That depends on whether the chicken breasts are bone-in, or boneless. To brine 4 lbs. of bone-in chicken parts (which would include bone-in chicken breasts, thighs, wings, or legs): Dissolve 1/2 cup of table salt* and 1/2 cup granulated sugar in 2 quarts cold water. Submerge chicken parts in brine and refrigerate for 1/2 hour to 1 hour. Rinse parts thoroughly in cold water, then pat dry with paper towels before continuing with recipe. To brine 4 (6 to 8oz. each) boneless chicken breasts: Dissolve 1/4 cup table salt* and 1/4 cup granulated sugar in 2 quarts cold water. Submerge boneless breasts in brine and refrigerate for 1/2 hour to 1 hour. Rinse boneless chicken breasts thoroughly in cold water, then pat dry with paper towels before continuing with recipe. * If using kosher salt, use two times the amount of salt called for in each formula above if you are using Diamond Crystal brand, and one and a half times the amount of salt called for in each formula above if using Morton's brand.
Fill a large pot with cold water, add a cup of sugar and a cup of salt. For additional flavor, add whole peppercorns, rosemary and whole garlic cloves. Mix well with spoon. Submerge the turkey, and let sit in the mixture for 12 hours or over night. This will make the turkey very flavorful and moist.
Ingredients for 100 pounds of meat: # 7 lb. plain salt (not iodized). Sea salt can be used. # 1 lb. dark brown sugar # 2 oz. salt peter Addition of one or more of the following ingredients is optional: 1 oz. red pepper 1 oz. crushed garlic cloves 1 oz. rosemary 1 oz. bay leaves Dissolve first three ingredients in 5 gallons of boiling water. Add optional ingredients. Cool gradually. Pour over the meat / bacon in crock.
Bacon takes between 2 to 3 weeks.
Ham takes 2 days / pound (30 to 40 days per average ham).
Keep as close as possible at 38 F. Check in 2 weeks for scum. If scum occurs, remove, wash meat off, start over again with new batch of brine. Cool temperature is a key to curing. Meat / bacon must be covered with liquid all the time. At the end of the process, drain meat /bacon until dry, and smoke. I prefer hickory, but any hardwood will do.
Ingredients:
10 to 12 fresh green pepper bunches
250 ml of water
3/4 tsp turmeric powder
the juice of 2 lemons
2 heaped tsp of salt
Method:
Wash the peppercorn and dry them by wiping gently with a towel, making sure the stalks are intact. Keep aside.
In a pan, bring the water to a boil and add the salt and turmeric powder. Simmer for a couple of minutes and take it off the heat. Allow the brine solution to cool down. Add the lemon juice and stir well. Pour this into a sterile glass bottle/ jar. Put the peppercorn stalks into the bottle/ jar, ensuring they are completely submerged in the solution.
Close the bottle and keep it at room temperature. After a week, the pickle is ready to be served. This pickle does not require refrigeration. The peppercorn stalks will change to a somewhat dull and dirty greenish colour after being in the brine. This is normal and doesn't change the quality of the pickle.
This recipe makes one medium sized jam jar of pickle.
This recipe is for 1 5-6 pound flat-cut beef brisket.
Ingredients:
2/3 cup table salt
1/2 cup + 2 tablespoons sugar
3 tablespoons kosher salt
2 tablespoons ground black pepper
Procedure:
You don't soak pickles in brine, you soak cucumbers in brine and you do it to turn the cucumbers into pickles.
cucumbers and brine vinegar soak the cucumbers in the vinegar for about 48 hours
They are actually cucumbers soaked in brine
The correct spelling of the plural noun is "pickles" (normally cucumbers in brine).
Pickles are actually cucumbers that are fermented in vinagar or brine to preserve them. That is where they get their sour taste. It is not known specifically where the pickling process comes from, however the earliest known use of the term originates from somewhere in central Europe circa 1440 A.D.
A pickle is just a cucumber that has been pickled (put in a brine). Cucumbers are grown above ground.
There are different methods for preparing dill pickles you can pour brine over cucumbers and then bathe them in a jar, you can brine cucumbers all night in salt water or, you can barrel ferment them. I found a recipe called fast favorite garlic dill pickles that sounds great it calls for pickling cucumbers, white venegar, water, pickling salt, fresh dill, and cloves of garlic you can find it at www.epicurious.com. They go well with hamburgers, sandwiches, and chips.
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Another contributor wrote: Most vegetables, and some fruits, can be pickled, using brine or vinegar solutions. Common pickles are small cucumbers soaked in a solution of vinegar, salt, and spices. Pickling Mexican peppers is common and even eggs can be "pickled." However, English "pickle" is nothing like American pickles. English pickle is a blend of chopped vegetables in a sweet-and-sour brine. If you're in England and ask for pickle for your hamburger, this is what you'll get.
Typically, there are no seeds in a pickle. Pickles are cucumbers that have been pickled in vinegar or brine, which does not involve keeping the seeds.
Pickling is actually a process in which you preserve food in a brine solution (water and salt) or marinate something and preserving it in a vinegar solution. Pickled cucumbers are what are typically called 'pickles', even though it's not technically correct. Other items that get pickled most commonly: ginger, olives, tomatoes, onions, and peppers.
Before a military campaign, Julius Caesar had cucumbers brine-soaked and fermented so that his soldiers would have a goodly supply of energizing, vitamin E-rich pickles.