Dill-Pickle-Style Lacto-Fermented Potato Chips
Yes—it’s absolutely possible to lacto-ferment potatoes into a tangy, dilly, garlicky “pickle chip” vibe. These come out bright, lightly sour, and pleasantly crisp-tender (more like a fermented pickle than a cooked potato). A quick cold soak removes excess starch so the brine stays clean and the texture stays snappy. Keep everything fully submerged under a 2.5% salt brine and ferment at cool room temp until the aroma turns pleasantly sour and the slices taste zippy.
Total time: 10105 minutes
Yield: Makes about 1 quart (1 L)
Ingredients
- 900 g (about 2 lb) waxy potatoes (Yukon Gold or red), scrubbed (leave skins on or peel)
- 900 g non-chlorinated water (about 3 3/4 cups)
- 23 g fine sea salt (about 1 Tbsp + 1 tsp Diamond Crystal kosher salt, or ~1 Tbsp Morton kosher) — this is 2.5% brine by total water weight
- 20 g fresh dill (about 6–10 sprigs)
- 12 g garlic (about 3–4 cloves), lightly smashed
- 2 g whole black peppercorns (about 1 tsp)
- 1.5 g mustard seeds (about 1 tsp)
- 0.5–1 g red pepper flakes (pinch to 1/2 tsp), optional
- 1 bay leaf, optional
- 2 g calcium chloride ("Pickle Crisp"), about 1/2 tsp (do not substitute table salt)
Instructions
- Wash a 1-quart / 1 L wide-mouth jar, lid, and any weights in hot soapy water, then rinse well and air-dry. (You don’t need to sterilize, just be clean.)
- Slice the potatoes into “chips” 2–3 mm thick (about 1/8 in). Aim for even slices so they ferment evenly.
- Put the slices in a bowl and cover with cold water. Swish hard with your hands for 20 seconds until the water clouds, then drain. Repeat 2 more times (3 rinses total). This step removes surface starch so the ferment stays cleaner and less slippery.
- In a large measuring jug or bowl, dissolve 23 g salt into 900 g water, stirring until it tastes like pleasantly salty seawater and no grains remain.
- Add the seasonings to the jar: dill (20 g), smashed garlic (12 g), peppercorns (2 g), mustard seeds (1.5 g), and optional red pepper flakes and bay leaf.
- Pack in the rinsed potato slices (900 g). Leave 2.5–4 cm (1–1 1/2 in) headspace.
- Pour in enough brine to fully cover the potatoes by at least 1–2 cm (1/2 in). If you have extra brine, keep it in the fridge to top up later.
- (Optional crunch) Stir 2 g calcium chloride into the jar.
- Weigh everything down so no potato is floating. Use a fermentation weight, a small jar, or a zip-top bag filled with a little of the same brine.
- Set the jar on a small plate (it may bubble over). Ferment at 18–22°C / 65–72°F out of direct sun.
- For the first 3 days, check once daily: potatoes must remain submerged; top up with reserved brine if needed. You should see small bubbles and a light briny, dilly aroma.
- Start tasting on day 4: pull a slice with clean tongs/fork. They’re ready when they taste tangy and pickle-forward, and the brine smells clean-sour (not rotten). Typical timing is 5–10 days, depending on temperature.
- Once you love the tang, move the jar to the fridge. The flavor will keep developing slowly.
Notes
Potato choice: waxy varieties (Yukon Gold/red) hold texture best; avoid very starchy russets unless you really rinse well. Brine math: if you want to scale, use 2.5% salt by weight of water (25 g salt per 1000 g water). Texture: These won’t be “crispy” like fried chips; think pickle-chip bite—crisp-tender and tangy. Serving: Great on sandwiches, chopped into potato salad (use the brine as dressing base), or alongside burgers. Storage: Refrigerated, they’ll keep 1–2 months; keep slices submerged for best quality.