On this day, Grandma June was making pickles and I brought along my camera in order to document the entire process. Dear Readers, if you like dill pickles you are in for a treat.
Here she is, my baby Sis-tah! Its because her that I even know Grandma June exists. Sorry Sister - your last picture was too beautiful, I had to post this one because it puts the Force in balance.
Alright - let's make some pickles!
First you must wash and scrub the cucumbers. Clean cucumbers make good pickles.
Next you need to peel about two heads of garlic into cloves. I love garlic!
You also need copious amounts of fresh dill. Grandma June uses the dill once its bloomed, which is why it looks differently in the photos than when its young and fern-y like in this post.
Once the cucumbers are cleaned, separate them into two bowls, one for whole pickles and one that will be pickle spears. FYI we packed both sizes together.
I love this shot of Grandma June. She's a woman of charm and grace.
Once you have your cucumbers separated and cut. Grab a clean jar and place one sprig of dill and one garlic clove in the bottom. Then start putting in cucumbers. We started with the spears and added the smaller cucumbers to pack the jars tightly.
Once the jar is full of cucumbers add another sprig of dill and another garlic clove on top.
Next sprinkle the tops with black pepper. Grandma June did this and I'm guessing its about 1/2 a teaspoon of pepper.
Then ladle the hot broth into each jar, filling up to the neck. The broth consists of 2 Cups of water, 1 Cup of apple cider vinegar, 1 Cup of sugar, and 1 Tablespoon of canning salt. Dissolve the broth in a pot over medium heat and let come to a boil.
Place the jars in a canner and fill with water up to the neck of the jars. Put the lid on and let the water come to a full boil. Boil for one minute and then place the jars on a towel to dry and cool.
And that folks is what Grandma June calls "cold packing." I don't know why because the whole process involves heat, but what I do know is that once these jars cool off your pickles are ready.
Oh my. I wish I was there for the lesson, too! I actually LOVE bread and butter pickles...does she do those?
ReplyDeleteI am intrigued by Grandma June. She sounds like one of those really neat people you only come across a few times in your life.
ReplyDeleteOh, it's hard to get proper pickles where we live! What a special training session!
ReplyDeleteMy favourite picture is the one of Grandma June's hands wiping the jar.
I wish I liked pickles!
ReplyDeleteMaybe I will make some for jared!
I do hope I'm not creeping you out as I'm a completely random follower. I found your blog on a friend's blog .. oh my, I suppose it is a little creepy! Where does Grandma June find dill that's bloomed, or does she grow it on her own? My Auntie gave me her dill pickle recipe and I've been itching to try it out but I can't find dill like this.
ReplyDeleteDear Anonymous: Grandma June grows dill and that's how she is able to get dill that has bloomed. I think that dill is pretty easy to grow, at least I hope so because I'm in the same predicament. Also having a random follower is fair game when you post things on the interwebs. Thanks for reading!
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