A couple of weeks ago I processed some cucumbers. My overall harvest isn't going to be all that great; the vines are not looking like they'll produce that much longer. But I did get enough for a load of bread and butter pickles, my favorite. The Ball Blue Book and
Pickyourown.org have similar recipes, which I generally follow. One exception is that I don't salt and ice the cucumbers; I just fresh-pack them, cutting the salt a little. PYO mentions draining and rinsing after icing. The
NCHFP site calls for icing beforehand, as well, but skips the rinsing step. So although I use a bit less salt, my finished product might have more salt in the brine. I end up with a brine that is about as salty as what one would get by using
Mrs. Wages' bread and butter mix.

My cucumbers this year were all yellow (
Edmonson from Southern Exposure and
Miniature White from Seedsavers). The recipes above call for onion, so I added some white onion slices, using store-bought ones (I haven't grown my own onions yet).
The procedure is pretty simple: slice; mix the brine (with the various spices indicated, plus sugar); add the slices (onion and cucumber) to jars; pour in the brine, and process. I got about 1.1 lb. of cucumbers per quart (when mixed with the onion). That's a bit less than anticipated by the recipes above, which suggest around 1.5 lb. per quart (or per two pints). As I have noted elsewhere, I'm usually not able to pack as much into jars as the recipes suggest. Hot- vs. raw-packing matters, but in this case the recipes are for raw pack, as well. I had two bowls of cucumbers, not the one suggested by the picture above. All that notwithstanding, I'm happy with the results (shown below is also a jar of pickled okra I threw in; I used a different brine mix for that).
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