The BEST Half Sour Pickles recipe there is! These easy homemade pickles taste just like New York Crunchy pickles. No canning is needed to make these delicious pickles, just throw them in the refrigerator for a few days! Make them to find out why they’re so popular!

How to Make Half Sour Pickles
If I could stand on top of a mountain and yell one thing, it would be “I love pickles!” Seriously, I can’t get enough of them — they’re crunchy, briny, and just hit the spot any time of day. Whether I’m grabbing a quick snack or adding them to a burger, they’re always my go-to. If you’re a pickle lover like me, don’t miss out on my tangy, heartwarming Polish Dill Pickle Soup! It’s the perfect comfort food that’s packed with all the pickle goodness.
Right now, my cucumber plants are in full swing, and we’ve been busy picking and pickling those fresh kirby cucumbers. Did you know cucumbers are one of the easiest veggies to grow? I currently have 6 mason jars full of pickles in my fridge! And it’s not just cucumbers — I also love experimenting with other pickled veggies, like Pickled Red Onions, spicy Pickled Okra, and some classic Pickled Green Tomatoes. Each of them brings something unique to the table!
If you’re ever in Brooklyn and find yourself craving a pickle, you know where to come! After years of swooning over the pickles at all the NYC pickle spots, I’ve finally perfected the art of making the perfect half sour pickle. Trust me, it’s totally worth it!


Half Sour Pickles Recipe
A few notes about these half sour beauties:
- Half sour pickles are made using a saltwater brine instead of vinegar, which gives them a milder, less acidic flavor. The saltwater helps draw out the natural flavors from the cucumbers while encouraging fermentation, which is what gives half sours their signature tang. This method allows the pickles to retain a more crisp texture and fresh taste, unlike the more tart, preserved flavor found in traditional vinegar-based pickles.
- I recommend letting these pickles sit in the fridge for at least 4 days before digging in. After that, they’re so irresistible, you might find yourself finishing the jar in just a day or two. However, if you have some self-control, they can last for several weeks in the fridge.
- Kirby cucumbers are the best for pickles, but honestly any cucumber if you can fit it into the jar will work.

Refrigerator Pickles Recipe
-If you don’t have Kirby cucumbers, no worries! For larger cucumbers, it’s a good idea to cut them into spears so they fit better in the jar. Just keep in mind that cutting the cucumbers exposes more surface area, which means the pickles may taste saltier as the flesh absorbs more brine.
-Please don’t skip on the seasonings. These pickles soak alongside delicious garlic, fresh dill, peppercorns, coriander seeds, mustard seeds and bay leaves.
-This recipe uses a half gallon mason jar. The ingredients and amount of water to salt ratio in this recipe is for this sized jar.
-For premium crunch and crispness, I suggest using Ball Pickle Crisp. It works great to keep that fresh crunch and prevents they from becoming soft.

Fresh kirby cucumbers just picked from the garden!

One of the yummy herbs in this recipe is coriander seeds. If you have a cilantro plant and you neglect it, it will turn into coriander seeds. Awesome, right? I always do this every year so I get fresh coriander to last until next harvest season.

You can use a mortar and pestle to crush your dry ingredients or you can be like me and just use a tool (I don’t know the name of this so let’s just go with “tool”) to bash it all together. A rolling pin works great too. So does a hammer.

Put your cucumbers in the jar, then add your garlic.
Then your crushed dry ingredients.

Pick a few pieces of fresh dill. Doesn’t it smell great?

Then add your salt water and fresh dill.
Keep filling your jar with water until your cucumbers are completely covered. In the jar above, a little bit of the salt water still needs to be added.
Now it’s the hard part.. waiting for a few days to eat them!

But when it’s time… it will be worth it!

If you are making batches as you harvest, and you use similar jars sometimes it gets confusing to keep track of the ones that have been sitting the longest. To do this I use chalk or a Sharpie and write on the lid. #1 = eat first, #2 = eat next, #3 = eat next next.. etc.
Enjoy! 🙂
If you try this Half Sour Pickles recipe, please leave a comment or share it on Instagram with tag #brooklynfarmgirl – I’m always looking for photos to feature and share!
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Half Sour Pickles
PrintIngredients
- 5 kirby cucumbers or however many you can fit into your jar
- 1/2 teaspoon coriander seeds
- 1/2 teaspoon mustard seeds
- 1/2 teaspoon black peppercorns
- few pieces of fresh dill
- 3 bay leaves
- 6 cloves garlic minced
- 1/4 cup sea salt
- 6 cups water
- additional whole coriander seeds and peppercorns to add on top
Instructions
- Wash your cucumbers.
- Dissolve your sea salt in the water.
- Grind up all the dry ingredients (coriander, mustard seeds, peppercorns, 2 bay leaves). If you don’t have a mortar/pestle, throw it in a plastic bag and use a rolling pin to crush them.
- Put the cucumbers in your jar.
- Put the minced garlic in the jar, then ground up spices, then pour the salt water mixture on top. If you have any water left, disregard it.
- Add a few pieces of fresh dill on top.
- Add in your additional coriander seeds, peppercorns and bay leaf. If you're using pickle crisp for extra crunch (see recipe notes), I put them in right now.
- Make sure your cucumbers are completely covered in water and close the jar. Give the jar a shake to mix.
- Put in the refrigerator. Let them sit for at least 4 days before eating.
- Enjoy!
Video:
Notes
For a crunchy pickle add 1/4 teaspoon Ball Pickle Crisp Granules at the end.
Kit says
Hi Pamela! I’m a hot mess in the kitchen, and frequently botch things as simple as hard-boiled eggs… but your recipe is quick, easy, and phenomenally DELICIOUS. Really, really good. Just made my second batch! Can’t thank you enough.
Pamela says
So happy to hear you’re enjoying these Kit! Keep on pickling! 🙂
Shaun says
I’m getting ready to try making a couple of batches including one batch using an alder smoked salt. One question in advance about the water: do you use filtered water to remove the chlorine, let it stand to dissipate, etc.
I’m already looking forward to the end of next week so I can crack open a jar!
Pamela says
I just use regular tap water.
Robin says
Can I substitute KOSHER SALT?????
Pamela says
Yes, I would use the same amount.
byeGeorge says
Ohh boy…I’m a pickle lover but only want the snap fresh product…how long should/can these be kept in the fridge before bacteria or other problems may arise…thx…byeGeorge,,,(~.-)
Thx for putting this together…
Pamela says
I’ve kept them for over a month and they’ve stayed crunchy and fresh. They don’t last that long in my house as I want to eat them all! 😉
Debby says
I became obsessed with pickles this year
.. chow chow, Korean Radishes, sweet and Spicy, curried veg, Kimchi, sauerkraut. .. all came out amazing and the larder is stuffed with my obsession. But half sours? Let’s just say after 6 batches of varying degrees of salty and mushy I was ready to give up. Then I saw this recipe and thought if a New Yorker can’t make a good half sour then I really am going to quit. Wow! Amazing. Right crunchy snap. Perfect proportions of salt and tang. I did them in a big batch in a gallon food prep bin weighed down with plates and packed them pretty solidly. After a few days they were ready so I transferred them to big half gallon jars and put then in the fridge. Can’t Stop eating them!
Pamela says
Hey Debby, I’m so glad you stopped by to let me know! Nothing makes me more happy than knowing someone else is enjoying some half sour pickles! We are harvesting some more cucumbers today from the garden so I’m sure to be making a few more batches myself! I definitely snack away on them all day… and they are the absolute best on sandwiches! Have a great weekend!
Fred in Houston says
Oh my God!!! This recipe is absolutely amazing!! My daughter and I made a batch and they are fantastic!!! Thanks for the great recipe – we’ll be making lots more of these! And to return the favor, email me if you’d like a copy of my contest-winning chili; glad to share.
Pamela says
Thanks Fred! I’m so happy to hear these pickles worked out for you. I’m about to make a few more batches today! My email is in the contact info above, feel free to send over that chili recipe!
Jamie says
Hi Fred, Can you post the chili recipe? Thanks😬
Jamie says
Hi Pamela, you say to add in additional coriander seeds, peppercorns and bay leaf on top. Ca you tell me amounts please? And how much dill?
Jamie says
Hi Fred, can you please send the winning chili recipe? Thanks!
wendy says
I have never made pickles before but have a ton of kirbys this year and want to try this recipe… do you need to buy mason jars and seal in boiling water? or do you just lid and put in the fridge? My mom made a batch of dill pickles from my kirbys but they are from the premade pickling spice and are super sour… im dying for a great half sour super cold cruncy pickle!!!
Pamela says
Hi Wendy, you can totally do this without canning. Just follow the steps and then put into your fridge directly. They will last a few weeks, if not slightly longer! Enjoy!
Karl says
I’ve been looking for a recipe close to the half sour pickles that they have at Ted’s Montana Grill and what Katie said, “The recipe(s) I followed weren’t this easy and they turned out…bad.” These turned out very close – just what I’d been looking for! Thanks for posting!
LOL! Also, what Les said, the mystery tool is a “nut rounder.” 🙂
Pamela says
So glad you liked them Karl! They are one of my favorite afternoon snacks!
Also thanks for letting me know the official term, haha. 😉
Leif W says
I used to help make pickles and also canned pears when I was a kid. I remember boiling the mason jars, and then adding some sugar water for pears, and a salty/vinegary/spiced mix for pickles (sometimes other things as well like pepeprs, tomatoes, etc). But I’ve long since forgotten the specific steps and ingredients. I’ve always grown up with a family mentality to just go to the store and buy a jar of pickles. I’ve never really liked those, they upset my stomach with all the chemicals, and also burn my throat. Nasty stuff. I do greatly prefer the half-sour pickles, though, and one of these days I’d like to make some. Your recipe ought to come in handy! I don’t have an aversion to vinegar, and may experiment with varying amounts and do my taste tests. That’s half the fun of preparing your own food! 😀
Oh, and the tool’s “official” name is an Adjustable Wrench, or Adjustable Spanner or Adjustable Spanner Wrench or Crescent Wrench or Adjustable Crescent Wrench. “Nut Rounder”, haha, I have never heard of that term, but I understand exactly what it means. It’s a joke, because these wrenches, although very convenient in a pinch, need to be used with great care. Some (most) brands will loosen up as you use them, or you otherwise bump a finger over the adjuster and loosen it, which happens right when you go to pull it hard to loosen the nut. Similar applies in reverse when tightening, and you need to do the “final torque down” to get it tight. Anyways, if the adjuster is loose in either of these positions, it tends to just grind off the corners of a hex nut, a very unfortunate occurrence called “rounding”. Then you have to take more drastic measures to get the darn thing undone, pliers, specialized tools like, drills, and specialized bolt-out drill bits, blow torches, etc.
Consuelo @ Honey & Figs says
I wish I could make this, but the cucumbers we grow are actually bigger than my head, so there’s no way I can’t fit them in a jar :(((
(((This recipe looks wonderful though)))
Pamela says
Those are some big cucumbers! You could always cut them up into bite size pieces if you’d like! Thanks for stopping by! 🙂
Dianna says
Why not pick them when they are a smaller, more manageable size? I wouldn’t think Kirby’s that big would be very good. Seems like you would lose the taste when they get that big. Curious to know if they still have good flavor when that big!
Jay says
How long can these pickles sit once canned? After the four days do they have to be eaten immediately? Have you done a water bath for them to preserve them, if so has that changed the taste or texture? Thanks again for the recipe!!
Pamela says
Hey Jay, I have many batches in my fridge that have been in there for about 4 weeks, and if I add some Pickle Crisp granules before I close the jar it really does help keeping that crunch weeks on in.
If you keep the cucumbers whole they stay fresh for many weeks. If you cut them into spears, I would give them less time before turning soft. After 4 days, no they don’t have to be eaten right away. You can leave them sit much longer if you’d like. Enjoy!
Debby says
Mine are going on 5 and are still yummy and crisp.
Less says
That tool is an adjustable wrench, often referred to as a “nut rounder” because it often slips on the nuts you’re trying to remove and rounding over the corners of the nut. 🙂
Pamela says
It can be called that too. 😛
gotasté says
I’ve always wanted to learn making these. Thank you for sharing! 🙂
Hannah says
Yum, these look so good. I have never done coriander seeds in them before but I grew up with my mum making these delish pickles all summer long. I have had them on my mind for a few days – so your post with a new recipe to try is serendipitous!
Pamela says
I hope you give them a try Hannah. The coriander seeds really enhance the sea salt water, I love them (great for soup too!).
Meghan @ The Tasty Fork says
I LOVE this blog, Pamela!! Your photos are so pretty. I bought a jar of pickles the other day, thinking I need to learn how to make my own! I pinned your post so I can use it as a reference.
Pamela says
Aww thanks Meghan! Good luck making your own pickles.. and enjoy snacking on them!
Gloria @ Simply Gloria says
So funny, I am the same way with vinegar! I’m loving how you did all this…yum! Love pickles so much that I find myself snacking on them all during the day. Your pics are so amazing, too!
Pamela says
Thanks Gloria! Glad I found another person who feels that way about vinegar!
BKS says
Im coming late to your pickle making recipe — the photos are great, the instructions perfect — However, I cannot locate the recipe! Im ready, have your ingredients —
Please send recipe again!
Thanks
Irina @ wandercrush says
Consider this me standing on a blogosphere mountain and yelling, “I love pickles too!” Homemade is the best, by far!
So happy to have found your lovely blog.
Pamela says
Consider us 2 people who are on a mountain yelling about pickles, I think we found friendship. 🙂
Anne ~ Uni Homemaker says
This sounds delish! I love pickling at home. I’m not a fan of pickles. Actually, bad pickles but I do l0ve it when it’s done at home or served at restaurants. Love the combination of ingredients here Pamela. YUM!
Pamela says
Thanks Anne, it’s lots of fun and easy to make too!
Katie says
I am SO excited to try this! I’ve tried to make half-sours, because a friend of mine just raves about them. The recipe I followed wasn’t this easy and they turned out…bad. Like, throw in the garbage bad and that is sacrilege, I know, as a fellow pickle FIEND. (I thought I was the only one who would raid the fridge of pickles at 4 am…)
Nerdy note – real pickles don’t use vinegar. And vegetables that are soaked in salty brine and not vinegar are fermented, which makes a vinegar like liquid. So, when people use vinegar, they are really making quick pickles, and skipping the best part! So, not only are half-sours better, but they also have all kinds of good-for-you bacteria. Win-win!
Pamela says
Let me know if you try these Katie, I hope you enjoy them! They are my all day snack, I can’t get enough of them right now. I ate more than 2 today (number will stay a secret to hide the guilty). 🙂
Katie says
They are in my fridge right now! I used a little of a pickling spice mixture I got at the coop and added in garlic (no fresh dill….sigh) and the water/salt ratio you wrote.
Judging by how much salt is in these, I know why my last batch was so bad. Not nearly enough salt and the pickles went bad. Real bad.
Pamela says
Let me know when you crack a jar open!
Jamie G says
I’ve never made pickles before. My mom is the pickle queen making no less than half a dozen gallons, a dozen or more of each quarts and pints. So many pickles! I am going to share this recipe with her since hers are all vinegar based (I believe).
Pamela says
Your mama is the pickle queen! If you know of any of her speciality recipes, feel free to share! 🙂
Julie @ Table for Two says
Gorgeous pickles!!
Pamela says
Thanks Julie!
Pam (Sidewalk Shoes) says
I adore pickles too! I had no idea you could pickle without vinegar!
Pamela says
I had to find a way around that vinegar.. 🙂 Thanks for stopping by Pam!
Amy @ Elephant Eats says
I LOVE pickles. My fave are garlicky, vinegary, sour dill pickes, but these half-sours look like a nice change of pace. I can eat like 2 or 3 pickles in one sitting. I don’t even want to think about how many I’ll eat when I’m pregnant. Anyway, these look excellent! I still haven’t tried my hand at canning. It really scares me.
Pamela says
I hear you Amy, I can eat a dangerous amount of pickles in one sitting too!
Ken says
How long will they keep in the fridge?
Pamela says
I prefer to eat them within a few weeks but I’ve kept them for over a month and they’ve stayed crunchy and fresh. Enjoy!
Debra says
I am intrigued by pickles with no vinegar. Thanks for stopping by EEs. I enjoyed reading yours.
Pamela says
Thanks Debra!
Kelly says
I love the sound of these fresh herb infused pickles. Hubby and I go through a lot of jars of pickles too and I have been meaning to try my hand at pickling so thanks so much for sharing this Pamela. Definitely pinning to try this 🙂
Pamela says
Thanks Kelly, I hope you try them! They are a favorite snack right now, I can’t get enough!
Mr. & Mrs. P says
We want to make our own pickles!!! Need to try asap!!! Beautiful photos too!!!
Pamela says
Good luck! Thanks!
Lisa @ Whisk & Cleaver says
You come up with the best recipes! I have an unreasonable fear of canning, you make it look so easy. I love pickles, too – my favorite is sliced pickles on a salami and swiss sandwich with mustard.
Pamela says
Definitely, I love sliced pickles on a sandwich or burger, can’t have it without them!
Kevin P Quinn says
I am going to try that. Sounds perfect. This pickle recipe is my go-to every time. I am just starting to get fruit on my cuke plant!
Eva @ Eva Bakes says
My pickle-loving husband would adore these!
Pamela says
They are so addicting, I am planting more cucumbers for the Fall so I can make more batches!
Laurie says
Question about Dill? I had a ton of dill volunteer in the garden this year and because I think it’s pretty I just let it go to seed. For next year’s purposes and making these gorgeous pickles, if I just keep the dill plants shorter and cut off the top before it goes to seed will I get those wonderful dill fronds like you’re showing? Just wondering! Love your web site!
Pamela says
Hi Laurie, that should work. I would recommend you pinch off the buds so the plant continues to get bushy and doesn’t stop growing. Good luck!
Ashley @ Wishes and Dishes says
I love pickles too!! These sound sooo great!
Pamela says
Thanks Ashley! They’re addicting.. I had a few to snack on yesterday! 🙂
Suzanne says
I’ve never had pickles without vinegar, these sound great. I too love pickles, crunchy and spicy they are the best. Your kirby’s look wonderful.
Pamela says
Thanks Suzanne! Agreed, I need a good crunch!
Miss Messy says
I’ve never made pickles but i think i need to! Looks like a super recipe and a brilliant snack to have around!
Pamela says
I hope you give it a try, it’s one of my favorite snacks!
Debbie says
I am been munching on these all week. Thanks Pamela for the great recipe, I am on my second jar. I reused the brine. That’s ok?
Pamela says
That’s totally ok Debbie, I do it sometimes too when I quickly finish a jar. 🙂
Ken says
Can I use store bought pickling spice?
Pamela says
Hi Ken, you can, but the recipe is so delicious because of the spices so I can’t guarantee the same results.