Dill pickle grilled cheese sandwich — the tangy, melty upgrade to the greatest comfort food of all time

Total Time: 15 mins Difficulty: Beginner
The tangy, melty, golden-crusted grilled cheese upgrade with stretchy gruyere and bold dill pickles that makes every other grilled cheese feel ordinary
Close-up side angle of a dill pickle grilled cheese sandwich cut in half and stacked showing stretchy melted gruyere cheese pulling apart and dill pickle slices visible in the golden crispy bread pinit

There are people who have never had a dill pickle grilled cheese sandwich and there are people who have. The gap between those two groups is significant.

Because once you experience that combination of deeply golden, butter-crisped bread, stretchy melted cheese pulling apart in long satisfying strings, and the bright, tangy punch of dill pickles cutting right through all that richness — you will never look at a plain grilled cheese the same way again.

I made my first dill pickle grilled cheese on a whim one afternoon when I was craving comfort food but wanted something with a little more personality than the classic version. I had a jar of dill pickles in the fridge and a block of gruyere on the counter and the instinct just hit.

Ten minutes later I was sitting down to what might genuinely be the best version of grilled cheese I have ever eaten in my life. The tangy, briny pickle flavor against the nutty, melty gruyere is a combination that sounds unusual until you try it and then it sounds completely obvious.

This is the grilled cheese that ruins all other grilled cheeses for you. You have been warned. Let’s get into it.

Why you’ll love this recipe

  • The pickle and cheese combination is genuinely life-changing. The tangy, briny punch of dill pickles against melted gruyere and white cheddar is one of those flavor combinations that sounds like it should not work and then absolutely blows your mind when it does.
  • That golden, butter-crisped bread is perfection. The right bread cooked in the right amount of butter over the right heat creates a crust that is deeply golden, shatteringly crispy on the outside, and soft and pillowy on the inside. This technique delivers that result every time.
  • Ready in 15 minutes. This is the ultimate fast meal. Fifteen minutes from pulling ingredients out of the fridge to sitting down with the best sandwich of your week.
  • The pickles add tang without adding heaviness. Regular grilled cheese is rich, buttery, and indulgent — which is wonderful. The dill pickles cut through that richness with a bright acidity that makes the whole sandwich feel more balanced and less one-dimensional. Every bite has contrast.
  • Uses simple, accessible ingredients. Good bread, good cheese, dill pickles, and butter. Nothing obscure, nothing expensive, nothing that requires a special trip to a specialty grocery store.
  • Completely customizable. This is a sandwich that welcomes experimentation. Different cheese combinations, different pickle varieties, different bread — the core concept is endlessly versatile. FYI once you try this base version you will start thinking about all the possible variations immediately.

Ingredients with key notes

For the sandwich:

  • 4 slices good quality white sandwich bread or sourdough — The bread is not an afterthought in this sandwich. A thick-sliced white sandwich bread gives you that classic soft interior with a golden crust that most people associate with the perfect grilled cheese. Sourdough is the elevated choice — its slight tanginess complements the pickle flavor beautifully and its sturdier structure holds up better to the filling without getting soggy. Avoid very thin sandwich bread as it will toast too quickly before the cheese has time to melt properly.
  • 4 oz gruyere cheese, thinly sliced or grated — Gruyere is the hero cheese in this sandwich. It melts into a beautifully smooth, stretchy pool and has a nutty, slightly sweet flavor that works brilliantly with the tangy pickles. Grated gruyere melts faster and more evenly than sliced — if you are in a hurry, grate it. If you want those dramatic cheese pulls for the photos, use thin slices.
  • 2 oz white cheddar or American cheese — Adding a second cheese alongside the gruyere serves two purposes. White cheddar adds a sharp, tangy flavor that reinforces the pickle theme. American cheese melts into a creamy, smooth layer that helps hold everything together and prevents any greasiness. Use whichever appeals to you most or a combination of both.
  • 6-8 slices dill pickles — The star ingredient. Thin dill pickle slices — either from a jar of dill chips or cut from whole pickles — layered generously through the center of the sandwich. The pickle slices should be patted dry with a paper towel before using. Excess moisture from the pickles can steam the inside of the sandwich and prevent the bread from getting properly crispy. Pat them dry but do not squeeze them so dry that you lose all the flavor.
  • 2 tbsp unsalted butter, softened — The medium by which the bread becomes golden and crispy. Softened butter spreads more evenly onto the bread than cold butter and creates a more uniform golden color across the entire surface. Do not use melted butter drizzled into the pan — it distributes unevenly and creates hot spots that burn some parts while leaving others pale.
  • 1 tsp dijon mustard — Optional but absolutely recommended. A thin spread of dijon mustard on the inside of one slice of bread adds a subtle sharpness and depth that complements the pickle flavor without being identifiable as mustard in the finished sandwich. It is a background flavor that makes you wonder why the sandwich tastes so good.
  • Pinch of garlic powder — Mixed into the softened butter before spreading on the bread. Adds a subtle savory depth to the golden crust that takes the sandwich from good to outstanding.

Step-by-step instructions

Step 1 — Prep the butter and pickles

In a small bowl, mix the softened butter with the pinch of garlic powder until evenly combined. Set aside. Pat the dill pickle slices dry with paper towels on both sides — place them in a single layer on a paper towel, lay another paper towel on top, and press gently. You are not trying to dry them completely, just remove the surface brine that would cause sogginess. Set aside.

Step 2 — Prep the cheese

If using block cheese, either grate it on the large holes of a box grater or slice it very thinly. A combination of grated gruyere and sliced white cheddar gives you the best of both worlds — the melt and stretch of grated cheese with the dramatic visual of layered slices. Have the cheese ready before you start cooking because the process moves quickly once the pan is hot.

Step 3 — Assemble the sandwich

Spread the garlic butter evenly over one side of each bread slice. Flip two slices butter-side down on a clean surface. If using dijon mustard, spread a thin layer on the inside face of one of these slices. Layer the cheese generously over one slice — use more than you think you need, because cheese melts down significantly. Lay the patted-dry pickle slices evenly over the cheese layer. Add a little more cheese on top of the pickles — this cheese-pickle-cheese layering sandwiches the pickles between two layers of melting cheese which helps them stay in place and ensures every bite has both cheese and pickle. Top with the second bread slice butter-side up.

Step 4 — Cook low and slow

This is the most important technique tip in this entire recipe. Place a heavy skillet — cast iron is ideal — over medium-low heat. Let the pan heat up for at least 2 minutes before adding the sandwich. Medium-low heat is non-negotiable. High heat creates a beautiful golden exterior but the cheese inside never has time to fully melt before the bread burns. Medium-low heat gives the cheese time to melt completely while the bread develops a slow, even, deep golden color.

Step 5 — First side

Place the sandwich in the preheated skillet butter-side down. Press it down very gently with a spatula. Cook for 4-5 minutes without moving it — let the bread develop a deep golden crust undisturbed. You should hear a gentle steady sizzle throughout — not a violent spit which would indicate the heat is too high. After 4-5 minutes, lift one corner of the sandwich to check the color. You want a deep even golden-brown — not pale and not dark brown.

Step 6 — Flip and finish

Flip the sandwich carefully using a wide spatula. Press down gently again. Cook the second side for another 3-4 minutes until equally golden and the cheese is fully melted and visible at the edges of the sandwich. If the bread is getting too dark before the cheese is fully melted, reduce the heat slightly and cover the pan with a lid for 1-2 minutes — the trapped steam helps melt the cheese faster without burning the bread.

Step 7 — Rest and serve

Transfer the sandwich to a cutting board and let it rest for 1-2 minutes before cutting. This brief rest allows the melted cheese to settle slightly so it does not all pour out the moment you cut into it. Cut diagonally in half — always diagonally, this is not negotiable — and serve immediately while the cheese is still stretchy and the bread is at its crispiest.

Serving suggestions

This dill pickle grilled cheese is a complete meal on its own but here are some excellent pairings:

  • With tomato soup — The combination of grilled cheese and tomato soup is one of the most perfect food pairings ever conceived. The tangy tomato soup with the tangy pickle grilled cheese creates a harmony that is deeply comforting.
  • With a simple green salad — A light arugula or mixed greens salad with a lemon vinaigrette cuts through the richness of the buttery, cheesy sandwich beautifully.
  • With extra pickles on the side — If you love pickles you might as well commit fully. A small pile of extra dill pickles alongside makes a great crunchy counterpoint.
  • With a bowl of creamy potato soup — The richness of potato soup alongside this tangy grilled cheese is a comfort food pairing that is genuinely hard to beat on a cold day.
  • With sweet potato fries — The slight sweetness of sweet potato fries against the tangy, savory sandwich creates a contrast that works really well.
  • With a cold dill pickle flavored beer — Yes this is a thing and yes it is excellent alongside this sandwich if you are so inclined.

Storage tips

Eating immediately: Grilled cheese is at its absolute peak the moment it comes off the pan. The contrast between the crispy exterior and the melted interior is a texture experience that diminishes quickly. Eat it immediately whenever possible.

Leftovers: If you have a leftover grilled cheese — which seems unlikely but occasionally happens — wrap it loosely in foil and store at room temperature for up to a few hours or in the fridge for up to 1 day. The bread will soften significantly as it sits.

Reheating: The best way to reheat a leftover grilled cheese and restore some of the crispiness is back in a dry skillet over medium-low heat for 2-3 minutes per side. The microwave makes it soft and steamy — avoid it if you can. An air fryer at 350°F for 3-4 minutes also works remarkably well for restoring the crispy exterior.

Make-ahead tip: You can assemble the sandwiches ahead of time — butter the bread and add the fillings — and store them wrapped in plastic wrap in the fridge for up to a few hours before cooking. Cook them directly from the fridge, adding an extra minute per side to account for the cold starting temperature.

Wrapping it up

Dill pickle grilled cheese is the upgrade that every grilled cheese sandwich has been waiting for. Golden, crispy, buttery bread, stretchy melted gruyere, and that bright tangy punch of dill pickle in every bite — it is a combination that is simple, fast, and completely unforgettable.

Make it for lunch today, make it for dinner tonight, or make it at midnight because the craving hit and you deserve it. Give it a try and let me know how it turns out — happy cooking 🙂

Dill pickle grilled cheese sandwich — the tangy, melty upgrade to the greatest comfort food of all time

Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 5 mins Cook Time 10 mins Total Time 15 mins
Estimated Cost: $ 8
Best Season: Suitable throughout the year

Description

Thick slices of good bread buttered with garlic butter and pan-fried low and slow until deeply golden and crispy, filled with melted gruyere, white cheddar, and generous layers of tangy dill pickle slices. Ready in 15 minutes and genuinely one of the best sandwiches you will ever make at home.

Ingredients

For the sandwich:

Instructions

  1. Mix softened butter with garlic powder in a small bowl. Pat pickle slices dry with paper towels. Prepare the cheese.
  2. Spread garlic butter on one side of each bread slice. Flip two slices butter-side down. Spread dijon mustard on the inside face of one slice if using.
  3. Layer cheese generously on one slice. Add patted-dry pickle slices over the cheese. Add a little more cheese on top of the pickles. Top with the second slice butter-side up.
  4. Heat a heavy skillet over medium-low heat for 2 minutes. Place sandwich butter-side down. Press gently. Cook for 4-5 minutes undisturbed until deeply golden.
  5. Flip carefully and cook the second side for 3-4 minutes until equally golden and cheese is fully melted. Cover with a lid for 1-2 minutes if cheese needs more time to melt.
  6. Rest on a cutting board for 1-2 minutes. Cut diagonally and serve immediately.
Keywords: dill pickle grilled cheese, pickle grilled cheese sandwich, grilled cheese with pickles, dill pickle grilled cheese recipe, best grilled cheese sandwich, gruyere grilled cheese, easy grilled cheese upgrade
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Frequently Asked Questions

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What is the best cheese for a grilled cheese sandwich?

For this specific recipe, gruyere is the star because its meltability and nutty flavor work so beautifully with the dill pickles. More broadly, the best grilled cheese cheeses are those that melt smoothly rather than greasy or stringy — gruyere, fontina, white cheddar, havarti, gouda, and American cheese all melt beautifully. Avoid aged hard cheeses like parmesan or aged manchego as primary melting cheeses — they do not melt smoothly enough for a satisfying grilled cheese experience.

What bread works best for grilled cheese?

Thick-sliced white sandwich bread and sourdough are the gold standards. The thickness matters — you want bread that is sturdy enough to hold the filling without getting soggy but not so thick that the exterior burns before the cheese melts. Brioche makes an incredibly rich, golden grilled cheese. Rye bread is an outstanding choice if you want to lean further into the pickle theme since pickles and rye are a classic pairing.

Why is my cheese not melting before the bread burns?

The heat is too high. This is the single most common grilled cheese mistake. High heat burns the exterior before the interior cheese has time to melt. The solution is always medium-low heat and patience. If your cheese is still not melting fast enough, cover the pan with a lid for 1-2 minutes — the trapped steam creates a gentle heat that melts the cheese from above while the bread continues to brown from below.

Should the pickles be warm or cold when I add them?

Room temperature or slightly below. Cold pickles straight from the fridge will lower the temperature inside the sandwich and make it harder for the cheese to melt. Pull the pickles out of the fridge a few minutes before assembling the sandwich. The patting dry step also helps remove some of the cold brine from the surface.

Can I make this in a panini press instead of a skillet?

Yes. A panini press gives you those attractive grill marks and applies even pressure from both sides which helps the cheese melt faster. Set it to medium heat and press for 4-5 minutes until golden and the cheese is fully melted. The result is slightly different from the skillet version — the texture of the bread is more compressed — but it is equally delicious.

What other fillings work well in a pickle grilled cheese?

Caramelized onions are a spectacular addition — the sweetness against the tangy pickle is outstanding. Crispy cooked bacon adds a smoky, salty element that works brilliantly. A thin spread of cream cheese inside adds an extra creamy layer. Sliced jalapenos alongside the dill pickles adds heat. Dijon mustard — already in this recipe — is the classic condiment pairing. The possibilities are genuinely endless once you have the base combination locked down.

A self-taught Cook, Filmmaker, and Creative Director

Most days you can find me in the kitchen experimenting with new recipes or behind my camera capturing the stories food tells. What I’m most passionate about is creating dishes that are quick, comforting, and surprisingly healthy—and sharing them with you.

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