Homemade pickled vegetable jars are a simple way to preserve vegetables using vinegar, salt, and spices. Done properly, they can last for months and develop a tangy, flavorful crunch.
Here’s a clear, safe, and reliable guide.
🥒 Basic Homemade Pickled Vegetable Jars
🧂 Ingredients (basic brine)
- 2 cups vinegar (white or apple cider)
- 2 cups water
- 2 tablespoons salt (non-iodized preferred)
- 1–2 tablespoons sugar (optional, balances acidity)
🥕 Vegetables you can pickle
- Cucumbers
- Carrots
- Cauliflower
- Green beans
- Onions
- Radish
- Bell peppers
🌿 Flavoring (optional but recommended)
- Garlic cloves
- Mustard seeds
- Black peppercorns
- Dill
- Chili flakes
- Bay leaves
🫙 Step-by-step method
1) Prepare jars
- Wash jars with hot water and soap
- Sterilize by boiling or using hot oven
- Let dry completely
2) Prepare vegetables
- Wash and cut evenly
- Keep pieces similar size for even pickling
- Optional: blanch harder vegetables (like carrots)
3) Make the brine
- Boil vinegar, water, salt, and sugar
- Stir until dissolved
- Let it cool slightly (or pour hot for quick pickling)
4) Pack jars
- Add spices first
- Fill jars tightly with vegetables
- Pour brine until fully covered
- Remove air bubbles by tapping jar
5) Seal and store
- Close tightly
- Store in refrigerator (quick pickles) or cool dark place (properly processed jars)
⏳ How long they last
- Refrigerator pickles: 2–3 months
- Properly sealed (canned) pickles: 6–12 months
⚠️ Safety tips (important)
- Always keep vegetables fully submerged
- Use clean, sterilized jars
- Don’t reuse old brine repeatedly
- Discard if you see mold, bad smell, or cloudiness
- Use correct vinegar acidity (at least 5%)
🧠 Why homemade pickles are popular
- Control over salt and sugar
- No preservatives
- Custom flavors
- Probiotic benefits (for fermented versions)
If you want, I can also give:
- a traditional spicy Pakistani achar recipe
- a no-vinegar fermented pickle (probiotic style)
- or tips to make pickles last a full year safely