GreeneScene Magazine
  • ArticlesNEW
  • Contests
    • Where is This?
    • Person Place or Thing
    • trivia
    • GreeneScene Reader Survey
  • Podcast
  • Submit
    • Submit a GreeneScene
    • GreeneScene of the Past
    • Community Events
    • Classified Ads
    • News Releases
  • Events
  • More
    • Contact
    • What’s the GreeneScene?
    • Print Archive
    • Ad Rates
    • Circulation
    • Subscriptions
    • Our Parent Company
No Result
View All Result
GreeneScene Magazine
  • ArticlesNEW
  • Contests
    • Where is This?
    • Person Place or Thing
    • trivia
    • GreeneScene Reader Survey
  • Podcast
  • Submit
    • Submit a GreeneScene
    • GreeneScene of the Past
    • Community Events
    • Classified Ads
    • News Releases
  • Events
  • More
    • Contact
    • What’s the GreeneScene?
    • Print Archive
    • Ad Rates
    • Circulation
    • Subscriptions
    • Our Parent Company
No Result
View All Result
GreeneScene Magazine
No Result
View All Result
Home Food

The Joys of Canning Pickles

T.R. Mahle by T.R. Mahle
March 5, 2026
in Food
0
Cooking Local Game Fish
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Canning pickles is a delightful blend of tradition, creativity, and satisfaction. The process begins with selecting fresh cucumbers and crafting the perfect brine—a balance of vinegar, salt, and spices. As jars seal with a satisfying pop, there’s a sense of accomplishment in preserving food by hand. Pickling allows for endless flavor experimentation, from classic dill to spicy garlic or sweet bread-and-butter. Sharing homemade pickles with friends and family brings joy and pride, while seeing pantry shelves fill up is deeply rewarding. Canning pickles is more than preserving vegetables—it’s preserving memories, flavors, and the pleasure of self-sufficiency.

I have personally canned several hundred quarts of pickles over the years…with a lot of trial and error to get them just where I like them. There are literally hundreds and hundreds of recipes available on the internet and in private recipes boxes for canning pickles. Sampling all the various options that are available can be an exhausting but fun process. To suit your personal taste, tweaking and adjusting your brine till you get it exactly right could take years. One of the easiest methods for getting a recipe is to simply just ask the person for their recipe if you like their pickles…usually they are more than happy to share their secrets.

I am glad to share a couple of my favorite recipes that have been passed down in our family and enjoyed for generations.

Old-Fashioned Bread-and-Butter Pickles
These bread-and-butter pickles are a little less sweet than most…you can increase the sugar if you like. Some people also add a little ground clove and you might try some diced red pepper in place of some of the onions.

• You will need approximately 6 pounds of 4 to 5-inch pickling cucumbers
• 2 pounds of small onions…sliced into thin rounds
• ½ cup of pickling salt
• 4 ½ cups cider vinegar
• 3 cups of sugar
• 1 ½ teaspoons of ground turmeric
• 1 teaspoon of celery seeds
• 2 tablespoons of yellow mustard seeds

Gently wash the cucumbers and remove the blossom end. Slice the cucumbers crosswise 1/16 inch thick. In a large bowl, toss the cucumbers and onions with the salt. Cover the cucumbers with ice cubes and let stand for 3 to 4 hours.

Drain the cucumbers. In a large nonreactive pot (stainless steel or glass) bring the remaining ingredients to a boil. Add the cucumbers and slowly bring the contents back to a boil. Using a slotted spoon, pack the cucumbers loosely in 8 pints or 4-quart mason jars. Close the jars with hot two-piece caps.

To ensure a good seal, process the jars for 10 minutes in a boiling-water bath or for 5-6 minutes in a steamer. Store the cooled jars in a cool, dry, dark place for at least 3 weeks before eating.

Dill Pickles (Mary Mayle’s recipe)

Wash freshly picked pickles with a brush under cold water and pack into quart jars.
To each quart add:

• 1 tbl. Pickling salt
• 1 tsp. dill seed
• ½ tsp. mustard seed
• 1/8 tsp. powdered alum (makes then crispy)
• ½ clove garlic, sliced
• ¼ small hot pepper

Cover with a solution made from (3 parts water and 1 part vinegar) stirred together before pouring on the pickles.

Cold-pack for 5 minutes after the water comes to a boil.

(Important) resist the urge to open and eat immediately…let them sit for at least two weeks so the flavor will be absorbed. Enjoy!

Donation

Buy author a coffee

Donate
T.R. Mahle

T.R. Mahle

Related Posts

Interior of a hunting shop with mounted animals, rifles, and outdoor gear on display.
Outdoors

Outdoor Spotlight: Majestic Bulls, White Sheep and Black Death

by T.R. Mahle
April 21, 2026
A wild turkey with its tail feathers fanned out stands in a grassy field.
Outdoors

Like Thunder Contained Within Feathers

by T.R. Mahle
April 21, 2026
A baseball coach in a Jefferson-Morgan Rockets jacket holds a bat while standing on a field.
Sports

42 Seasons

by Dave Bates
April 21, 2026
Next Post
Intentional Walks: Waynesburg’s Professional Baseball Team

Intentional Walks: Waynesburg's Professional Baseball Team

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

I agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

The GreeneScene Podcast The GreeneScene Podcast The GreeneScene Podcast

Recommended

Group of pharmacy staff posing with an award and balloons inside a retail pharmacy.

McCracken Pharmacy Wins National Award

April 1, 2026
Hummingbird Project 3D Render

Let’s Talk About the Robena Data Center

March 26, 2026
Waynesburg Central High School Logo

Cool At School: WCHS National Honor Society Induction

April 1, 2026
Ambulance with flashing lights driving quickly at night responding to an emergency.

Our Growing Emergency Care Desert

March 27, 2026
Interior of a hunting shop with mounted animals, rifles, and outdoor gear on display.

Outdoor Spotlight: Majestic Bulls, White Sheep and Black Death

April 21, 2026
A wild turkey with its tail feathers fanned out stands in a grassy field.

Like Thunder Contained Within Feathers

April 21, 2026
A baseball coach in a Jefferson-Morgan Rockets jacket holds a bat while standing on a field.

42 Seasons

April 21, 2026
A black and white image of a professional wrestler holding a championship belt and posing confidently.

When ESPN Treats the WWE Like Sport, It’s Just One More Step to Societal Surrealism

April 21, 2026
Wilson Accounting Group Wilson Accounting Group Wilson Accounting Group

Archives

  • 2026
  • 2025
  • 2024
  • 2023
  • 2022
  • 2021
  • 2020
  • 2019
  • 2018

Recent Posts

  • Outdoor Spotlight: Majestic Bulls, White Sheep and Black Death
  • Like Thunder Contained Within Feathers
  • 42 Seasons

Categories

  • Arts & Entertainment
  • Business
  • Community
  • Cool at School
  • Crowded Kitchen
  • Education
  • Events
  • Featured
  • Food
  • Government
  • Health & Wellness
  • Hometown Heritage
  • Leisure
  • Local History
  • Local People
  • Opinion
  • Outdoors
  • Pets
  • Piece of My Mind
  • Public Service
  • Religion
  • Scene and Heard
  • Seasonal
  • Special Interest
  • Sports
  • Supernatural
  • Towne Square
  • Uncategorized

© 2025 GreeneScene Magazine - A Direct Results Company

No Result
View All Result
  • Articles
  • Contests
    • Where is This?
    • Person Place or Thing
    • trivia
    • GreeneScene Reader Survey
  • Podcast
  • Submit
    • Submit a GreeneScene
    • GreeneScene of the Past
    • Community Events
    • Classified Ads
    • News Releases
  • Events
  • More
    • Contact
    • What’s the GreeneScene?
    • Print Archive
    • Ad Rates
    • Circulation
    • Subscriptions
    • Our Parent Company

© 2025 GreeneScene Magazine - A Direct Results Company

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.