EvA wrote:The article mentions thinning mayo with pickle juice for potato salad. My mom used to pour a little pickle juice (as you would vinegar) on warmed sliced potatoes before adding the other ingredients to potato salad, including mayo. As a child, I thought her saving and using pickle juice one of the weirder things she did in the kitchen.
wesuilmo wrote:As long as we're talking about Mother's pickle juice use: My mother put dill pickle juice in her spaghetti sauce. Too make it "bright".
knitgirl wrote:not apropos of much, but I had a severe leg cramp at 2 a.m. and I'd heard that pickle juice helps. I drank a small amount of juice and ate 3 pickles and it did the trick.
leek wrote:knitgirl wrote:not apropos of much, but I had a severe leg cramp at 2 a.m. and I'd heard that pickle juice helps. I drank a small amount of juice and ate 3 pickles and it did the trick.
I had heard that too - here's more:
https://www.healthline.com/health/pickl ... for-cramps
Done Hiding Their Shameful Secret, Pickle-Juice Drinkers Go Public
jimd wrote:Using pickle juice to alleviate leg cramps is an old Jewish tradition. My mistake was in rubbing it on my legs, instead of drinking it.
HankB wrote:jimd wrote:Using pickle juice to alleviate leg cramps is an old Jewish tradition. My mistake was in rubbing it on my legs, instead of drinking it.
It's also heard of in the running community. My wife likes it after long runs. I'll drink it if she hands it to me. (After a long run I'll drink just about anything anyone hands me.)
It's supposed to be due to the effect that the astringency the vinegar has via the nervous system.
spinynorman99 wrote:There's next to no actual benefit gained from drinking pickle juice (or vinegar). Magnesium and potassium will cure your runner ills. Pickle juice is just a puckery placebo.