pickles could be future of energy in North Carolina

By ANYSSA REDDIX   –   Daily Tarheel

Pickles may be a future source of energy for the state of North Carolina.

Researchers from universities across the state are creating technologies to extract salinity gradients, such as pickle juice, to form energy.

Salient gradients occur when two types of water have different levels of salt concentration, UNC researcher Orlando Coronell said.

 This project is a collaboration across multiple universities: Coronell and Lindsay Dubbs from UNC, Doug Call and Joseph DeCarolis from North Carolina State University and Andy Keeler from East Carolina University.

“This is a UNC Research Opportunities Initiatives project — research that may be high risk but it needs to be game changing for the state of North Carolina,” Coronell said.

Coronell said electricity can be stored from the two water currents using reverse electrodialysis.

“The pickle, in this case, serves as the salty water stream,” Coronell said. “You need one high in salt and one low in salt. The way the pickle comes into play is because the pickle brine is very salty.”

The research team was contacted by Mt. Olive Pickles, which began the partnership.

“They were looking for unique solutions to handle some of the brine waste they produce,” Call said. “To make pickles you need a lot of salt, and a lot of other things like vinegar. Because that’s their main production facility, they make a lot of salt water.”

When the team went to test the brine, they found that it produces a fair amount of power.

“Of all the different water pairs, it did the best,” Call said.

Finding this solution opens the door for future partnership, Call said. There are still steps to be taken to figure out what the technology can do.

“The first part is determining how the resources, in this case, the salinity gradients in North Carolina, how they do with the technology, how well we can produce electricity, how much electricity we can make, and other functions,” Call said. “Then we have to figure out what the limitations of the current state of the technology.”

North Carolina is the perfect place to test this technology, Coronell said.

“You need two streams always to make this technology worthwhile, and North Carolina is geographically well positioned to take advantage of this technology,” Coronell said. “We have the sea…we have freshwater streams in the forms of lakes and rivers.”

Aside from the work Coronell and Call have been doing, the other professors have their own areas of expertise. Dubbs said she is focused on the environmental assessment and determining what potential environmental impacts of the technology are.

“My part was kind of the more local effects,” Dubbs said. “These facilities would be located on the coast. We were interested in how that would affect coastal water quality and coastal ecosystems.”

Call and Coronell brought Dubbs into the project because of her extensive background in renewable energy technology and coastal environments.

“We’ve found that basically the reverse electrodialysis would not have very many detrimental impacts on local environmental quality in coastal regions,” Dubbs said.

As far as the impact this technology can have on energy in the state, there is still much work to be done before a conclusion can be made.

“This is technology that is in the research stage,” Coronell said. “It’s still going to take a lot of research.”

@_ANYdaynow

university@dailytarheel.com

 

Event attendees relish in pickle variety

By Ethan Levin   –   Daily Staff Reporter

Ann Arbor residents Wade De Vries, 3 years old, and his father Greg De Vries try pickles at The Eighth Annual Pickle Contest and Public Tasting at Downtown Home & Garden on Saturday. Sinduja Kilaru/Daily

Ann Arbor residents Wade De Vries, 3 years old, and his father Greg De Vries try pickles at The Eighth Annual Pickle Contest and Public Tasting at Downtown Home & Garden on Saturday.
Sinduja Kilaru/Daily

On Saturday morning, Ann Arbor locals and visitors puckered up to sample a selection of 43 pickled foods at Downtown Home & Garden on South Ashley Street — a store that has been around for more than a century.

The Eighth Annual Pickle Contest and Public Tasting is part of the store’s month-long showcase of locally created preserved food items.

Kelly Vore, Downtown Home & Garden owner and event coordinator, said the competition was one of several at the store this month that publicized the talents of food preservers in Ann Arbor. During the public event, participants were invited to sample as many pickled items as they wanted before voting on the entries they enjoyed.

The local picklers had the opportunity to receive a $100 gift card to the store if their entry received the most votes.

“Everything here is contributed by our customers, who are very generous with their entries,” Vore said. “We help them plan early in the season with their gardens, and in turn they share the benefits of the harvest with the community. You never know what you’re going to see.”

The number of entries has doubled since last year’s event, and Vore said pickling has increased in popularity because of its “trendiness.” Vore added that pickling and other methods of preservation are popular pursuits during summer, particularly following months of abundant harvest.

“The harvest changes every year — you never know exactly what to expect, but pickling and fermenting is definitely a growing side of the preserving business,” Vore said. “You’ve probably seen more pickles or preserved things in general at the grocery store. It’s a growing side of the industry.”

For several tasters, the event provided the opportunity to share a common interest among other members of the community. Many of those who came to taste the pickled foods said they never knew there were so many people who pickled in the area.

“I was kind of curious, because I love pickles,” said Ann Arbor resident Patrick Laughlin. “ I’m getting the impression that there’s a limit of one entry per contestant, so I guess people are more into pickling than I thought. What a nice way to spend the morning.”

Noting the resurgence of food preservation in Ann Arbor, Vore said her store is locally recognized for having original competitions that allow residents to try new foods, such as the 18th Annual Jam Public Tasting and Contest, which welcomed 52 jam entries last week.

She said the store’s model of preserved food competition has been around for decades.

“These are things that used to be down at state fair competitions 75, 100 years ago. In that vein, we’re keeping those kinds of traditions alive. People like to share their creative ideas and it’s very appreciated,” Vore said.

The 43 entries in Saturday’s competition were arranged around a long rectangular table in the center of one of the store’s rooms. To better categorize the broad range of pickled foods, the samples were organized into several sections based on flavor, including bread and butter pickles, dills pickles, sour pickles, various pickled vegetables and spicy pickles.

Competition between picklers extended beyond appearance and taste — contestants were encouraged to create a name that encapsulated the character of their pickled item.

“If you’re trying to start a rock band, and can’t think of a name, pull one from our ballots,” Vore said. “For example ‘Briana’s Beautiful Bread and Butter pickles’ or ‘Don’t Be Chicken — I’m Just a Hen of the Woods’ are some of the great names.”

Other popular names were “Butter Than Average,” “Tess’s Terrific Dilly Beans,” “Pucker Up!” and “Briny Bloods.”

Rackham student Alicia Stevers said when she spotted pickled chicken, she knew she’d have to try it while she had the rare opportunity.

“I think it was a really bold decision. I was expecting a lot of pickles and pickled vegetables — pickled meats weren’t really on my radar,” Stevers said. “I’ll try everything once; now I can say I’ve tried pickled chicken.”

 

Brandywine Branch Distillery Launches DragonDance Gin, a Jalapeño Distilled Spirit

CHESTER COUNTY, PA 

jalapeno-distilled-spirit

 

Imagine a spirit that can take your palate on an adventurous journey of hot fresh pepper, bright botanicals and unforgettable taste; transform your ordinary cocktail to the extraordinary or yield a wild ride of flavor on its own. With the debut of DragonDance Gin, the first-ever Jalapeno infused gin, spirits enthusiasts’ fiery dreams have come true. Hailing from the exceptional Revivalist Botanical Gins™ Portfolio, renowned Master Blender Riannon Walsh launches her one-of-a-kind grain to bottle DragonDance Gin, a bold compliment to her already unique and stellar collection of New Style gins.

A grain to bottle distilled gin, DragonDance adds jalapeno to the dried botanical recipe used in her exquisite Revivalist Equinox expression to boost the robust flavor and bring the bright jalapeno notes to life. As soon as you open the bottle, the aroma of DragonDance gives off the essence of fresh pepper skins overlaid by light citrus notes and a bright grassy aroma. At first sip fresh lemon, coriander and grass with a tingly bite take shape and quickly dissolve into a lush and velvet mouthfeel. A grand finale of soft pepper and herbaceous notes leave the palate yearning for more. Flawless on its own and exceptionally versatile in cocktails, DragonDance warms you in winter, cools you in summer and is the perfect recipe of spice, savory and originality to take the New Style gin category by storm.

“ DragonDance is the most playful gin in our portfolio to date. I created it to not only challenge the palate but to challenge the enormous cocktail possibilities it brings to the bar and home mixologist,” says Riannon Walsh. “To the best of my knowledge this gin is unlike any gin available on the market today.”

As the first-ever jalapeno distilled gin, DragonDance is setting a new standard for innovative craft distillers everywhere. Riannon Walsh is raising the bar by creating a product never before made for public consumption and as already evident with the inaugural and truly original expressions in The Revivalist Gin Portfolio, DragonDance is a further demonstration to her commitment to innovation.

DragonDance Gin can be purchased at Brandywine Branch Distillery in Chester County, Pennsylvania and is also available in fine dining and drinking establishments in PA as well as in retail liquor store and bars/restaurants’ in New Jersey. It is also available nationally online at www.brandywinebranchdistillers.com and online craft spirits shop Ezras.com. Suggested retail price for DragonDance™ is $39.99.

Homemade (Slightly Sweet) Pickles

• 4 medium white onions, peeled and sliced into rings
• 3 jalapeño peppers, seeded and julienned
• 1 cucumber, cut into thin chips
• Kosher salt
• 2 cups apple cider vinegar
• 1 ½ cups of sugar
• 1 teaspoon mustard seed
• 1 teaspoon pickling spice mix
• ½ teaspoon ground turmeric

Place onions, peppers and cucumbers in a large bowl and salt them generously. Regular iodized salt may have an adverse effect and could possibly turn your pickles brown; be sure to use Kosher salt. Cover with a towel weighted with a frozen Saints tumbler. The salt dries the water out of the veggies in a couple of hours.

Heat the rest of the ingredients to boiling in a nonreactive pot, stirring frequently. Make sure all the sugar is dissolved. Remove it from the heat and allow it to cool.

Drain the veggies and cover them with the vinegar mixture. An airtight container works great as they will need to be kept in the refrigerator. Enjoy them after 8 hours or so and for up to 2 weeks. They work well with pork or smoked chicken. A strong horseradish cheddar is a nice cheese pairing.

Use this as a base for your pickle adventure but make it your own! I’m excited about my next batch. Look out, dill.