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.
Roy Kitka says
My hobby is making all sorts of pickles but could never come up with the perfect half sour, including all the old family recipes.About a year ago I searched the internet and found your recipe.I use Aldi cukes6-8 per package.Im 77 but old dogs can learn new recipes.The 5stars are for the pickles but most of all there a lot more than 5 stars for your website.
john doe says
you are adorable!
Rachel says
Hi, I see no mention of burping the jars–does your recipe not require it?
Pamela says
That’s right, no need to do that.
Rob q says
Because These aren’t sour pickles. No fermentation.
john doe says
the only thing sour here is you, rob
Mary Elizabeth says
Can powdered coriander and powdered mustard be used instead of the seeds? I can use a mortar and pestal but wonder how crushed I should make the spices and is the bay leaf included in crush?
KLM says
This recipe delivered EXACTLY what I was looking for! I’m one of those people that will go to a deli just for the half sour pickles. And the market never has them, or if they do, they don’t last. These are so fresh tasting and flavorful! Used Persian cucumbers as Kirbys are out of season
Question….do I have to crush the seeds? Aging hands don’t like it…. And without that, these would be a two minute recipe! And in any case, I’m making them over and over!
April says
I haven’t made this recipe yet but I’m excited to try it! I actually want to make sours. How long should I let them brine to become full sour? TY
Brian says
Do you use brown or yellow mustard seeds ?
Erica says
Just finished my second batch of these and they’re so great! Do you have any advice about what to do with them once they are pickled to your liking? Is there an ingredient I can add to stop the picking process? Thanks
danleep11 says
Your recipe sounds really good but I don’t like the salt. For anyone who wants less salt, then alterations of the recipe would be needed, ie, substitute the water/salt brine into a vinegar/water brine, reducing the salt to any desire and making 50/50 water/vinegar. This then makes pickles to the standard definition of pickles. If there is no vinegar, it not a pickle. Then, use the Ball Crisper (CaCl) and can according to Ball directions. I do like the recipe, though and will use it ‘my’ way.
BrooklynPickleMaven says
Vinegar doesn’t define a pickle. In fact brining is the standard for pickling everything, not just piggies. Corned beef is pickled brine, as is watermelon rind, olives, reappears, etc. If salt is your concern then vinegar pickles are your choice -but they won’t be half sour, sour, or garlic dill.
charleen wuellner says
Does the water need to be warm or just room temperature? I want to make sure I am doing this right. I am a pickle fanatic.
Pamela says
Room temperature water is fine, I never warm it up. Hope this helps!
charleen wuellner says
Thank you for getting back to me. I am so surprised. I have never made pickles but I thought I would give it a try. I love half sours and they are hard to find with that snap. Thank you again
Charleen in Miami
Steve says
Looked around for a recipe when someone gave me way too many cucumbers! I liked yours the best. I didn’t have all the seasonings but I improvised. I couldn’t wait, so I tasted one after two days. (It was for scientific research, of course.) It was tasty but really salty! Next time I think I’ll use half the salt.
Question – what do you do after four days? Do you remove the brine and keep them in water? If you don’t do that, won’t they keep pickling?
Thanks!
Steve says
Answering my own question – the salinity of the solution does matter. Not enough salt will allow bad bacteria to grow; too much salt will kill the good bacteria as well as the bad.
Kelly says
Love this recipe and am making these over and over. We are NYers and my husband says these are better than Katz Deli pickles. Could not be easier to make and ready to eat in a day or two.
Pamela says
That makes me so happy to hear Kelly! Keep on enjoying these pickles! 🙂
Katherine says
These don’t have to be canned but can they be? I have so many cucumbers just thinking about long term storage
Anna Linn says
Can I use this recipe for green tomatoe pickles? My friend gave me a box of green tomatoes and I’d love to make half sour tomatoes. My favorite!
BrooklynPickleMaven says
Yes but pickled green tomatos usually are made with garlic only. No dill
Kevin says
Can I slice up the pickles or should they be whole?
Pamela says
I recommend leaving them whole for the best crunch, but sometimes if I need a squeeze a couple into the jar I will slice them up.
Patty Goodwill says
Yummy. !!!!!
Leslie says
I am inundated with cucumbers this summer. I was looking for a good recipe for half sour pickles and found this one. It was easy and the pickles turned out so good – crunchy, flavorful and just plain yummy. My only slight criticism is that they were just a little too salty so when I make them again, I will try using a tad less sea salt.
John Doe says
I don’t know if this is your problem but if they are too salty you probably mixed the solution wrong, mix 6 cups of water and 1/4 cup of salt first, don’t put 1/4 cup of salt in then fill it with stuff then top with water it will be too salty then. as you are placing the cucumbers into the jar let the excess fluid spill out, it’s just salt water and some spices but at least the brine will be the right salinity!
Kathleen says
Thanks John. I LOVE half sour pickles, but mine have been too salty… and I have been repeating the recipe and reducing the amount of salt, but to no avail. Thank you soo much for this comment!!! I think THIS explanation will solve my problem. I might also mention that I will only pickle WHOLE pickles, as sliced pickles, by definition being more porus, soak up more salt. Bottom line? Your suggestion: 6 cups water to 1/4 cup salt and only using whole pickles should solve all my issues. I can’t wait to try this. Thank you.
nida says
yummy
CocoBee says
I’m making them today.
FYI Before I make new recipes, I love to read through the comments and answers. It’s so frustrating when good questions are left unanswered.
Sue says
Made theses the other day. They are delicious and so much better than store bought. So glad I found this recipe. Thank you so much for sharing the recipe 😊
Christina says
Great recipe. Do you know how long they can last once they finish brining?
Hazel says
I’ve grown cucumbers for the first time. I’ve tried quite a few pickling recipes and yours is, by far, the best! Made me feel like a successful pickler. lol. Thank you!
Jmi says
This recipe is spot on. Easy and they always come out great. Thank you!
Bryan says
FYI, mechanics call that tool a “nut f***er” because they often screw up the edges of nuts and bolts. They don’t work very well but do in a pinch when you have the right wrench. So smashing coriander is probably literally the best thing you do with it.
Lisa says
I grew up loving this type of pickle. Searched on line for “new pickles” and saw your recipe. It’s super easy and fabulous!! Happy to learn I can reuse the brine one time. Thanks for this incredible recipe!!
LNC says
I am trying this for the first time. I don’t have half gallon jars. But I made up the salt water, as per instructions and then added the dry spices and garlic, cut my cuts to fit and poured the salt solution over. They’re in the fridge. Fingers crossed.
jay jenkins says
Great pickles I made 2 gallons
Marie says
Can I use pickling salt in place of sea salt
Mike S says
Thanks for the share. What grain size or brand of sea salt are you using? A quarter cup of finely ground pickling salt for example is much more salt than a quarter cup of coarsely ground salt. This might be why some are noting that there pickles came out too salty. I typically just go by weight when I make a brine. Excited to try this recipe!
Mike S says
Answered my own question. After a little research I found out the 3.5% brine solution
is traditional for half sours (which is just like seawater). So in this recipe, 49 grams of salt is needed for the 6 cups of water called for if u want to make sure an not over salt. your brine.
Irene says
This is by far the best pickle recipe I’ve ever made. I can’t make them fast enough. They are gone in no time. The family is constantly asking me to make more! Thank you!
Marie S says
Can I use pickling spices instead of the individual spices? Not crazy over dill, so can I leave it out?
BrooklynPickleMaven says
Yes. Do whatever you like
K C says
This recipe is amazing!! Do I need to let the water cool before pouring it over the cucumbers or it’s ok for it to still be hot? Thanks!