Summer Pickled Cucumbers
Submitted by larry benton
Summer pickled cucumbers with a hot vinegar brine spiced with celery seed and mustard seed. Classic bread-and-butter pickles ready for jars, no pressure canning required.
YIELD
12 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
20 minREADY
40 minThese summer pickled cucumbers are the bread-and-butter style most Americans think of when they hear “pickle." Thin slices of cucumber and onion are salted to draw out water, rinsed, packed into jars, and covered with a hot sweet-and-sour brine spiced with celery seed and mustard seed. The jars seal on the counter as they cool and store well in the fridge for weeks.
The salt-draw is the make-or-break step. Fresh cucumbers hold enormous amounts of water, and skipping this rest turns the pickles limp and diluted within days. Two hours under salt gives the vegetables time to sweat out their water and tighten up their cell structure, which is what produces the signature bread-and-butter crunch.
Celery seed and mustard seed are the classic American pickling duo. Celery seed brings a faint herbal warmth that’s hard to place but unmistakable once you taste it, and mustard seed adds tangy pop without the heat of ground mustard. Together they make the pickles taste unmistakably like the ones from the deli counter.
The brief vinegar-sugar boil dissolves the sugar completely and warms the spices enough to release their oils. Pouring the hot brine over packed vegetables starts a gentle cook that softens the slices just slightly and lets the flavors penetrate deeply.
These are not shelf-stable pickles without a proper water-bath process. Store them in the refrigerator for up to a month.
Kitchen Tips
- Use pickling cucumbers or Kirbys if possible. Their thicker skins and denser flesh stand up to the brine better than standard slicers.
- Slice the onions thin. Chunky onions never fully tenderize and can push the overall flavor too sharp.
- Warm the jars before packing. Cold jars can crack when hit with the boiling brine.
- Wait at least two days before eating. The flavors need time to penetrate the cucumbers.
Variations
- Add a dried bay leaf and a few black peppercorns to each jar for a more complex flavor.
- Swap half the white vinegar for apple cider vinegar for a softer, fruitier tang.
- Toss in a few thin slices of red chile for heat and color.
Ingredients
Directions
Wash, dry, and thinly slice the cucumbers. Peel and slice the onions. Mix the two ingredients together in a bowl and sprinkle with the salt.
Leave 2 hours. Rinse and drain. Bring the vinegar, sugar, and spices to a boil and simmer for 3 minutes.
Pack the drained cucumbers and onions loosely in warm jars. Cover with the spiced vinegar and seal immediately.
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