July 6, 2012


In the last two weeks, I’ve made dozens of pickles. My favorite sweet pickles were first on the list, and if you have been reading along, or had a quick lunch over here in MrsW’s kitchen, you know I serve these all year long. This is a pickle that’s worth the (very minimal) work. They are sweet and briny with a sharp vinegar bite. Without a doubt, the best part is the crispness. They are the perfect deviled egg, egg salad, tuna salad or chicken salad pickle. They pair with rich salty charcuterie in a wonderful way. And they are perfect for that refrigerator contemplation… the “what’s for dinner” stare … that requires something lifted aimlessly from jar to mouth while thinking.

Slicing the cucumbers is the only real work, made easy with the mandoline.

 

There’s no real recipe, only a technique. And for the last twenty years, I’ve been acting as if this recipe is my very own secret. The recipe was on a card in the metal file box my grandmother used for her recipes, titled Luvey’s Seven Day Pickles. In the time I’ve been blogging, so much has been made of originality and recipe attribution. So, calling these pickles Luvey’s seemed the correct attribution for what I was sure was original and unique.

Until I walked through Union Square Greenmarket last month, wandering aimlessly, glancing at table after table of lovely foods. There was a farmer with a table filled with jars. One jar said Seven Day Pickles. I picked it up, turned it this way and that, and knew, just knew, that any claim of originality was going to be pushed aside.

As soon as the boiling water goes in, the color begins to change.

 

What incredible arrogance to think that this was a secret recipe! I’m really quite embarrassed. As if the Greenmarket experience wasn’t enough to make me rethink, Emily Nunn came to visit (she’s making her Comfort Food Tour, but you’ll have to ask her about that.) Emily and I met virtually through Food52, and I just knew I would love her. Her recipe for Lemon Blueberry Pancakes is amazing (secret ingredient!) and the Matilda, Maple, & Garlic Pork Shoulder with Crispy Skin – the title alone makes my mouth water. She arrived for a visit a bit remorseful, saying she had intended to bring some of her Aunt’s special sweet pickles. My ears perked up with that mention. Somehow I knew, I just knew. Yes, Aunt Mariah makes the same seven day pickle.

After one day, there’s a lot of bubbling and foaming.

 

Emily claims Mariah’s have more clove, but I surmise that is just a matter of pickling spice, and now that I’ve seen the recipe, my suspicions have been confirmed. There are a couple of slight adjustments to the technique, but really, it’s just about the same darn pickle.

So, they’re not original…but they are amazing. Like no other pickle. And in these dog days of summer, when the heat is hovering at 100°F every single day, here’s a preserving recipe that has very little cooking involved.

Day Two. Not very interesting.

 

It’s simple, and the ingredients are few, but there is one you may not know. Alum is what makes this pickle crisp. It’s a mineral – an old time mineral used to maintain crispness. It’s not creepy. It’s not a first cousin to high fructose corn syrup or neighbor to those multisyllabic scary ingredients. It’s found in some grocery spice aisles. I’ve done some research and encourage you to do more if you want. It’s not a bad thing, alum. It’s natural and serves a mineral, simple purpose adding snap to these pickles.

Alum.

 

There is no processing and these jars are shelf stable. Really. If you process these pickles, you will cook them and they won’t be the same.  I’ve kept them on my shelf for a year (they never last any longer than that, and having enough for a year is always a challenge.) The high concentration of both sugar and vinegar certainly adds to the stability. Still, I make one recipe, 12 pints, intending to consume them or give them away within one year.

Get your sugar on.

 

Make these with the firmest cucumbers you can find. I know you will say ten pounds? Geez, that’s a lot of pickles. Go ahead, halve the recipe if you must, but I’ll bet you will regret not having more pickles once you’ve tasted one of these seven day wonders.

 

[print_this]

Luvey’s Seven Day Pickles
Makes 12 pints

10# cucumbers
1/4 c salt
3 T Alum
1 gallon apple cider vinegar
1/4 c pickling spice
4 c sugar

Day One:

Soak the cucumbers in ice cold water for 30 minutes.

Drain. Trim off the ends of the cucumbers, then slice (a mandoline is best) into 1/4″ slices. (Note: Aunt Mariah cuts hers into chunks. I like this idea.)

Pack the slices into a huge jar or food safe container. Cover with boiling water.

Cover the container and let it sit overnight.

Day Two:

Drain. Add the salt to one gallon of boiling water.

Pour the boiling water over the cucumber slices.

Cover and let it sit overnight.

Day Three:

Drain. Add the alum to one gallon of boiling water.

Pour the water/alum mixture over the cucumber slices.

Cover and let it sit overnight.

Day Four:

Drain. Bring cider vinegar to a boil

Put the pickling spice into a cheesecloth bundle (or a tea ball!) and add to the cider vinegar.

Pour the vinegar mixture over the cucumber slices.

Cover and let it sit for three days.

Day Seven:

Drain, reserving 2 cups of the vinegar.

Dispose of the pickling spices.

Put the pickles into a giant bowl. Pour the sugar over the pickles, stir well and allow the mixture to sit for about an hour.

Pack the pickles into sterilized jars – pints or quarts, whatever size you want. I say, depending on how many you think you will eat in one sitting. I’m good for a pint. (Not that you can’t keep these in the refrigerator or on the shelf for months.)

The sugar will draw the liquid out of the pickles and make a syrup, some of which is now on the bottom of the bowl. Scrape/pour the syrup over the pickles, dividing evenly between all the jars.

Make up any shortfall of liquid by adding back the vinegar, just until the pickles are covered.

Cap the jars. Turn them over and over a few times in the next three or four days to disperse and dissolve any sugar that gathers on the bottom.

Chill the pickles well before serving.

[/print_this]

 

PS Those clever farmers at the Greenmarket had a Seven Day Pickle with Jalapeno. I think the rounds of chile would be amazing, so will definitely try that next year. Sweet, acidic and spicy? Be still my heart.

189 Responses to “the original seven day pickle?”

      • Jean

        I have made these many times, never processed them and have actually used them years later. They are delicious!!!

        Reply
        • Cathy Barrow

          They do not need to be processed. The sugar and vinegar provide enough preserving!

          Reply
          • Martie

            Cathy, I’m on day 3 of your pickle recipe, and have been adhering to the recipe exactly, but I noticed another website which gives your recipe for 7-day pickles, and even states it’s from your cookbook, but the recipe varies from this one in that a total of 10 cups of sugar is used, and in fact, the instructions for day 4 have you combine the 1 gallon of vinegar with I believe 4 cups of sugar. I don’t have your Mrs. Wheelbarrow book, so I sure hope you can verify for me before tomorrow evening that I only use vinegar starting day 4, and not a vinegar/sugar combo. Thanks very much.

          • Cathy Barrow

            Hi! I did modify the recipe for the book and was happier with the newer version. Boil the vinegar and 5 cups sugar until dissolved. Pour over the drained cucumber slices and add the spices tied in cheesecloth or in a tea ball. Cool, cover and eta sit for 3 days

  1. VictoriaInMD

    Oh yes. Adding these babies to the list of things to try in the next few weeks!

    Reply
  2. Linda

    I make Candy Sweet Pickles from an old recipe of my mother’s. The crunch comes from soaking the sliced cucumbers in lime. (Very similar to lime pickles except the recipe calls for green food coloring – don’t know why, but when they aren’t bright green, they don’t taste the same!)

    Reply
    • Gwen Merritt

      Hi Linda

      I lost my mothers recipes for sweet pickles and when I read candy sweet pickles …that was a great description of my mamas sweet pickles.. she pasted away 2008 at age 81….would you share your recipe when us? I am on face book Gwen Merritt Robertson
      Thanks

      Reply
      • GARLAND BURGE

        do you have a recipe for candy sweet crock pickles, my wife had one and lost it.
        You do the salt water soak for a couple days then the alum then vinegar then put
        in the crock with a layer of pickles and a layer of sugar with a pack of spice in the
        middle but she does not know how many days for each. They last in the crock for
        2 years or untill they are gone.
        Thanks
        gburge@scenicautos.com

        Reply
        • Mary Reed

          The recipe i have says to put 17 pounds of cucumbers in a glass crock or very large jar-in salt water that will float an egg thats so it salty enough!!! Then leave for 14 days skimming off mold on tope. You will have to weight the cucumbers down with plate and something on top to keep them from popping up !! Then rinse and slice on 14 the day. Clean crock or very large jar and put cut cumbers back in jar. Cover with alum water. 1 bax of container of alum Let sit over night. Rinse and put back in jar. Cover with 5 percent acidity white vinegar. Pour out in sink and put cut pickles back in jar or crock with ten pounds of sugar one layer pickles and one layer of sugar. I make little spice bags with clean nylon hose or cheese cloth cut in 6 squares Put mixed pickling spices in each square and tie up. Drop on in sugar and pickles every once in a while until crock or jar is full. Let set and stir every few days to help dissolve sugar. Chill when done and enjoy. Mary

          Reply
    • Connie

      Linda, could you send me the recipe for your sweet pickles. I can’t find mine. And always made them for grandkids. Its the one with the green food coloring. Gadazz01@aol.com and also on facebook. Been hunting the web for the recipe and so far have not found it. But yours sound pretty darn close. Thanks. Connie Bertrand

      Reply
    • Laurie

      Linda, would you share that recipe? Sounds like one I’ve been suching for and haven’t been able to find.

      Reply
    • debbie donovan

      Linda, can i please get this recipe?? you can email me at redirishdeb@yahoo.com.. newbie here, i’m trying to learn how to can , only made watermelon preserves so far, Son loves sweet pickles so would like to try while he’s gone for training.. thanks so much, debbie

      Reply
      • Linda

        Combine 6 c. lime (the powdery stuff you put on your garden), 2 gal of water and 7 lb of sliced cukes (if you have a wavy cutter, use it on the cukes); let stand 24 hours, stirring occasionally. Drain, rinse and soak in cold water for 3 hours. Combine 2 qts white vinegar, 10 c sugar, 1 t celery seed, 1/2 t whole cloves, 1 t pickling spice, 1 T kosher salt and a lot of green food coloring – these pickles are Christmas green! Pour this mix over the cukes and boil for 35 minutes. Pack into hot jars and process for 10 minutes in boiling water bath. Makes 6-7 pints.

        Reply
        • Jane

          You can also make sweet pickled peppers. I worked for a long time trying to get them just right and found this works great. I have given hard away and brought back with in hours for a refill. You can get the Mrs Wages lime at Walmart. Follow the recipe on the bag just use Peppers instead of cucumbers.

          Reply
        • Barbara

          Thank you, thank you.
          I have been trying to find this recipe for a long time.
          My Dad used to make these whe I was little. He died very young, and the recipe was not written down .
          What do you call this recipe?

          Reply
          • Holly

            I accidentally skipped the alum and went to the vinegar. Can I do the alum after the vinegar?

          • Cathy Barrow

            The alum must happen before the vinegar. Many people make this pickle without alum, so just go forward with the recipe.

          • Sonya

            Mrs Cathy do the 7 day pickles have shelf life? If so do you do boiling them at the end or just jar them? It’s my first time trying this. Appreciate the help

          • Cathy Barrow

            Hi Sonya, The 7 day pickles do not need to be boiled to seal. They stay fresh on the shelf (covered tightly) for several months. Always chill before serving. The crunchy cold pickle is perfection! – Cathy

    • Becki

      Yes! My great grandmother used to make these as well. She did use alum. And she only gave out the recipe when someone turned 40. I turned 40 in 2015, and she had passed away so many years ago. They are my favorite pickles ever! I couldn’t wait to get the recipe. My father however, had lost the recipe. I was very sad. I am so glad to have found this!!! Thank you! Now I can share this with my children, who also adore pickles!!!

      Reply
  3. Ann

    Ahh secrect recipes. Brings to mind Kung Foo panda… the secret to the recipe? The secret to the recipe is there is no secret! I encourage people to SHARE their recipes, tell your story, Honor the source of the recipe, tell their story.
    On another note, instead of slicing into a bowl I use a rectangular plastic storage container that is just wide enough for my mandolin. Then Im not trying to fling a bowl around my kitchen.

    Reply
  4. Linda

    I have a recipe that is very similar but they’re called Vera’s Seven Day Pickles. A “canning” friend told me that grape leaves may be used instead of alum; indeed, I invited her over to pick as many grape leaves as she wanted. Since that day long ago, I’ve always put them in with my dill and sweet pickles and it works. I also read that removing the blossom end of the cucumber removes the enzymes that cause pickles to soften. Because I have an abundance of grape leaves, they do the trick for me.

    It’s probably difficult to imagine, but on July 4th we finally had a temperature of 70F, something we haven’t had since last summer. It will be a while before I have any pickling cucumbers!

    Reply
  5. Cathy

    I believe the crunch enzyme comes from alum or lime or grape leaves and some say oak leaves, so I’m sure all of them work. And Linda, do you think Vera and Luvey knew eachother? That makes me smile!!

    Always cut the blossom end off your cucumbers before pickling. If you don’t you’ll get mushy pickles for sure, and I blame the blossom ends for the great pickle explosion of 2005. But that’s another story. If you don’t know which is blossom and which end isn’t, just cut them both off and stop fretting!

    Reply
  6. Sande

    I have never made pickles but will be trying these! One question; am I correct in assuming there is no need to place under refrigeration up to where you say to chill before serving?

    Love your site! You have encouraged me to try many new things, thank you.

    Reply
  7. Carol

    I assume is ok to use a metal bowl for the sugar step. It appears there is no need for this question because of the pictures, but just wanted to make sure.

    Reply
    • Cathy

      Honestly? I don’t have a bowl big enough, so that’s what I use. I wish it was glass or ceramic.

      Reply
  8. Jamie Samons

    Cathy: thank you so much for posting this! I can’t wait to try these as I am fairly addicted to all things pickled. I can’t see alum without thinking of those old Warner Brothers cartoons in which Wyle E. Coyote’s head shrinks after eating it.

    Reply
  9. Bonnie Story

    Sounds wonderful!! BUT no refrig OR processing, seriously?? I have been so indoctrinated about pickle safety that this makes me a bit… um, uncomfortable, but I should shut up and try it. I think I simply MUST. When my cukes are ready for this, that is (Puget Sound – they are 6″ shoots right now!)

    Reply
    • Cathy

      I know. It seems crazy, but I’ve been eating these for over half a century (good golly!!) and I’m still here.

      Reply
      • sonja

        So I just put those pickles in a hot jar and that’s it? I am brand new to the canning, that’s why I am asking 🙂

        Reply
        • Patricia Walthall

          Once I pour the hot liquid in the jar with the pickle, add the lid and screw top and I turn the jars upside down. This heats the lid. After 10 minutes invert the jars lid up. As they cool you will hear them pop as they seal. If any don’t seal you can do a water bath to seal it.

          Reply
          • carl t

            The recipe does not say anything about pouring hot vinegar on the pickles and it is a major variation from the recipe to put them through a water bath. I am pretty sure they are not supposed to seal.

      • Lori

        Hi Cathy,
        I’ve never heard of 7 day pickles. I’ve heard of 9 day, but way to much work. I’m from Canada so I don’t know if that makes a difference but my mom makes a 12 day crock pickle, it starts similar to yours, put your cukes in salt water overnight, then drain them the next day. Then you make a hot vinegar brine, add your little package of pickling spice, pour over the cukes. Then for 12 days you simply stir in a cup of sugar. On the 12th day, sterilize some jars and you’re done. They also need no canning, and have a long shelf life. I use the crock liner from from my slow cooker, it’s 8qts and makes a nice batch of pickles.
        Your recipe intrigued me, I think I’m going to try a batch your way and do a comparison.
        I’ve never found another recipe like my mom’s but I think it’s been one handed down over the years, my grandmother and great grandmother apparently made them.
        I do love reading the stories of how ones have obtained their recipes. Thank you for sharing.

        Reply
    • sharol

      my recipe for sweet pickles turns into about 14 days. they sit in brine for 7 days so some call it 7 day but then a day in hot water, a day in alum water and 4 days of hot vinegar sugar pour over…same syrup, just reheated. I use a crock, and when done it can sit in the open crock if you want which is what a lot of the old timers did. I put mine in jars, pour the hot liquid over. and put lids on. they usually seal, but if not, just eat them first…they will not spoil…I have yet to find anyone who has any as good as these. got it from a sweet lady who was my sister-in-law’s (who is in her eighties) mother….so it is an early 1900-s recipe and probably before the convenience of most of our home canning methods. gotta share….my sister-in-law once had some while at a family pot luck and started looking for who had brought them…because they were “like my mother’s” when she asked me…I told her of course they did because they were from her mother’s recipe. She was very please another generation were enjoying them.

      Reply
      • Lana

        I lost my recipe that I have had for 40 years. But I remember they sat in brine for 7 days, then I used the alum and vinegar. When I packed them in jars, I used layers of cucumber and sugar. Your recipe seems the closest to mine. could you send it to my email address. Thank you very much!

        Reply
      • Anita

        That sounds like my great grandfather’s recipe – which I have in his handwriting! I’ve made them several times and they’re like candy. The syrup is also drained, reheated and poured back over the pickles multiple days. They use both grape leaves and alum and are seasoned with cinnamon sticks and cloves.

        Reply
      • Larry

        Thanks: my Wife died made the best pickles. Called “century pickles”. All sounds good buy cucmbers where whole, not sliced, always crisp, hard to find enough cucmbers, could make them sweet or sour, problem! need Moore pickels. Bought a car for a jar of pickels. My house was lost in the paradise campestris fire. The recipe was lost. Everything lost, grape leave sounded right, used to wrap sausage yum! Greek! w

        Reply
        • Cathy Barrow

          Larry, I’m so sorry to hear about your wife and your home. It must be very unsettling to experience all that loss. I hope this pickle recipe will be something like what you remember from the “century pickles.” Wishing you the best in 2021.

          Reply
  10. Barbara | Creative Culinary

    I miss having canning stock and maybe I don’t have to. Not having to process is perfect! Do you have a recipe for kosher pickles that aren’t processed? I used to make them but never liked them as much as the Clausen ones that are in the deli case that are so crisp.

    Reply
  11. A Canadian Foodie

    Love the idea and it is almost cucumber season here. Never made anything but dill. Mom used to make so many kinds: bread and butter, mustard, mixed pickles, you name it. This sounds like a lot of fun and too good to not try.
    🙂
    Valerie

    Reply
  12. Pamela

    I can’t wait to finish painting my kitchen and go get some cucumbers to make these. I LOVE pickles! And love making them even more. Thanks!

    Reply
  13. Lisa

    Is there a particular type of cucumber you recommend for this recipe -pickling cuke, Persian or slicing? Thanks, Cathy, I’m really looking forward to trying these!

    Reply
    • Cathy

      I usually choose pickling or kirby cucumbers, but I’ve made it with all sorts.

      Reply
  14. Darlene Carrigan

    Could not resist! Day 1 done. This is by far the most laid back recipe ever. Love it. Cannot wait to taste the results. First time using alum. Wondering if I could add some garlic cloves, or is that not a good idea due to lack of processing?

    Reply
    • Cathy

      Yay! So glad! Regarding the garlic, I think you’ll see, once you taste this pickle, that garlic isn’t part of the flavor profile. Additionally, garlic is one of those “chance of botulism” additions to any canned item. While there is probably enough vinegar to make it safe, I would be afraid since there’s no processing involved.

      Reply
      • Darlene Carrigan

        That’s what I was kind of thinking. I’ll save the garlic for the refrigerator garlic dills. I am so looking forward to Day 8!

        Reply
        • Darlene Carrigan

          My husband and I just devoured the first jar last night. Perfect compliment to the spicy Coppa. Really wishing I opted for the full 10#. Thank you so much! This is def. going into my regular pickle rotation. May even need to make another batch next weekend, as friends are asking for jars!

          Reply
  15. jones

    If I have only 2 lbs of pickles, is every step the same as far as the amounts, except for the sugar step at the end?

    Thanks. Can’t wait to taste these.

    Reply
    • Cathy

      Hi, my guess is you will need only about a quart of liquid to cover two pounds of slices – so cut the salt, alum and pickling spice back to 25% of the recipe measure shown.

      Reply
  16. eric

    The jar you are intially fermenting these in, is it sealed, just covered or does it not matter?

    Reply
    • Cathy

      Hi Eric, The jar has a rubber gasket that seals it, but I’ve also made these in a giant flower vase (no kidding) with plastic wrap and a giant rubber band on the top.

      Reply
  17. Virginia

    Hi Cathy, I have been reading your blog for years, and I have been making these pickles since you posted about them the first time back in 2010. These pickles are absolutely fabulous! I hope you don’t mind, but I posted about them on my blog so that I would have my own record of them. Of course, I linked back several times to your wonderful posts and encouraged people to check them out for themselves. Thank you for posting about these several years ago and now!

    Reply
    • Cathy

      Welcome to the pickle club! I’m delighted you made them and posted about them. Clearly, it’s a recipe that needs to be passed around, right?

      Reply
  18. Natalie Luffer Sztern

    My Mother always made pickles but her recipe was from heart and altho I always helped her I was given certain tasks so I never got to know the whole recipe. When I first got married and had kids, we would go to the market and buy the small pickles and I would make them. Half-Sours were the only way we ate them and whole is how we pickled them.

    I have a cute PICKLE Halloween story…in Montreal Mrs. Whyte’s Pickles are the most popular Jewish pickle. When my kids were young everyone in the neighborhood knew the owner of Mrs Whyte’s Pickles because every year he gave each kid a pickle in a baggie as a snack…:))

    Reply
  19. Helen

    I’m on Day 4, today. I used alum for dill pickles last year and found that it made them taste, well, sort of store bought. I’m trusting that the bold spices in this recipe will fix that. (I’m using the pickling spice blend formula you posted last year, or whenever it was.) Can’t wait to see how these turn out! Thanks for posting this. ;o)

    Reply
  20. Kimmers

    So thrilled to try these! Two questions: my family prefers their pickles in spear form. Will that work? I’m guessing it would as you mentioned chunks, but still new enough to be unsure if altering the slice shape changes the chemistry or volume in some way.

    Also, I only have five pounds of cukes. Should I halve everything in the recipe, or use the recipe as stated understanding there will be leftover liquid?

    Thank you for such a wonderful site!

    Reply
    • Cathy

      I’ve never made these as spears, so will be curious to hear how it works. Halve everything for half the weight of cucumbers. It will work out fine, but you’ll be wishing you made 10 pounds. !!! Ha!

      Reply
  21. sande

    I want to make these pickles this week but wonder if it is ok to use aluminum pans as I do not have anything else large enough for 10 pounds of cukes. Will this cause a reaction with the cider vinegar?

    Again…..LOVE LOVE YOUR RECIPES!!!

    Reply
    • Cathy

      Aluminum will react with the vinegar. You’re best using glass or ceramic. I’ve found huge glass containers at Marshalls and World Market and lots of secondhand shops and garage sales. You can seal it with plastic wrap, but getting a container with a lid is better.

      Reply
  22. Molly Pisula

    Cathy, have you ever waited longer than three days between day 4 and day 7’s activities? I just finished day one, and realized I will be out of town on Day 7, meaning it will be Day 9 before I finished and bottle these pickles. Any idea if it’s ok to let them sit longer in the vinegar?

    Reply
    • Cathy

      I can’t imagine it would matter, Molly. The last step just finishes the flavor, not the pickling part. I think they could sit in the pickle brine for awhile.

      Reply
      • Molly Pisula

        Wow! Talk about a speedy reply! Thanks Cathy! Looking forward to seeing how these turn out. I’m making your giardiniera too right now, which is amazing!

        Reply
  23. Brighid

    Just trying these today and realized that the only non-reactive container large enough to put all these pickles is my water bath canner! Obviously the lid isn’t going to form a tight seal. Is that important?

    Thanks for all the great recipes!

    Reply
  24. Jhan

    So glad to have found you! What a treasure trove of classic and delicious!

    As an aside, alum also should be an ingredient in your medicine cabinet – make a paste with water and it takes the sting and swelling out of bug bites and stings , and works wonders for canker sores….

    I started making the pickles yesterday! Can’t wait!

    Reply
    • Cathy

      That’s great info re: alum. I’ve used a similar paste from baking soda and water for bee stings, but didn’t know alum would do the same thing. Enjoy your pickles!

      Reply
      • cheflisav

        Alum is also supposed to stop small cuts from bleeding, such as from shaving but have been too chicken to try it out.

        Reply
  25. Susan

    If you were going to add jalapeno would you just pierce it and add it whole like the lacto fermented pickles? And at which stage would you add it?

    Reply
  26. Mary Lee

    I’m making my shopping list as I read the recipe..what fun! Do you think this would work with zucchini and yellow sqash? I won the battle against the squash beetle for once this year and have a bit of a glut! Thanks for all you share.

    Reply
    • Cathy

      Mary Lee, I have no idea, but would love to know how they turn out! Please come back and tell us.

      Reply
  27. Anne

    As far as a squash pickle recipe, it’s alot easier to keep squash and zucchini crisp than a cucumber. I have a great, simple recipe for squash pickles that takes just a couple of hours and turns out great. Cucumber pickles are worth the extra time, though.

    Reply
  28. Pam Whitman

    Mrs. W., I am into my second season of canning and loving it more than ever!! I think in part it is because my favorite shopping is in the produce section of the supermarket & our local farmers’ market. Second, I may be part rabbit 🙂 I love this recipe! It turns out PERFECT every time! Right – down to the number of pints it will produce. Just finished my first 12 pints for 2013. I will be making more. I have a friend who literally opened a can I gave her and consumed the contents in one sitting. She loves, loves pickles – as I do. She is the friend I mentioned who had her husband (a farmer) put in a pickling cucumber patch on their farm as a birthday present for me. I am so excited. Can this recipe be applied to other vegetables do you think? I love your blog!!

    Reply
    • Cathy

      Hi Pam. I can eat an entire jar of these pickles in one sitting ,too. They are so addictive! I’m glad you like it. I haven’t tried any other veg, but think it might work well with jalapenos!

      Reply
  29. Toni Carroll

    Fabulous pickles! I have made these a couple of times and get raves. I do keep adding sugar till they are well covered. They are even better after they sit for several months. I pull out a jar and put it in the fridge. They are much better chilled.

    Reply
  30. Toni Carroll

    I also make these in a ceramic crock rather than a glass jar and it works great.

    Reply
  31. Blaire

    I am sooo excited! Day 7 of pickle process and I just finished the sugar step. I don’t have enough liquid and I only saved 2 cups of the cider vinegar. What should I do?

    Reply
    • Toni Carroll

      I had the same problem so I just made up a little more solution if vinegar, sugar and pickling spices and simmered that a while to impart the flavors. Let that cool and then topped off the jars as needed. I used a lot more sugar than vinegar.
      But before you do this, give them time in the jars with the sugar. They keep making liquid for a while. You can add more sugar to the jars too before you add the extra vinegar/sugar solution. Give that a chance first. We like ours really sweet so theses turned out fabulous. They also get better with age. They mellow out.

      Reply
  32. cheflisav

    I started making these 7 day pickles 3 days ago. I was busy canning some tomatoes last night and should have drained them for the first time but forgot till today. Will they be okay do you think? Also, am I correct in assuming that no salt is added till the second batch of hot water on day 2? I don’t see it in the recipe but just making sure it didn’t get left out. Thanks for the recipe!

    Reply
  33. oakley

    I made a half batch of these, but did not have enough liquid to fill my jars to the top. Is that ok? Thanks.

    Reply
  34. Tonia

    Hi Cathy, I found your recipe and thought this must be the pickle recipe from my grandmother! It looked like it and everyone in my family I talked to said enough for me to think it is…

    So,I made these last week….let them sit in the brine an extra day as my time was tight…tasted them and they have a sharp vinegar taste…too much for my liking so I’m thinking the extra day was a mistake.

    Is there anything that I can do to mellow that out? I have about 14 half pints and they are half full of their own juices with the sugar. I also added extra sugar to each jar thinking this would help and have been turning them over a couple times a day…just tasted them again and still have that sharp vinegar taste that curls to the back of your throat and makes you cough…it’s strong…lol

    Thanks, Tonia

    Reply
  35. Katie

    I just made these pickles and they were great. I was wanting to know if you have a easy recipe like this maybe for dill pickles

    Reply
    • Cathy

      The easiest dill-style pickle is the lacto-fermented pickle (see the post “pickles and frickles”).

      Reply
  36. Jeannie

    This is the famous Craven County Sweet Pickle recipe. This is the second year I’ve made them.

    Reply
    • Cathy

      Interesting! I’ve never heard of Craven County pickles before, but it is the same recipe! I’ve seen them in Mennonite community stores, at the Union Square Greenmarket and other places, and my friend Emily’s family has a 14 day version. It’s a familiar recipe that has been around forever!

      Reply
  37. Melody

    Thank you for sharing this! I received a WONDERFUL 7-day pickle recipe from a dear friend of mine (her mother’s recipe), but the directions as far as sealing/packing weren’t terribly clear. I’m sure I won’t have enough liquid to go into all the jars, so I will add in extra vinegar (her recipe didn’t specify white or cider vinegar so I used white, but I’ll bet cider would be delish). Also nice to know that they don’t have to be water-bath canned, as they are wonderfully crispy now, and I’d hate to lose that. Again, thanks! I’m in mid-Tennessee, and I’m going to try planting some cukes again since mine didn’t do so well the first time (I planted them way too close together). If they come out well, I’m definitely going to try your version.

    Reply
  38. Terrie

    I made these pickles about 3 weeks ago and they disappeared in record time. Everyone loved them (including me). I just finished another 20 pound batch yesterday and my husband planted more cucumber plants. These are my new addiction!! I did end up adding quite a bit more sugar to get the syrup and used pickle crisp in lieu of alum (couldn’t find the alum). Thank you for sharing the recipe.

    Reply
  39. Josie

    I’m on day 3- subbed a bunch of grape leaves for the alum per my mom’s suggestion. It’s been very hot and humid here and the pickles are in a pot with a lid, not sealed tight. They smell a little funky and are cloudy at this point. Is that normal?

    Reply
    • Cathy

      Yes, that’s ok. They will smell a little fermented! You’re about to put them in the vinegar and that’s going to change everything.

      Reply
    • Cathy

      Hi Terry, I’ve added whole jalapenos and sliced jalapeno – both will work (slicing the peppers allows you to remove the seeds for a little less heat!) Add them with the vinegar.

      Reply
  40. Larissa

    How do you seal these for the shelf? I didn’t see where anything was hot when you can them to make them seal. So excited to try these!

    Reply
    • Sherry Vance

      Did you ever find out how to seal them for shelf life? I am not sure what to do either.

      Reply
      • Toni

        You don’t need to do anything to firm seal them. You poured boiling liquid on them several times during the process. Plus with all the sugar and vinegar in them, nothing bad can survive. I’ve made these for years and eaten them years later and they were fine.

        Reply
  41. Karen

    I have never made pickles, so giving this recipe a try! Can’t wait! The question I have is do I leave the bundle of spices in the jar with the vinegar all three days? Thanks for a response!

    Reply
  42. Ron

    Made these and they are crisp, but a real vinegar bite. They have been in jars for a day and a half. Can I add more sugar at this point to increase sweetness?

    Reply
    • Cathy

      Hi Ron, The pickles will mellow in time, but if you want to add more sugar, feel free!

      Reply
    • Toni

      Yes…I add a LOT more sugar than recipe states and everyone begs me for these. I just keep adding sugar, shaking and turning upside down until it is a pretty thick syrup. Otherwise, they are too tangy for us. We like our sweet pickles really sweet. To each his own though.

      Reply
  43. Greg

    Just finished making these but I didn’t have nearly enough juice to fill the jars, so I just boiled some more vinegar and sugar until I had enough. I reserved about a quart of the vinegar from the batch, so I assume next time I’ll have to save all of the vinegar and then I should have enough. Can’t wait to try these!

    Reply
  44. Elaine

    I know this may sound stupid but is it store bought pickling spices or do you have a recipe for picking spices?

    Reply
    • Cathy

      There’s a recipe in my book and also on the blog here. Just search for pickling spice.

      Reply
  45. Lulu

    Hmm. They do sound good and are very similar to my silverskin onion pickles but they use salt not alum.
    Not that I’m fearmongering but it does irk me a little when people assume ‘natural’ means ‘harmless’ so I should point out that aluminum (it’s the alum) consumption has been linked to certain types of Alzeimers. Just saying.

    Reply
  46. Linda

    I am new to pickling, but this recipe is so close to my Mom’s recipe that I want to try it! Sadly, never took the time to learn her canning techniques before she passed. If I could only go back now…. Questions: do I cut the blossom end prior to day one and the beginning of the soak cycle? Where do I find grape leaves!!? How long should the pickles sit and rest before eating?

    Reply
  47. Jay

    When you say overnight how many hours do you suggest? I have started the recipe and first two day at least 12 hours.

    Reply
    • Cathy Barrow

      Discard the liquids drained off the pickles until the end — the vinegar and sugar mixture will be reused.

      Reply
  48. Jenifer C

    Hey there! I’m on day two – on day 3 do you boil the water with the alum. I assume no, but the other days it’s boiling, so I just want to be sure! Thanks!

    Reply
  49. Jennipurr14

    I’m so excited to try these pickles! In your cookbook, you add five cups of sugar to the brine on Day 4, which you don’t do here. I’m wondering which version is better. Also, I’m very curious about adding a little bit of jalapeno. Does anyone have any recommendation about how much to add? 🙂

    Reply
    • Cathy Barrow

      Hi Jennifer. The sugar is added in the book at a different time than here, but it’s still added! Follow the instructions in the book — that recipe has been tested and perfected. Hope you love them!

      Reply
  50. Jennifer S

    This may be a stupid question but does 10# mean 10 cucumbers or 10 pounds of cucumbers. Thanks.

    Reply
  51. Billy

    Hey Cathy! I love that you used a mandolin slicer. Do you know where you can get one of these? Would online be the best option? Thanks for your recipe!

    Reply
  52. Barbara Willingham

    Hi Cathy,
    Do you know, can I use Alum in other veggies, such as asparagus and carrots?

    Reply
  53. Heather

    Can you use regular white vinegar or does it have to be apple cider vinegar?

    Reply
    • Cathy Barrow

      The apple cider vinegar provides a very nice sweet and sour flavor to the pickle. I would not make this pickle with white vinegar.

      Reply
  54. Sandy

    I have been making these pickles and putting them in mason jars and using a ring and seal on top. I’m wondering if I could use a plastic screw-on lid instead as they are less expensive. They aren’t sealed either way. Any comments? And can they still be stored for a long period of time that way?

    Reply
    • Cathy Barrow

      I don’t have a definitive answer for you. I can only say that it makes me a little squeamish to think of that plastic in contact (or close proximity) to the food.

      Reply
  55. Sonja

    Question I made these and put them in the jars. The lids did not “pop” and seal like water bath is that ok it shod I run them thru the water bath processing to have them seal.

    Reply
    • Cathy Barrow

      These pickles do not have to seal to be shelf stable. If you want to seal them, use a boiling water bath for no more than 5 minutes.

      Reply
  56. Jeanne

    Day 2 I left them in the water 36 hours and they smelled and felt a bit slimy…..I did a slight rinse and put the alum in and it’s been about 12 hours…..did I ruin them? I had to divide into 2 ….I had one pot and I used a crock pot with lids sealed down. This makes me nervous and I wonder if I should cut the alum short and get it moving along.

    Reply
    • Cathy Barrow

      I think you’l lbe fine. Do not cut down the time with the alum – that’s what makes them crisp.

      Reply
  57. Mary Leisure

    If I don’t can these, how do they seal. You say not to use a hot water bath, but i need your help, Im on day four, so I be excited to hear from your. Mary

    Reply
  58. Docia M Richard

    What size jar did you use for this process? Better yet, do you have a link for where I can get one like that shown in your pics?

    Reply
      • Docia M Richard

        Thank you so much! I got a jar of these as a door prize at a native plant society meeting in Sept. They are amazing! I’ve made bread & butters, and dills in all shapes, but never 7 day pickles. Can’t wait until next summer to put up a mess of these! I have a 5 gal lidded jar that will be perfect! Again, thanks!

        Reply
  59. Bonnie Nuckols

    Hi, on the second day of the seven day pickles a gallon of water will not cover them all the way. Should I cover them like on the first day.

    Reply
  60. Linda

    HELP!! I made this recipe, followed it to a “T”. The pickles are so strong of apple cider vinegar we can’t eat them. Any suggestions to salvage 10 pounds of cucumbers and 4 cups of sugar? Was thinking of rinsing them but not sure what to use for liquid! Thanks in advance for any help!!

    Reply
    • Cathy Barrow

      Hi Linda, when people have written in the past, we often discover they did not toss the pickles in the additional sugar before packing them in the jars? Did you remember to do that? Did you let them cure for a month?

      Reply
  61. Bonnie Pressler

    On day 7 you drain pickles and then cover with 4 cups of sugar, stir and pack in jars. Do you not put the reserve vinegar to fill the jars? I need to be the on sweet side any suggestions?

    Reply
    • Cathy Barrow

      The sugar pulls liquid from the pickles as you pack them tightly. You won’t want to add the vinegar or the pickles will be too sour.

      Reply
  62. Donna

    Wow it’s now August 1st 2019 when I found this recipe and guess what? It’s almost 100 degrees here in Pennsylvania 🙂 I just finished slicing my gherkins for this recipe. Since my Parisian gherkins are doing so well this year, I’ll try the candy pickles next, I do wonder if that recipe is what we call Christmas pickles? Thanks for sharing:)

    Reply
  63. Southingtonian

    Finally! Mrs Bailey’s 7 day pickle recipe! Ever since college (decades ago) i have regretted not getting this recipe from the amazing mother of a college friend. She was a Ma Kettle sort of woman (Google it) and in the summer she had massive crocks of pickles working in the basement like none i had had since my own grandmother’s. When we visited Grummaw down in VA, she would bake her lemon pound cake (a dense delicious yellow loaf) cut 2 slices from it, slather them with home-churned butter and make a sandwich with her bread and butter pickles. Amazing! Will get to getting (as the saying goes) on my own batch of them today!

    Reply
  64. Jan Carter

    2019 and just read this recipe and comments. I still feel the need to seal in a water bath though. I pray that won’t ruin them.

    Reply
  65. Andrea Meyers

    Help. I forgot the salt on Day 2. I’m at Day 7 today. Should I toss them? Since they’re soaking in a gallon of boiled vinegar I would think botulism should not occur. Please advise

    Reply
  66. Emelle

    If you’re comfortable using peppers without “processing” don’t balk at using garlic! You may be surprised!

    Reply
  67. Shouldnotbeleftalonewithpickles

    Eep.
    My dear friend trusted me to babysit her 7 day pickles and I accidentally forgot them at adding the alum stage and it’s been 3 days. Can they be salvaged still? I’ve been looking in vain for this recipe, and here it is!

    Reply
  68. Justin S

    Hello Cathy,
    I’m wondering if i csn use csne vinegsr instead of apple cider vinegar. Its a 4.5% acidiy level. The reason being, apple cider vinegar is $8 a quart where i am now, philippines. Cane is 1/10 the price. I would really appreciate your opinion.
    Thank you,
    Justin

    Reply
    • Cathy Barrow

      The acidity needs to be 5 percent, but that seems like a slight difference, doesn’t it? Give it a try! Let us know how it goes.

      Reply
  69. Jessica Thom

    Just want to add at this late date that I have been using this recipe for 5 years now, and not a single cucumber pickled…I first found the recipe when I ended up with 10# of Vidalia onions and didn’t want them to go to waste. Have to say, pickled onions are amazing on sandwiches! I pickle onions of any type as well as a variety of peppers with this recipe every year. Trying tomato’s this year!

    Reply
    • Cathy Barrow

      It’s possible you need to use filtered water in your part of the country. Some places chlorinate water with a product that can play havoc with pickling. The same is true for salt. If you are not using kosher salt, but iodized, it could mean unsuccessful pickling. Finally, if the blossom end was not sliced off the end of the cucumber before pickling, the pickles will be soggy.

      Reply
  70. Kathy

    I have your first book in which I found your 7 day pickle recipe. I am in the process of making them and, because I didn’t have alum, I used black tea as you suggest as a substitute in the book. Yikes – the pickles are now stained black. I have them now soaking I. The vinegar and sugar. Question is – do I now have 7 day black tea pickles? Will the stain go away? My plan was to enter in the local county fair but now I’m not sure. Please let me know what your experience has been.
    Thanks
    Kathy

    Reply
    • Cathy Barrow

      Hi Kathy, Yes, tea will turn the pickles a tea-color. Alum is the best product for retaining crunch and color. – Cathy

      Reply
  71. Rhonda

    Hi, I am sure I saw a comment here about someone adding red hot candies to these pickles but I cannot find it now. Does that sound familiar at all?

    Reply

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