Sweet Pickles
Submitted by desmcd
Old-fashioned sweet pickles brined in salt and vinegar, then soaked in a spiced sugar syrup with cinnamon, cloves, and allspice. Crisp, tangy, and warmly spiced.
YIELD
20 servingsPREP
10 minCOOK
30 minREADY
40 minThese old-fashioned sweet pickles follow a two-stage process that grandma would recognize. First, whole pickling cucumbers sit in a cold salt-and-vinegar brine until you’re ready to use them. Then they get drained, cut, and bathed in a hot spiced syrup that soaks in over two days.
The spice bag is what makes these special. Whole allspice, cloves, and a cinnamon stick simmer in the sugar-vinegar syrup, giving the pickles a warm, almost holiday-like fragrance. After the first soak, you drain the syrup, boil it again with more sugar, and pour it back over the cucumbers. That second pour drives the sweetness deeper into each piece.
The alum step keeps the pickles crisp. Without it, the long syrup soak can turn them soft and mushy.
Kitchen Tips
- Use pickling cucumbers, not regular slicing cucumbers. Slicers have too much water content and go limp during brining.
- Keep the spices in a cheesecloth bag so they’re easy to remove. Loose spices stuck to pickles look messy and can turn bitter.
- Make sure the syrup is boiling hot when you pour it over the pickles. Hot syrup penetrates better and helps preserve them.
- Store sealed jars in a cool, dark place. These are ready to eat once cooled but improve in flavor after a week.
Variations
- Add a few slices of fresh ginger to the spice bag for a warm, zesty kick.
- Toss in mustard seeds for a bread-and-butter pickle crossover.
- Use apple cider vinegar instead of white vinegar for a rounder, mellower tang.
Ingredients
Directions
Wash cucumbers and put in jars whole.
Cover with cold brine and store until ready to use.
When ready, drain pickles and cut into pieces.
Cover with boiling water and ¼ teaspoon alum, let stand until cool.
Drain. Put pickle spices in a cloth bag and boil in syrup mixture. Pour hot syrup on pickles and let stand in open jars for 2 days. Drain syrup into a pan and heat with spices and add 2 more cups sugar. Bring to a boil. Put pickles into clean jars, pour syrup over and seal. Pickles are ready to eat when cool.
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