Are you ready for this? Give a big Nicole-Parton’s-Favorite-Recipes’ welcome to our old pal Darryl Paulsen and his lovely wife, Judy! 
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| Darryl. | 
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| Judy. | 
You remember Darryl, creator of one of the best paella recipes ever? The recipe blew your socks off when I posted it in October, 2012: It remained each week’s best-read recipe for ages and ages. You’ll find it indexed under Main Dish: Seafood (Darryl Paulsen’s Spanish Paella). It’s excellent!
Darryl’s Hot Sweet Pickles:
This recipe requires three 
days’ marination 
½ gallon (64 fl. oz. or about 2 L) dill pickles (Darryl favors the priced-right pickles from Costco) 
8 garlic cloves, peeled and sliced
½ c. (125 mL) Tabasco sauce
3 c. (750 mL) granulated sugar, divided
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| Your starting point. | 
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| Drain dills, saving juice. | 
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| Slice dills into chunks. | 
Drain pickles, reserving juice if desired (see Note). Slice large pickles into 1-in. (2.54 cm) chunks; leave the smaller ones whole.
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| Return chunked pickles to empty jar. | 
With pickles in empty jar, layer with garlic, hot sauce, and 1 c. (250 mL) granulated sugar.
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| Did someone say garlic and hot sauce? | 
Replace lid tightly, shaking until sugar starts to dissolve. Let stand overnight or up to 24 hr. at room temperature. The second morning, add another 1 c. (250 mL) granulated sugar. 
Replace lid tightly, shake, and repeat standing process at room temperature (I turned the jar upside-down the second time). The third morning, add the final 1 c. granulated sugar. Shake jar until sugar dissolves completely. Label with date and contents; refrigerate. Will keep up to three months.
These pickles aren’t as hot as the Paulsens made out. They’re also sinfully addictive. Ron and I are going to have another one right now!
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| Add granulated sugar over three days. | 
Replace lid tightly, shake, and repeat standing process at room temperature (I turned the jar upside-down the second time). The third morning, add the final 1 c. granulated sugar. Shake jar until sugar dissolves completely. Label with date and contents; refrigerate. Will keep up to three months.
These pickles aren’t as hot as the Paulsens made out. They’re also sinfully addictive. Ron and I are going to have another one right now!
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| My, oh, my! These are great! | 
Note: You’ll think this recipe doesn’t have enough liquid. No worries - by the second and third days, it will make plenty of pickle juice on its own. Don’t change a thing in the recipe and it will turn out just fine. 
Further Note: Don’t discard that dill pickle juice! See my terrific recipe for Easiest-Ever Pickled Eggs, indexed under Appetizers: Egg-Based. I made this great egg recipe at the same time I prepared these pickles. As with the pickles, these eggs also need three days’ marination. Ron and I are about to have a pickled egg, too. There’ll be a hot time in the old town tonight!
Further Note: Don’t discard that dill pickle juice! See my terrific recipe for Easiest-Ever Pickled Eggs, indexed under Appetizers: Egg-Based. I made this great egg recipe at the same time I prepared these pickles. As with the pickles, these eggs also need three days’ marination. Ron and I are about to have a pickled egg, too. There’ll be a hot time in the old town tonight!

 
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