How to Make Lacto-Fermented Dill Pickles in Canada
Lacto-fermented dill pickles use only salt and water — no vinegar. Take 1.5 kilograms of small fresh Canadian Kirby cucumbers, trim blossom ends, and pack tightly into a 2 litre wide-mouth Mason jar with fresh dill, 4 garlic cloves, and 1 tablespoon mustard seeds. Cover with a 3.5 percent saltwater brine (35 grams pickling salt dissolved in 1 litre water), weight the cucumbers to stay submerged, and ferment at 18 to 22 degrees Celsius for 5 to 14 days until pleasantly sour. Refrigerate to slow fermentation; lacto pickles keep 6 to 12 months refrigerated. They're tangier, more probiotic, and softer-textured than vinegar pickles.
Lacto-fermented dill pickles are the original dill pickle — predating canning, predating vinegar production, going back thousands of years. They’re tangier and more complex than vinegar pickles, contain live probiotic bacteria, and use exactly two ingredients beyond flavourings: cucumber and salt.
This guide covers the traditional fermentation method. For shelf-stable water-bath canned dill pickles, see how to make dill pickles.
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What you need
For 1 × 2 L wide-mouth Mason jar (about 1.5 kg pickles):
- 1.5 kg small fresh Kirby pickling cucumbers (under 8 cm long, narrow, firm)
- 35 g pickling salt per 1 L of brine (use about 1.5 L total brine for a 2 L jar)
- 1.5 L water (filtered or bottled — chlorine in tap water can inhibit fermentation)
- 4-6 cloves garlic
- 1 large bunch fresh dill (or 2 dill flower heads, traditional)
- 1 tbsp mustard seeds
- 1 tsp black peppercorns
- 2 bay leaves
- Optional but recommended: 1 black tea bag, OR a few fresh grape/oak/horseradish leaves for tannins (keeps pickles crisp)
- 2 L wide-mouth Mason jar or fermenting crock
- Fermentation weight (glass weight, smaller jar of water, or sealed brine-filled bag)
- Airlock lid or loose-fitting regular lid
Stainless airlock and spring weight that fits standard Bernardin wide-mouth jars. Perfect for 2 L pickle batches. ~$30 CAD.
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Method
Step 1: Prep cucumbers
- Wash cucumbers under cool running water. Scrub gently with a vegetable brush.
- Trim 1-2 mm off the blossom end of every cucumber. This is critical — blossom-end enzymes soften pickles. See why pickles go soft for the detailed explanation.
- Leave the stem end intact or trim it too — doesn’t matter for safety.
- Soak cucumbers in ice water for 1-2 hours before packing. This firms them up and improves crunch.
Step 2: Make the brine
- In a large pot, combine 1.5 L water + 52 g pickling salt (3.5% concentration; about 3 tbsp salt).
- Heat gently, stirring until salt completely dissolves.
- Cool to room temperature before using. Hot brine kills lactobacillus bacteria.
Step 3: Pack the jar
- Drain the cucumbers.
- Place flavourings at the bottom of the 2 L jar: garlic cloves, mustard seeds, peppercorns, bay leaves, half the dill, and your tannin source (tea bag or 1-2 grape/oak leaves).
- Pack cucumbers vertically as densely as you can. Squeeze them in. Lacto-fermenting cucumbers expand only slightly.
- Place remaining dill on top of cucumbers.
- Pour cool brine over to cover cucumbers completely, leaving 3-4 cm headspace.
- Place a fermentation weight on top of the cucumbers to keep everything submerged below the brine. No exposed cucumber surfaces — that’s where mould grows.
- Apply the airlock lid (or a regular lid loosened ¼ turn).
Step 4: Ferment
- Set the jar on a plate to catch overflow.
- Place at 18-22°C out of direct sunlight.
- First 24-48 hours: minor bubbling begins.
- Day 3-5: active fermentation, brine becomes cloudy, bubbles rise visibly. Taste daily.
- Day 5-7: pickle-tasting, sour, pleasant.
- Day 7-14: increasingly sour, more complex.
Refrigerate when they taste how you like them.
Step 5: Refrigerate
Lacto pickles continue to ferment slowly in the fridge. They’re at their crisp-and-tangy peak about 1-2 weeks after refrigerating.
Storage
- Refrigerator at 1-4°C: 6-12 months
- Best texture: weeks 2-12 after refrigeration
- Best for serving raw: months 1-4
- After 6 months: still safe, more sour, softer texture; good for chopping into salads or relish
- Don’t store at room temperature after fermentation — they over-ferment fast
Variations
Half-sour (3-day) pickles
Eat after just 3 days of fermentation. Still firm, mildly sour, “half-cured” style. Famous New York-Jewish style. Refrigerate immediately; consume within 2 weeks.
Spicy lacto pickles
Add 2-3 small dried chili peppers OR 1 sliced fresh jalapeño to the jar.
Garlic-heavy
Use 8-10 garlic cloves instead of 4-6. Garlic mellows during fermentation; the result is intensely garlicky and excellent.
Whole-cloves of garlic for snacking
Add extra garlic — the fermented garlic cloves themselves become a delicacy. Pop them out of the brine and eat with cheese or crackers.
Lacto-fermented sliced pickle chips
Slice cucumbers into 5 mm chips before packing. Faster fermentation (3-5 days). Less crunchy than whole pickles.
Lacto pickles with onion and pepper
Pack thinly sliced onion rings and 1 sliced red bell pepper between layers of cucumber. The onions and pepper pickle alongside.
Asian-style lacto pickles
Substitute white vinegar-free Asian flavours: 2 tbsp sliced fresh ginger, 1 star anise, 1 tbsp Sichuan peppercorns. Same brine, different jar character.
How to use lacto pickles
- On sandwiches — Reubens, deli sandwiches, grilled cheese, burgers
- Side dish with steak, roast, or grilled meats
- Chopped into potato salad — adds crunch and tang
- In tuna or chicken salad — replaces vinegar-pickle relish
- In a charcuterie board — alongside cheese and cured meat
- Pickle juice for marinades — the live brine is a fantastic chicken or pork marinade
- Pickle backs — sip alongside whiskey shots (very Canadian-Polish thing)
- Straight from the jar — the prairie-grandmother snacking tradition
Lacto pickles vs vinegar pickles — when to use each
| Lacto pickles | Vinegar pickles | |
|---|---|---|
| Acid source | Lactic acid (bacterial) | Acetic acid (vinegar) |
| Flavour | Tangy, complex, funky | Sharp, vinegary, clean |
| Texture | Slightly soft | Firmer (with Pickle Crisp) |
| Live probiotics | Yes | No (heat-processed kills them) |
| Storage | Refrigerator 6-12 months | Pantry shelf 12+ months |
| Method difficulty | Lower | Moderate |
| Equipment | Jar + weight | Canner + jars + lids |
| Salt level | 3.5% brine | 5-7% brine in finished pickle |
Most Canadian home fermenters make both — vinegar pickles by the case for shelf storage, lacto pickles for fresh probiotic eating.
Common problems
- White film on brine. Kahm yeast — harmless, just skim off. Cucumbers underneath are fine. Keep them submerged.
- Fuzzy or coloured mould. Discard the batch. Rarely happens with submerged cucumbers.
- Cucumbers turned hollow. Variety or post-harvest dehydration issue — not a fermentation problem. The hollow ones are safe; just less satisfying.
- Pickles are slimy/mushy. Cucumbers were too old, blossom ends not trimmed, or fermentation too warm. Tannin source (tea, grape leaf) helps. Use fresher cucumbers.
- Pickles too salty. Brine concentration was too high. Stick to 3.5% — measure salt by weight.
- Pickles not sour after 10 days. Temperature too cold, or chlorinated water inhibited bacteria. Move to warmer spot; use filtered water next batch.
- Brine cloudy. Completely normal for lacto pickles — cloudy brine = active lactobacillus.
- Garlic turned blue or green. Harmless reaction between garlic enzymes and acid. Looks weird, tastes fine.
- Cucumbers floating above brine line. Use a heavier fermentation weight; top up with more 3.5% brine.
Why the 3.5% salt rule matters
Below 2%: spoilage bacteria outcompete lactobacillus → rotten pickles. Between 2-3%: borderline; some batches go off. Between 3-4%: ideal for cucumbers (the sweet spot). Above 4%: too salty; lactobacillus struggle; fermentation slow or fails.
This rule is specific to cucumbers. Cabbage (sauerkraut) ferments at 2% because the dry-salting method works differently and cabbage has less water content. Don’t substitute kraut salt levels for pickle brine.
Yield expectations
- 1.5 kg cucumbers → 1 × 2 L jar of lacto pickles (about 1.2 kg pickled cucumbers + brine)
- Each jar provides 50-80 pickles depending on size
- A typical Canadian fermenting household makes 2-4 jars per summer for fall/winter eating
Why lacto pickles are worth it
- Easiest fermentation project after sauerkraut — fewer variables than kimchi
- Live probiotic food — beneficial bacteria intact
- Use surplus cucumbers — when the garden over-produces, lacto-ferment instead of giving away
- Better texture than vinegar pickles for some uses — sandwiches especially
- Heritage food — Eastern European, Jewish, German Canadian traditions all use this method
Next steps
- How to make dill pickles in Canada (vinegar method) — shelf-stable companion
- How to make sauerkraut in Canada — the cabbage version
- How to make kimchi in Canada — Korean fermentation
- Best fermenting crock in Canada — equipment guide
- Why pickles go soft — the texture troubleshooting
- Fermenting & root cellaring pillar — broader method
Sources
- Bernardin Complete Book of Home Preserving (latest edition)
- University of Guelph — Department of Food Science
- Health Canada — Food safety guidance for fermented foods