Dill Pickles

Learn how to make pickles at home! This easy 8-ingredient recipe yields crisp, tangy dill pickles that are a delicious snack or sandwich topping.

Homemade pickles

The first time I tried this dill pickle recipe, I wondered why on earth I’d spent so many years buying pickles at the grocery store. Sure, store bought pickles can be tasty, but these little guys take dill pickles to a whole new level. They’re super easy to make (the refrigerator does most of the work for you!), and they taste awesome. They’re crisp, tangy, and refreshing, with an addictive garlic-dill flavor. Most often, I eat them as a snack right out of the fridge, but they’re delicious on sandwiches and veggie burgers too. If you like dill pickles, you’re going to love this recipe.

Pickle recipe ingredients

How to Make Pickles

My method for how to make pickles couldn’t be simpler! Here’s how it goes:

  • First, slice the cucumbers. I usually make this recipe with Persian cucumbers, but small pickling cucumbers work here too. Slice them lengthwise into quarters to make spears, or thinly slice them horizontally to make dill pickle chips.
  • Then, fill the jars. Divide the cucumbers among 4 8-ounce or 2 16-ounce jars, and add fresh dill, halved garlic cloves, mustard seeds, and peppercorns to each jar of pickles.
  • Next, make the brine. I use a mix of water, white vinegar, sugar, and salt. If you’re not a sweet pickle person, don’t worry! The sugar doesn’t actually make the refrigerator pickles sweet. Instead, it balances the pungent vinegar and salt to create an irresistible sour pickle flavor. Heat the brine on the stove until the sugar and salt dissolve and pour it over the jarred cucumbers. Then, set the jars aside to cool to room temperature.
  • Finally, chill! This is the hard part! These guys aren’t ready right away – they need some time in the fridge to soak up the brine and become really flavorful. Dill pickle chips will be ready in 24 hours, while spears will take at least 48. They’ll keep in the fridge for several weeks, and they get better as time goes on. For the best flavor, wait about 5 days.

Find the complete recipe with measurements below.

Pickle recipe ingredients

Dill Pickle Recipe Serving Suggestions

These homemade pickles taste great on sandwiches, burgers, and more! Pile dill pickle chips onto veggie burgers, mushroom burgers, cauliflower po’ boys, black bean burgers, or BBQ jackfruit sandwiches at your next cookout. Alternatively, serve spears alongside one of these sandwiches for a deli-style lunch:

If you’re not in the mood for a sandwich, try adding your refrigerator pickles to a salad. I love to dice them and add them to my Easy Macaroni Salad.

Last but not least, they’re delicious on their own! Enjoy them straight out of the fridge for a tangy, refreshing snack.

What are the best jars for pickling?

Ball Mason jars are a classic option for pickling. I love the brand’s 16-ounce jars, especially because you can get them in a pack of 12 for under $16 at Target. That’s just under $1.30 a jar! They’re dishwasher-safe and completely airtight, which is why they’re my go-to jars for making pickles like these.

dill pickles

More Favorite Homemade Pickles

If you love this dill pickle recipe, try making pickled jalapeños, pickled red onions, or banh mi pickles next!

Get This Recipe In Your Inbox
Share your email, and we'll send it straight to your inbox. Plus, enjoy daily doses of recipe inspiration as a bonus!

Dill Pickles

rate this recipe:
4.98 from 186 votes
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 1 minute
Chilling Time: 1 day
Serves 16
Learn how to make pickles at home! They're crisp, tangy, and refreshing - a perfect snack or sandwich fixing.

Equipment

Ingredients

Instructions

  • To make dill pickle spears, slice the cucumbers lengthwise into quarters. To make dill pickle chips, thinly slice them horizontally.
  • Divide the cucumbers among 4 (8-ounce) or 2 (16-ounce) jars. Divide the garlic, mustard seeds, peppercorns, and dill sprigs among each jar.
  • Heat the water, vinegar, sugar, and salt in a medium saucepan over medium heat. Stir until the sugar and salt dissolve, about 1 minute. Let cool slightly and pour over the cucumbers. Set aside to cool to room temperature, then store the pickles in the fridge.
  • Pickle spears will be lightly pickled in 2 days, but their best flavor will start to develop around day 5 or 6. Pickle chips will be lightly pickled in 1 day, and will become more flavorful every day after that. Store in the fridge for several weeks.

Notes

Pictured are these Weck jars.

279 comments

4.98 from 186 votes (125 ratings without comment)

Leave a comment:

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Rate this recipe (after making it)




  1. Jackie Gormly
    07.30.2024

    Can I freeze these?

    • Phoebe Moore (L&L Recipe Developer)
      08.02.2024

      Hi Jackie, I wouldn’t recommend freezing the pickles. They’d become soggy when thawed.

  2. Linda
    07.28.2024

    5 stars
    These are my new favorite pickles! Love, Love Love!

    • Phoebe Moore (L&L Recipe Developer)
      08.01.2024

      So glad you love them, Linda!

  3. Jennifer
    07.19.2024

    This website sucks when you’re trying to read a recipe on your phone. Used to love this site but now it’s impossible to get a recipe because it keeps refreshing to add.

    • Jen
      07.23.2024

      , I just screenshot everything. Then I go to my photos and have no problem. Lol.

  4. lulupulu
    07.13.2024

    5 stars
    mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm

  5. Megan
    07.05.2024

    Hi, I’m ready to try and make these pickles today!
    Just one question – I was wondering if regular granulated sugar or light brown sugar can be substituted for the cane sugar? That’s the only ingredient I don’t have on hand.

    Thank you!

    • Megan
      07.07.2024

      5 stars
      I went ahead and made them anyway, the granulated sugar worked fine and my pickles are absolutely delicious!

      The hardest part is always the waiting…

    • Phoebe Moore (L&L Recipe Developer)
      07.12.2024

      Hi Megan, I’m a little late getting to this, but regular granulated sugar would work!

    • Lauren
      07.27.2024

      5 stars
      I used regular sugar and it turned out fine

    • Lexy
      07.28.2024

      Red path granulated sugar is cane sugar

    • Shelley McDermott
      08.01.2024

      5 stars
      You can, I use organic but standard works too

  6. Lin Cline
    06.22.2024

    5 stars
    I’ve used your recipe a few times now and we absolutely love the results. In fact, I was given some pickling cukes and had just finished a jar of pickles and just reused the juice adding more dill (we grow our own) and it was just a little milder but still awesome.

    • Bri
      07.09.2024

      5 stars
      I was wondering about reusing the juice – how did you do that? We went through the first batch so quickly, so delicious! It would be helpful to reuse it!

  7. Jayden Chase
    05.18.2024

    i’m starting my own pickling business and had some questions. When they are done being refrigerated for a week are they ok to leave out of the refrigerator?

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      05.22.2024

      Hi Jayden, these need to be stored in the fridge – the time they need to pickle depends on the size you cut the cucumbers. Pickle spears will be lightly pickled in 2 days, but their best flavor will start to develop around day 5 or 6. Pickle chips will be lightly pickled in 1 day, and will become more flavorful every day after that. Store in the fridge for several weeks.

  8. Cheryl C Griffith
    05.09.2024

    Can these be canned/processed? I’d like to put a bunch up to make it through the winter! It’s my first pickle try so thought I should ask! Thanks for any help

    • Phoebe Moore (L&L Recipe Developer)
      05.10.2024

      Hi Cheryl, we make this recipe as refrigerator pickles. We haven’t tried canning them. I recommend using a recipe that includes canning instructions if you want to give it a go.

    • Meeghan
      06.08.2024

      I am pickling these for canning today, water bath method. Very excited!

  9. Robin
    05.08.2024

    Does the cane sugar make them sweet. Hello Kevin out

    • Phoebe Moore (L&L Recipe Developer)
      05.10.2024

      Hi, I would still consider these sour dill pickles, not sweet pickles. The cane sugar adds balance to the acidic brine. Hope this helps!

  10. Sara Kasperek
    04.23.2024

    Can you use any kind of cucumbers?

  11. Maria Northover
    03.25.2024

    5 stars
    This recipe tasted Exactly what I was after.

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      03.25.2024

      I’m glad you enjoyed them!

  12. Maria Northover
    03.25.2024

    I made these and they are absolutely delicious.

  13. Luka
    03.23.2024

    How long do they last? It says they should be ready after a day but after opening them to eat, how long until they go bad?

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      03.25.2024

      Hi Luka, they should last a few weeks in the fridge.

    • Shelley M
      06.23.2024

      5 stars
      I made these, whole pickling cukes August of 2023, I just opened a jar and they are fantastic, my customers are made in haven’t sold the rest of them ?

  14. Shannon
    03.14.2024

    Hi! This looks so yummy and easy! Are these fermented?

    • Phoebe Moore (L&L Recipe Developer)
      03.15.2024

      Hi Shannon, These are quick pickles, so they’re not fermented.

  15. Phyllis
    03.08.2024

    I need to drink pickle juice for my foot/leg cramps and the recipes I’ve tried so far are just too salty and intense to drink. I try really hard to stay away from all sugars, so I haven’t put any in my pickle juice, but is that why I haven’t been able to reproduce the juice that is made commercially and available in the pickle jars from the store (I can drink that okay)? Is there any other ingredient I could use instead of sugar to counter the salt and the intensity of the vinegar? I have to make some more right now, and I’m dreading what I’ll end up with. Going to use much less kosher salt this time, and less pickling spices, more dill weed and hope for the best. Would coconut sugar or date sugar be okay to use? What about xylitol or stevia? Thanks for whatever you can suggest.

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      03.11.2024

      Hi Phyllis, coconut or date sugar should be fine – once dissolved the liquid will turn brown which will look a little weird but the taste should be fine. I’m not sure about xylitol or stevia but I think they should work fine – use less of those because the sweetness is more concentrated.

      • Phyllis
        03.11.2024

        4 stars
        Thanks so much for Your response, Jeanine!  I really appreciate it.

        I made the pickle juice the other night and used regular sugar, but only about 1/4 tsp, and boyo, did that make a difference, even just that little bit.  So far, it seems okay, doesn’t bother my belly as sugar usually does, probably because it was such a small amount.  But it made the taste much more tolerable.  I’ve also been mixing it with regular pickle juice.  I also put 1/4 tsp of tumeric in.  Next batch, I may try either the coconut or date sugar just to see the difference.  I don’t have any issues about how it looks, it’s the taste that’s important here, and how it works for my cramps, and how it settles in my stomach. Thanks again!

  16. James
    02.25.2024

    Can you make whole pickles with this recipe or only spears /chips?

    Thanks

    • Phoebe Moore (L&L Recipe Developer)
      03.01.2024

      Hi James, you could use this recipe to make whole pickles. They’ll just take longer to take on flavor from the brine. I’d recommend pricking the cucumbers in a few places with a fork or knife tip to help the brine penetrate the skin. Hope you enjoy!

      • James
        03.04.2024

        A few follow-up questions:
        1. In a response below, Jeanine wrote that they Get soft in the brine if the brine is warm. But the instructions say to pour warm brine over the cucumbers and then let them sit till they hit room temp then put in fridge. Just confirming that we are supposed to pour warm brine on cukes, not room temp brine.

        2. Assuming weed to pour warm brine over cukes, should we immediately seal the jar and then let it get to room temp, then in fridge? Or keep jar open till reaches room temp, then seal, then put in fridge?

        Thanks!

        • James
          03.07.2024

          Ended up going ahead and maing these.

          – poured warm brine over pickles.
          – left the jars open till they cooled to room temp, then sealed and put in fridge.

          Made one jar of pickle slices, one of whole pickles.

          Pickle slices are OUTSTANDING. Crunchy, perfect flavor. My wife, who is a pickle-phile, was blown away.

          Haven’t tried the whole pickles yet, as they need more time in the brine.

          But wow are those pickle slices gooooood!

          • Phoebe Moore (L&L Recipe Developer)
            03.08.2024

            Hi James, Awesome! I’m so glad you loved the pickles!

  17. Daniel Webster
    12.21.2023

    5 stars
    Easy to follow instructions. I made this in big Ball mason jars to give as Christmas presents. Very practical and tasty. Thank you.

  18. S
    12.12.2023

    5 stars
    Easy to follow recipe and turned out really yummy! Thank you for sharing

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      12.13.2023

      I’m so glad you loved them!

  19. Tracy
    10.26.2023

    5 stars
    I made these and loved them. I have made them several times now and plan on making them many times in the future.

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      10.27.2023

      I’m so glad you loved them!

  20. Patty
    10.25.2023

    4 stars
    I made these pickles but they became limpy after a few days.. What happened?

    • Jeanine Donofrio
      10.27.2023

      Hi Patty, they should get softer as they sit in the brine. Did you let the brine cool all the way to room temp? If the brine was warm, it could soften the cucumbers.

A food blog with fresh, zesty recipes.
Photograph of Jeanine Donofrio and Jack Mathews in their kitchen

Hello, we're Jeanine and Jack.

We love to eat, travel, cook, and eat some more! We create & photograph vegetarian recipes from our home in Chicago, while our shiba pups eat the kale stems that fall on the kitchen floor.