Classic Lime Sweet Pickles

6:57 AM
Classic Lime Sweet Pickles, cucumbers made into the most heavenly crisp, sweet, tangy pickle you will ever eat.  The hardest part about making these pickles is waiting for them to be ready to eat.  


This summer, we had more cucumbers than we knew what to do with due to a little, or you might say a big mistake.

When we bought seeds for the garden, a little girl was filling in for her mother at the feed store.  

My son-in-law had already planted cucumber, cantaloupe, and squash plants, and some of the squash and cantaloupe plants had died, so we decided to replant them with seed.  

I asked the little girl for some cantaloupe, zucchini, crook neck squash, purple hull peas, and okra seeds.  She bagged them all up, and we went out to the garden that afternoon and planted them.

A few cucumber mounds are all that are needed to make plenty of cucumbers.  We had already planted four or five mounds, so we thought we were good on cucumbers.  

Wanting a lot of cantaloupes this year, we planted about twenty mounds.  We could not wait for them to make.

We were getting excited as they started popping up out of the ground.  Well, all the excitement turned to "OH NO"!  

All the plants we thought were cantaloupe turned out to be cucumbers....yes, she gave us the wrong seeds! 




We were bound and determined not to waste any of these cucumbers.  Every other day or so for two or three weeks, we made some pickles.  

We first started out making our favorite dill pickle, 14 Day Sun Pickles.  Then we made some Sweet Dill Pickles (post coming) and some of these Classic Lime Sweet Pickles that I am posting today. 

I intended to get these posted sooner, but Jim's Mother had a severe stroke on July 31, and we have been caring for her every day at the hospital.  

We are grateful she is still with us and makes her as comfortable as possible.  

With her being ill and Jim and I finishing up with Summer canning, we have been quite busy.  

This is why my blog post has been few lately.  Your prayers are appreciated.


I have not made these pickles in years.  In fact, I had to go out to the storage building and find the pickling crock I use to soak the cucumbers.  

I washed it out and started the process, and I mean the process.  Lime pickles take three days to make, but they are well worth all the effort it takes to make them.  

This is the recipe my mother used to make her Lime Sweet Pickles.  Memories started flooding in as I made these.  

My summers were filled with hours in the kitchen canning.  

How I would love to have one of those days back with my mother..." smiles"!



Classic Lime Sweet Pickles 

Ingredients:
  • 7 lbs. cucumbers washed and sliced 1/4" thick

  • 2 cups pickling lime

  • 2 gallons water

  • 2 gallons ice water

  • 8 cups white vinegar

  • 8 cups sugar

  • 1 tablespoon canning salt

  • 1 bottle pickling spice, tied in a cloth (This is the brand I use here)


Directions:
Add water and pickling lime in a large pickling crock; stir until all the lime is dissolved.  Add cucumbers and stir once more.  

Lay a dinner plate over the cucumber to weigh them down in the lime water;  soak for 24 hours.   Drain cucumbers and rinse three times in water, being sure not to break the cucumbers.  

Rinse the lime out of the pickling crock to remove all traces of the lime water.  

Return cucumbers to the pickling crock; add ice water and soak for 3 hours.  Drain cucumbers; set aside. 

In an extra sizeable nonreactive pot (not aluminum), combine vinegar, sugar, salt, and pickling spice bag.  Bring to a boil and boil until the sugar is dissolved.  

Remove the pot from the heat and add the drained cucumbers.  Soak in the pot overnight. 

The next day heat cucumbers over medium heat until they reach a boil.  Boil in syrup for 35 minutes.  

Pack pickles in sterilized jars up to within 1/2 inch from the top.  

Pour hot syrup over packed hot cucumbers.  Continue until all the cucumbers are packed in jars.  Place lids and rings that have been boiled in hot water on packed jars.  

Place jars in the pot of boiling water and bring to a boil.  Boil quarts for 15 minutes and pints for 10 minutes.  

Remove jars from the water bath and turn them upside down on the counter to ensure the jars will seal. 

Note:  Sometimes, Mother didn't tie up the spices.  She just let them run loose in the syrup and dipped them up as she poured the syrup over the cucumbers.

Note:  From the comment below, I decided to add a note about what you can use to soak your cucumbers in.   Glass will work if you can get something big enough.  Or you can split them and soak them in two batches, which is ok.  Plastic is fine.  In fact, I have used plastic paint buckets that I have washed out real good before.




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Kay Little
Kay Little

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