Bread and Butter Pickles Canning Recipe (2024)

Every summer I make a huge batch of no sugar dill pickles with the tiniest cucumbers I can find. I save the monster cucumbers that get lost on the vine for sweet dill pickle relish, but that leaves me a lot of dill in my canning pantry. I searched for quite a while before stumbling across this bread and butter pickles canning recipe in my Ball Complete Book of Home Preserving.

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I think what got me excited the most is the history behind bread and butter pickles.The story goes that a pair of Illinois cucumber farmers made it through the tough years by selling pickles to the local grocery in the 1920’s. They became known as “bread and butter pickles” simply because the farmers traded them for their bread and butter.

This bread and butter pickle recipe is special because it turns oversized cucumbers into flavorful pickles without bitterness. Generally, the best pickles come from the tiny sweet cucumbers, harvested before they’ve had time to fully develop seeds or bitterness. But what’s a farmer to do with all the monster cucumbers that get lost on the vine?

This recipe leaches the bitterness from the cucumbers soaking the cucumber slices in salt and then straining the liquid before canning. It’s the same process that’s used for removing the bitterness from other vegetables, like eggplant.

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Soaking cucumber slices in salt to reduce bitterness and improve the texture of the finished bread and butter pickles.

The actual canning brine is both sour and sweet. Most pickle recipes use water and vinegar in the pickling brine, often in a 50/50 ratio. Bread and butter pickles are all vinegar with no water in the brine, but that sourness is balanced out with a heavy helping of sugar.

Even with 2 cups of sugar spread out across 5 pints of pickles, these bread and butter pickles don’t come across as too sweet. That’s because the sugar is balanced nicely by the vinegar, and any lasting bite the cucumbers still retain after a salt soak.

The spices are simple. Just mustard seeds for a tiny bit of heat, celery seed for a little umami and turmeric for warmth and color. Other recipe variations add horseradish and ginger to create spicy bread and butter pickles. Or as the ball book of canning calls them “zesty.”

Start by slicing the cucumbers into uniform rounds, about 1/4 inch thick. Toss the cucumbers in salt, using 1/2 cup of pickling and canning salt for every 10 cups of cucumbers. Allow the cucumbers to soak in salt for 2 hours to pull out bitterness and extra liquid. This will result in sweeter cucumbers, and it also helps with texture.

Prepare a water bath canner along with canning lids and rings. In a separate pot, bring the bring ingredients including vinegar, sugar, mustard seeds, celery seeds and turmeric to a boil. Note that the brine doesn’t include any salt, but the cucumbers will be quite salty after their soak. There’s no need to add more to the brine.

Bring the brine to a boil, and while it’s heating,prepare the cucumbers by washing them in a colander. Remove as much of the salt and cucumber liquid as possible, and then add the cucumber slices and sliced onions into the boiling brine.

Allow the cucumbers to heat in the brine until the brine returns to a boil. Working quickly, pack the cucumber slices into jars leaving 1/2 inch headspace. Top with pickling brine, still leaving 1/2 inch of headspace.

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Adding Brine to Bread and Butter Pickles

Seal the jars with 2 part canning lids to finger tight and process in a water bath canner for 10 minutes for pint jars (15 for quarts). Turn off the heat, but allow the jars to sit in the canner for another 5 minutes before removing them to cool.

Check the jar seals, and store any unsealed jars in the refrigerator. Home canned bread and butter pickles should last 18 months or more. Be sure to wait at least 2 weeks for the flavors to marry before trying your pickles.

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As with any pickling recipe, there’s the original traditional way to make the pickles and then there’s all manner of homegrown variations. So long as the vinegar, vegetables and processing time stay the same, you’re free to adjust just about anything else.

That includes both the sugar and salt, neither of which is used as a preservative in this recipe. Feel free to change up any of the spices to suit your preferences. Try less sugar if you’d like, or add a hint more or less salt. For sweet and spicy pickles, try adding red pepper flakes or black pepper.

The ball book of canning and preserving offers three variations that are commonly made in home kitchens. The British version has makes a darker pickle brine, and the brown sugar and cider vinegar add richness and character. The zesty bread and butter pickle recipe adds horseradish and ginger to help balance out the sweetness. The last variation, with garlic, just adds more flavor and umami to the pickles.

  • British Bread and Butter Pickles ~ Use cider vinegar instead of white vinegar, and brown sugar instead of white. Add in 1 tsp ground ginger along with the rest of the spices.
  • Zesty Bread and Butter Pickles ~ Skip the celery seeds and turmeric and add in 2 tbsp prepared horseradish and 2 tbsp freshly grated ginger root instead.
  • Garlic Bread and Butter Pickles ~ The ball book of canning says to add in 1 clove of garlic to each jar, but personally, I’d add in 3 to 4 cloves if you really want them to have a good garlic flavor.

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This traditional bread and butter pickles recipe comes from the ball book of home preserving. It should yield 5 one pint jars of bread and butter pickles.

Ingredients

  • 10 cups pickling cucumber, trimmed and sliced in 1/4 inch slices
  • 4 cups medium onions, thin sliced
  • 1/2 cup pickling or canning salt, for soaking cucumbers
  • 3 cups white vinegar
  • 2 cups granulated sugar
  • 2 tbsp mustard seeds
  • 1 tsp celery seed
  • 1 tsp ground turmeric

Instructions

  1. Start by combining cucumber, onions and salt in a non-reactive glass or stainless steel bowl. Toss the vegetables in the salt to fully coat and let them sit for 2 hours.
  2. Prepare a water bath canner, jars and lids while the cucumbers are soaking in salt.
  3. In a stainless steel saucepan, combine the remaining ingredients including vinegar, sugar, mustard seed, celery seed and ground turmeric. Note that all the salt in the recipe is used to soaking the cucumbers and is not added to the pickling brine.
  4. Bring the pickling brine to a boil.
  5. Strain the cucumbers and onions, and rinse them in the sink to remove most of the salt. Drain them thoroughly.
  6. Add the strained vegetables to the boiling brine and allow the mixture to return to a boil.
  7. Once the mixture has boiled, scoop the cucumbers and onions out of the brine and pack them into prepared canning jars leaving 1/2 inch headspace. Fill the canning jars with hot brine, still leaving 1/2 inch headspace.
  8. Wipe rims, remove air bubbles and seal the jars with 2 part lids to finger tight.
  9. Process in a water bath canner for 10 minutes and then turn off the heat and leave them to sit for another 5 minutes before removing the jars from the canner.
  10. Allow the jars to cool completely before checking seals and removing canning bands for storage.

Notes

When canning pickles, it's best to use pint jars because they require less cook time and result in crisper pickles. If you choose to use quart jars, add 5 minutes to the process time.

Nutrition Information:

Serving Size:

1 grams
Amount Per Serving:Unsaturated Fat: 0g

If you’re just getting started canning, but plan on making canning and preserving food part of your lifestyle long term, try investing in an online canning course. Pioneering today has acanning with confidencecourse that takes you through the ins and outs of canning from basic canning safety all the way through to pressure canning meat at home. The course covers:

  • Canning Safety– Safe techniques to for home canning
  • Water Bath Canning– Jams, jellies, pickles, tomatoes, and other high acid fruits and vegetables including low sugar, no pectin variations.
  • Pressure Canning– How to safely operate a pressure canner at home to can almost any type of food for long-term preservation
  • Troubleshooting and Storage– Figuring out why a recipe just didn’t work, and maximizing storage of your home canned goods.

TAKE A LOOK ATCANNING WITH CONFIDENCEIF YOU’RE PLANNING ON INVESTING HEAVILY IN LONG-TERM HOME FOOD PRESERVATION.

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