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Here’s another frugal recipe from my wife.
This easy and delicious recipe for bread & butter pickles is perfect for a beginner. Regardless of your skill level, you’ll produce canned pickles that you’ll be proud to serve. Because of the high acid level in pickled foods, you can process them in a pot of boiling water, rather than a pressure canner. And packing slices into jars is much simpler than organizing whole pickles like dills or sweet gherkins to fit neatly into a jar. These pickle slices are nice in sandwiches, chopped in tuna and pasta salads, or eaten on their own.

Look for cucumbers that are meant for pickling or that have been picked when they are no bigger around than 1-1/2 inches. If you are doing large-scale canning, ask your produce vendor if you can buy in bulk. This year, I found a 25-pound box of organic pickling cucumbers for $12. Even after discarding a number of bruised vegetables, that was enough to make over 14 quarts (28 pints) of pickles.
This recipe makes five pints.
You will need:
2-1/2 cups granulated sugar
2 cups cider vinegar (5% acidity)
1 cup water
1 tsp salt
1 tsp celery seed
1 Tbsp mustard seed
1-1/2 Tbsp mixed pickling spice (cinnamon stick, ginger, mustard seeds, cloves, peppercorns, chilies, etc.)
3-1/2 pounds cucumbers, cut into 1/4″ slices

Start heating your boiling water canner. This should be tall enough that your jars will be covered by at least one inch of boiling water and there must be additional room (2-3″) to avoid splashing during the boiling process. It should also have some sort of rack on the bottom on which to set the jars. Remember that your jars will displace water as you submerge them.

In a 5-quart pot (non-aluminum), combine sugar, vinegar, water and spices. Bring to a boil, stirring to dissolve sugar.

Add cucumber slices. Return to a boil, stirring gently and trying to submerge slices as they cook.

When the pot returns to a boil, boil for 90 seconds, then remove from heat. The slices should have changed from a bright cucumber green to a darker pickle green.

Using tongs or a slotted spoon, fill hot jars* with pickles slices, then fill each with pickling liquid, leaving 1/8″ headspace. (You may have extra brine; you can refrigerate this up to a week if you are making another batch soon.) Wipe rims clean with a damp paper towel and add lids and rings.

Process in a boiling water canner — 20 minutes for quarts, 10 minutes for pints. Begin timing when the water has returned to a boil after you submerge your jars.
Using a jar lifter, remove jars to a folded kitchen towel. Let cool 24 hours and make sure the jars have sealed. The lids should be sucked down in a such a way that they won’t “pop” when you press on them. If not, you can add a new lid and process again, or store your pickles in the refrigerator. Sealed jars can be stored one year or more. Remove the rings for storage to avoid them rusting onto the jars. (I usually put a ring back on if I am giving as a gift, in order to avoid accidental opening during transport.)

*Hot foods should go into hot jars to avoid shocking and potentially cracking the glass. You can heat your jars before filling them by placing them in the boiling water bath as it heats up, or by running them through the dishwasher or using the dishwasher’s dry cycle.
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August 25th, 2007 at 10:41 am
Here’s an even easier pickle recipe for beginners. These make your everyday run of the mill dill pickle slices great for putting on hamburgers.
3 quarts of water
1 quart of vinegar
1 cup of canning salt
3 1/2 pounds of cukes cut into slices
Whole dill (optional)
Combine all ingredients except dill and bring to a boil.
Get your jars ready - this makes 4 - 6 quarts or 8 - 12 pints depending on how well you pack your jars.
Boil the jars to ensure they are sterile (boil rings as well especially if pre-used.)
Remove jars and pack with your sliced cukes. Add your dill heads and leaves to the jars more or less depending on your taste. (note that this recipe calls for you not to cook the cukes beforehand).
After packing your jars, pour your vinegar water mixture into your packed jars. Place lids and rings and process for at least 25 - 30 minutes (remember your cukes were not cooked beforehand so you have to leave them longer to insure they get cooked to the middle).
After removing jars listen for that satisfying pop of your lids sealing. These need to sit in their jars for a couple weeks before they are ready.
For a variation on this recipe, add crushed garlic and slices of uncooked onion to your jars to get some zest.
August 25th, 2007 at 11:39 am
My mom’s specialty was bread and butter pickles. She made tons of them, from cucumbers grown in her garden, from a recipe almost exactly like yours. So I have vast experience with them. And let me inform you of a sad fact: NOBODY likes bread and butter pickles. I beg you, do not give these as gifts.
When my Mom died and I cleared out her house, I found a sealed jar of her infamous pickles left in the pantry. They must have been sitting there for years, nobody wanted them. I sure didn’t want them, so I offered the jar to all my siblings, none of them would take it. They all told me, “you know what they taste like, why would you think I would want them?” I told them, just stick it on your shelf, it will be a memento of your mom. Nope, they wouldn’t touch it. So now it’s been sitting on my shelf for years and years. I think I’ll throw them out.
August 25th, 2007 at 12:17 pm
My mother-in-law made bread and butter pickles, and, contrary to the universal law stated above, I like them. I made my own from her recipe a few years ago, but I usually just buy them at the store. You should make pickles because you enjoy it, not to save money, unless you eat an astonishing volume of pickles.
As I recall her saying, in her experience, it was not essential that the lids seal (although they usually did). In fact, she would just spoon the boiling hot stuff into a jar and put the lid on, with no “processing” and no need for a special canning pot. Typically the lids would suck down and seal as they cooled. If one did not, it became the first eaten.
Bread and butter pickles (Marilyn)
2 quarts sliced medium cucumbers
3 medium white onions sliced
1 green pepper chopped
1-2 cloves garlic
1/6 cup canning salt (i.e. 2 Tbsp + 2 tsp)
Combine ingredients in large glass bowl; cover w/ cracked ice and mix. Let set 3 hours, then drain in a colander. In a large pot, combine this cucumber mixture with
2.5 cup sugar
3/4 tsp tumeric
3/4 tsp celery seed
1 Tbsp mustard seed
1.5 cup vinegar
Heat just to a boil and pour in jars. Keep for a few weeks before eating. Makes 4 pints (double everything for quarts).
August 25th, 2007 at 1:58 pm
Thank you, thank you, thank you. My new project this week is pickles!
August 25th, 2007 at 8:51 pm
Where did you get that jar lifter? I have been looking everywhere for one!
August 25th, 2007 at 8:58 pm
I made these pickles this year using Kris’s recipe and they were positively wonderful.
August 25th, 2007 at 9:14 pm
I just made bread and butter pickles this week, too, and they were soooo good. Much better flavor than store-bought. But I would suggest processing them in the boiling-water canner for safety … sometimes you can find a canner at thrift stores, otherwise at the hardware store (where they probably carry jar lifters, too!).
August 25th, 2007 at 9:56 pm
I am so tempted to make these again. Love ‘em!
Thanks for the recipe (and a really cool blog!)
Jean
August 25th, 2007 at 10:55 pm
but are they crunchy? my mom cans dill pickles every year, but they never taste as good as claussen pickles, mostly because hers just aren’t that crunchy. she must boil them too long or something.
August 26th, 2007 at 12:26 pm
My mother-in-law, Gertie Cardinal, put carrot sticks in her pickles. The jars looked beautiful with the splash of orange. I like the carrots better myself. So why not add some slices to the bread and butter pickles?
August 26th, 2007 at 1:52 pm
These pickles are very crunchy. The key to cruncy pickles is to not boil them for longer than the recipe says. If you really want crunch add about 1/2 tsp of alum to the jar.
August 26th, 2007 at 3:27 pm
You can find the jar lifter at WalMart in the kitchen section with canning supplies…it comes in a 2-piece kit with the funnel. I just saw it there yesterday.
August 27th, 2007 at 12:44 pm
I love bread and butter pickles, but am unable to eat very much in the way of fruits or vegetables. Woe is me! In the past, I’ve eaten my way through an entire jar of homemade B&B pickles and was sick as a dog for days afterwards.
But that period of time between that first bite and the first ominous rumble from my guts was pure heaven. Yum!
August 27th, 2007 at 6:56 pm
[...] From the Frugal Kitchen: How to make Bread-and-Butter Pickle Slices @ Get Rich Slowly - I love making homemade bread and butter pickles but I’ve never canned them before. They usually don’t last long enough to can! I think this would make a great gift. [...]
September 21st, 2007 at 5:16 am
In a pickle…
Pickled vegetables. Photo by ccarlstead on flickr….
October 9th, 2007 at 12:13 pm
Can you tell me the origin of the name “Bread and Butter” pickles?