Sunday, August 3, 2008

How to make Grandmama's Sweet Cucumber Pickles in only 9 Days!!!

My mama could make the BEST sweet cucumber pickles of anyone I know. As a child I watched her and helped some. After she died, I got one of her pickling crocks. Most of the time it sits in the corner with some silk sunflowers in it for decoration. BUT every few years, I plant cucumbers in my garden and then decide to follow Mama's directions for making sweet pickles. It's quite a process. I thought I'd share it with you.

Are you ready?

The first thing you need is a cucumber plant in your garden. Well, I guess you need a package of seeds first, but I didn't think to take a picture of the seeds. So the first picture is the young cucumber plant in our black dirt.

Then you need some patience for God to help these little plants grow some cucumbers.
When the cucumbers get big enough to look like a pickle, you pick them and wash them. You have to scrub to get the prickly things off and make them nice and shiny.


Then you get some pickling salt and mix it with some water. You put 1 cup salt to 1 gallon of water to make a brine solution.


The cucumbers and brine go into Mama's very old crock.



Now the crock gets sent to the corner to be quiet and nice for 3 days. You might check on it from time to time to make sure the cucumbers stay in the salty water.


After 3 days, you pour the salty cucumbers into your sink and rinse them off.



It's cuttin' time now. You cut the ends off and throw them away. You cut the cucumbers into chunks about 1/2 " thick.



Now you mix together some Alum and water. You put 3 Tablespoons of Alum to 1 gallon of water.

Back into the crock! Cut up cucumbers and Alum water go back to the corner for 3 more days.


Pour 'em out, rinse 'em off, and put 'em in the jars! Squeeze 'em in real tight!


Add 1 stick of cinnamon and a handful of whole cloves to each jar.


Time to make the Syrup! You need to mix vinegar and sugar together in a ratio of 2 cups sugar to 1 cup vinegar. It takes a lot of sugar!!


Get it good 'n' hot! Boil it real good!


Pour it over the cucumbers in the jars. Cover the group of jars with wax paper to keep them clean but don't seal them yet. The next 2 days, you drain the syrup back into the pan, add a little sugar, reheat it to boiling and pour it back over the pickles. On the third day (that's 9th day total) you seal the jars. If you're lucky, you'll hear little pops throughout the day until each jar is sealed.


And that's how you make Sweet Cucumber Pickles, Grandmama's way!!

11 comments:

Kim @ Homesteader's Heart said...

Those sound and look wonderful! I have never canned before, only for the fact that my garden has never produced enough bounty to have to. But when I do I'm going to try that recipe. Great job.
Blessings,
Kim
Can you send some down lol!!!

Brenda said...

I like bread and butter pickles, are these similar to those? The turned out beautifully!

Joni said...

I love to can but I have never made pickles, I'll have to give it a try...I'm getting ready to make pumpkin butter here soon...I really enjoy my time in the kitchen and it sounds like you do too! Thanks for sharing your recipe....it's nice to keep the old ones alive...your Grandmama would be pleased...

Sally said...

My gracious Karen, those sound and look yummy. Are they crispy? The recipe reminds me so much of the way my mom made her pickles although I don't remember the cinnamon sticks.

You're a smart lady!! Thanks for sharing.

Karen said...

That looks like so much fun! And I know how yummy they are!

Jeanne said...

Wow that was a wonderful instruction. Never done it before but you made it seem doable. I love this time of year with all the garden's bounty.

Donna said...

Oh my, those look delicious! We used to can our own pickles but quit about 10 years ago. We are just too worn out to do it all, LOL.

Donna said...

Thank You!!!!!!! I've got My Mom's crock as well!!!hughugs

Kathy C. said...

Those sound wonderful! I am going to have to try that with some cukes from the Farmer's Market. With any luck I'll be able to grow some of my own this fall, but I want those pickles now, lol. About how many pickles were used in this demonstration? :)

Annie said...

mm..you are making me Hungry...mmm

Annie

Karen M said...

I can see you all liked my pickle how to.

To answer questions:

They are similar to bread and butter, but most bread and butter pickles have onion in the jars.

I like time in the kitchen to a point. I don't do nearly as much kitchen time as I used to when I was full time stay at home mom.

Yes, these pickles are fairly crisp.

I ended up with 6 quarts of pickles. There were probably about 2 gallons of whole cucumbers to start with.

No one step of this process is difficult, but the whole process does end up being a lot of work and is not very cheap. The spices and sugar end up costing several dollars per quart.

But almost anyone who likes sweet pickles think they are some of the best they've ever tasted.