Bernadine's Sweet Pickles
Submitted by mikemohican
Old-fashioned sweet pickle recipe with a pickling lime soak that delivers candy-crisp cucumber slices. Apple cider vinegar, sugar, and celery seed pack each pint with snap and tangy sweetness.
YIELD
44 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
20 minREADY
40 minSweet pickles that crunch like candy come from one secret most modern recipes skip: the pickling lime soak. Bernadine’s old-fashioned method submerges thinly sliced cucumbers in a calcium hydroxide bath for a full day, drawing out moisture and firming the cell walls so every slice stays snappy through canning and a year on the shelf.
The syrup is sweet-tart with apple cider vinegar, sugar, and celery seed. Pour it hot over the rinsed slices, let them rest overnight, then simmer slowly the next morning before sealing into pints.
The payoff is that quintessential candy-sweet snap, the kind you remember from a grandma’s pantry. Pile them on a sharp cheddar sandwich, set them next to smoky brisket, or chop into potato salad for instant heirloom flavor.
Pro Tips
- Use food-grade pickling lime, never garden lime. After the 24-hour soak, rinse thoroughly, then stand the slices in fresh water for 4 hours, changing the water every hour, to pull out every trace of residual lime.
- Choose small, firm pickling cucumbers (Kirby type). Slicing or English cucumbers turn mushy and waste the lime treatment entirely.
- Process pints in a boiling water bath for the full 10 minutes to lock in a safe seal. Listen for the pop as they cool on the counter.
- Wait at least two weeks before opening a jar. The celery seed and vinegar mellow into the syrup, and the flavor deepens dramatically.
Variations
- Stir a teaspoon of mixed pickling spice or two cinnamon sticks into the syrup for a holiday-spiced version.
- Swap half of the apple cider vinegar for white vinegar for a sharper, brighter bite.
- Add sliced fresh ginger or a few star anise pods for an unexpected warm-spice twist.
Ingredients
Directions
Soak 7 pounds small sliced cucumbers in 2 gallons of water and 3 cups lime.
Stir each 2 hours while soaking for 24 hours.
(Let stand overnight.)
Drain pickle slices and let stand in fresh water for 4 hours, changing water every hour.
To make syrup, bring to a boil vinegar, sugar and celery seed.
Pour over pick les and let stand overnight.
Next morning boil pickles in syrup for 1 hour (slow simmer).
Put in jars and seal. Process pints for 10 minutes in boiling water bath.
Makes about 11 pints.
Comments