Have made these many times. They are very good. The recipe is given in the photo.
Interestingly, pickles are a good reminder of what the word “baptize” means in the Bible. It comes from an ancient Greek poet named Nicander.
Nicander was a Greek poet and physician who lived in 200 B.C. Beside poetry and medicine, Nicander also had an interest in cooking. He recorded a recipe for making pickles. This recipe provides insight into our twenty–first century style of learning.
Nicander said, to make a pickle, the vegetable must first dipped (bapto) into boiling water. Then immersed (baptizo) into a vinegar solution.
Nicander used two different Greek verbs. Both contain the idea of immersion into a liquid. Both are forms of the Bible word, “baptize.” The Bible word “baptize” comes directly from these Greek words. They mean, “dip” or “immerse.” They DO NOT mean sprinkle. Sprinkling is not baptism, immersion is. Jesus, when he was baptized, went up straightway out of the water (Matt 3:16).
You don’t make pickles by sprinkling them with vinegar, and you don’t picture the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ (i.e. baptize) that way either. Baptism must be done by immersion, or it is not scriptural.