Bread and Butter Pickles

Bread and Butter Pickles requires roughly 4 hours and 35 minutes from start to finish. Watching your figure? This gluten free and dairy free recipe has 465 calories, 67g of protein, and 15g of fat per serving. This recipe serves 50. For $3.23 per serving, this recipe covers 33% of your daily requirements of vitamins and minerals. 3192 people were glad they tried this recipe. Head to the store and pick up sugar, yellow onions, turmeric, and a few other things to make it today. It is brought to you by Simply Recipes. All things considered, we decided this recipe deserves a spoonacular score of 98%. This score is super. Try Bread-and-Butter Pickles, Bread-and-Butter Pickles, and Bread and Butter Pickles for similar recipes.

Servings: 50

Preparation duration: 260 minutes

Cooking duration: 15 minutes

 

Ingredients:

6 allspice berries plus a pinch of ground allspice

1 cup apple cider vinegar (5% acidity)

3/4 teaspoon celery seeds

1 inch cinnamon stick

1 Tbsp mustard seeds

2 1/2 lbs pickling cucumbers (fresh from the market)

1 16-qt canning pot with rack

1 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes

1/4 cup pickling salt (can use Kosher salt as a substitute, regular table salt has additives in it that will turn the pickles dark and muddy the color of the pickle juice)

2 1/4 cups sugar

Jar lifters or tongs

1/2 teaspoon turmeric

1 1/4 cup white distilled vinegar (5% acidity)

1 pound white or yellow onions, thinly sliced

Equipment:

bowl

kitchen towels

oven

pot

slotted spoon

paper towels

tongs

Cooking instruction summary:

1 Carefully rinse the cucumbers, scrubbing away any dirt that may have stuck to the ribs. Slice off 1/8-inch from the ends and discard. Slice the cucumbers in 1/4-inch thick slices, place in a large bowl. Add the sliced onions and pickling salt. Stir in so that the salt is well distributed among the cucumber slices. Cover with a clean tea towel (thin towel, not terry cloth). Cover with a couple of inches of ice. Put in the refrigerator and let chill for 4 hours. Discard ice. Rinse the cucumber and onion slices thoroughly, drain. Rinse and drain again.2 If you are planning to store your pickles outside of the refrigerator for any length of time, you will need to sterilize your jars before canning, and heat the filled jars in a hot water bath after canning. If you are planning to eat the pickles right away and store them the whole time in the refrigerator, you can skip the water bath step. It's still a good idea to sterilize the jars first, you can do that by running them through the dishwasher, or placing them in a 200°F oven for 10 minutes. To sterilize the jars for canning, place empty jars on a metal rack in a large, 16-qt canning pot. (Jars must rest on a rack in the pot, not on the bottom of the pot). Fill with warm water and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to warm to keep the jars hot and ready for canning. Remove with tongs or jar lifters one by one as you can the cucumbers. Sterilize the lids by bringing a pot of water to a boil and pouring water over a bowl containing the lids.3 In a 4 qt or 6 qt pot, place the vinegar, sugar, and all of the spices. Bring to a boil. Once the sugar has dissolved, add the sliced cucumbers and onions. Bring to a boil again. As soon as the sugar vinegar solution begins boiling again, use a slotted spoon to start packing the hot jars with the cucumbers. First pack a jar to an inch from the rim with the vegetables. Then pour hot vinegar sugar syrup over the vegetables to a half inch from the rim. Wipe the rim clean with a paper towel. Place a sterilized lid on the jar. Secure with a metal screw band.4 If you are planning to store pickles outside of refrigerator, process the filled jars in a hot water bath for at least 15 minutes. Return filled jars to the same canning pot with its already hot water. Water level needs to be at least one inch above the top of the cans. Bring to a boil and let boil hard for 15 minutes, or 20 minutes for altitiudes of 1001 to 6,000 feet. Over 6,000 feet, boil for 25 minutes. Remove jars from pot. Let cool down to room temperature. Jars should make a popping sound as their lids seal. If a lid doesn't properly seal, do not store the jar outside of the refrigerator.

 

Step by step:


1. 1 Carefully rinse the cucumbers, scrubbing away any dirt that may have stuck to the ribs. Slice off 1/8-inch from the ends and discard. Slice the cucumbers in 1/4-inch thick slices, place in a large bowl.

2. Add the sliced onions and pickling salt. Stir in so that the salt is well distributed among the cucumber slices. Cover with a clean tea towel (thin towel, not terry cloth). Cover with a couple of inches of ice. Put in the refrigerator and let chill for 4 hours. Discard ice. Rinse the cucumber and onion slices thoroughly, drain. Rinse and drain again.2 If you are planning to store your pickles outside of the refrigerator for any length of time, you will need to sterilize your jars before canning, and heat the filled jars in a hot water bath after canning. If you are planning to eat the pickles right away and store them the whole time in the refrigerator, you can skip the water bath step. It's still a good idea to sterilize the jars first, you can do that by running them through the dishwasher, or placing them in a 200°F oven for 10 minutes. To sterilize the jars for canning, place empty jars on a metal rack in a large, 16-qt canning pot. (Jars must rest on a rack in the pot, not on the bottom of the pot). Fill with warm water and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to warm to keep the jars hot and ready for canning.

3. Remove with tongs or jar lifters one by one as you can the cucumbers. Sterilize the lids by bringing a pot of water to a boil and pouring water over a bowl containing the lids.3 In a 4 qt or 6 qt pot, place the vinegar, sugar, and all of the spices. Bring to a boil. Once the sugar has dissolved, add the sliced cucumbers and onions. Bring to a boil again. As soon as the sugar vinegar solution begins boiling again, use a slotted spoon to start packing the hot jars with the cucumbers. First pack a jar to an inch from the rim with the vegetables. Then pour hot vinegar sugar syrup over the vegetables to a half inch from the rim. Wipe the rim clean with a paper towel.

4. Place a sterilized lid on the jar. Secure with a metal screw band.4 If you are planning to store pickles outside of refrigerator, process the filled jars in a hot water bath for at least 15 minutes. Return filled jars to the same canning pot with its already hot water. Water level needs to be at least one inch above the top of the cans. Bring to a boil and let boil hard for 15 minutes, or 20 minutes for altitiudes of 1001 to 6,000 feet. Over 6,000 feet, boil for 25 minutes.

5. Remove jars from pot.

6. Let cool down to room temperature. Jars should make a popping sound as their lids seal. If a lid doesn't properly seal, do not store the jar outside of the refrigerator.


Nutrition Information:

Quickview
465k Calories
66g Protein
15g Total Fat
10g Carbs
57% Health Score
Limit These
Calories
465k
23%

Fat
15g
24%

  Saturated Fat
5g
36%

Carbohydrates
10g
4%

  Sugar
9g
11%

Cholesterol
196mg
66%

Sodium
792mg
34%

Get Enough Of These
Protein
66g
134%

Zinc
16mg
111%

Selenium
74µg
107%

Vitamin B12
6µg
107%

Vitamin B3
15mg
79%

Vitamin B6
1mg
75%

Phosphorus
618mg
62%

Iron
6mg
35%

Vitamin B2
0.52mg
31%

Potassium
1056mg
30%

Vitamin B5
2mg
20%

Magnesium
74mg
19%

Vitamin B1
0.25mg
16%

Copper
0.3mg
15%

Folate
44µg
11%

Vitamin E
0.91mg
6%

Manganese
0.12mg
6%

Calcium
53mg
5%

Vitamin K
5µg
5%

Vitamin D
0.3µg
2%

Vitamin C
1mg
2%

Fiber
0.37g
1%

covered percent of daily need
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How to Can - Bread and Butter Pickles Recipe

 

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The fig is also a fertility symbol and the Arab association with male genitals is so strong that the original word 'fig' is considered improper.

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The Passover test [My thanks to Jeff G for the following] Sean is waiting for a bus when another man joins him at the bus stop. After 20 minutes of waiting, Sean takes out a sandwich from his lunch box and starts to eat. But noticing the other man watching, Sean asks, "Would you like one? My wife has made me plenty." "Thank you very much, but I must decline your kind offer," says the other man, "I’m Rabbi Levy." "Nice to meet you, Rabbi," says Sean, "but my sandwiches are alright for you to eat. They only contain cheese. There’s no meat in them." "It’s very kind of you," says Rabbi Levy, "but today we Jews are celebrating Passover. It would be a great sin to eat a sandwich because during the 8 days of Passover, we cannot eat bread. In fact it would be a sin comparable to the sin of adultery." "OK," says Sean, "but it’s difficult for me to understand the significance of what you’ve just said." Many weeks later, Sean and Rabbi Levy meet again. Sean says, "Do you remember, Rabbi, that when we last met, I offered you a sandwich which you refused because you said eating bread on Passover would be as great a sin as that of adultery?" Rabbi Levy replies, "Yes, I remember saying that." "Well, Rabbi," says Sean, "that day, I went over to my mistress’s apartment and told her what you said. We then tried out both the sins, but I must admit, we just couldn’t see the comparison."

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