Sweet Pickles
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My easy-peasy spicy and sweet pickles recipe includes dill pickles marinated in a sweet, spicy, and tangy brine made with sugar, pickling spice, and white vinegar.
Julie Hutson sent me this handed-down recipe a few years back and my mother and I quickly got to making these spicy and sweet pickles and found they were the best pickles we’d ever eaten. They taste like the old-fashioned pickles my grandmother used to spend weeks creating! Over the past few years, I’ve developed my own way of making them and simplified it a bit for me (I tend to simplify everything but my household clutter, go figure) and so I decided that I just HAD to bring this easy sweet pickle recipe to y’all for the benefit of everyone who has never tasted a truly wonderful sweet and sassy pickle.
You are in for a treat… and very likely the best pickle you’ve ever had in your life. Fortunately, this sweet pickle recipe is super quick and easy to make. We start with whole dill store-bought pickles, which will marinate in a pickling liquid that’s a little bit sweet thanks to the sugar, a little bit spicy thanks to the pickling spice, and a whole lot tangy thanks to the white vinegar. The instructions are as simple as combining all the ingredients and patiently waiting for them to get all good and pickled. You can eat them the next day, but these old-fashioned sweet pickles taste better the longer you let them marinate.
I’ve included lots of serving suggestions below for how you can make the most of your sweet and sour pickles. But I won’t tell a soul if you simply eat them out of the jar because I do the exact same thing! Alright, who’s ready to get pickling?
Recipe Ingredients
- Sugar
- White vinegar
- Pickling spice
- WHOLE dill pickles
How to Make Sweet Pickles
First, drain off all of your pickle juice into a bowl and remove all of the pickles from the jar.
Now, to that jar (or any sterilized jar), I want you to add the pickle juice…
Vinegar…
Sugar…
And the pickling spice.
Some people tie this up in cheesecloth. Mama ties hers up in a bit of muslin (which is a plain cotton fabric). I just toss mine in there because I like the added zest of biting into a peppercorn and such from time to time. Plus, I think they look prettier that way.
Give that jar a good shaky shake.
Aww come on, you can do better than that, put your arms into it!
There ya go!
Now slice those pickles.
You can cut them thin or thick, whichever you like best. I like mine a little thicker because it means I don’t have to eat as many 😉.
Put all of your sliced pickles back into the jar with the .
Now class, on the rare occasion that one or two slices don’t fit, what do you do?
That’s right! You eat them! It is good to have a taste comparison anyway so you can see what the frog was like before he became the prince.
Put your lid on the jar and give this another good shake.
It’s Pickling Time!
At this point, you’ll see a good bit of undissolved sugar at the bottom. I set my jars out on the counter for a few hours and turn them upside down every hour or so to help with this.
Like this. In a few hours, most of that sugar will be dissolved. The rest will take place over the next day or so.
Before you go to bed, put the jar in the fridge. In the morning, look and see if you need to turn it over again.
All of the recipes for this say to wait anywhere from 3 to 5 days before your pickles are ready. But seriously, how do you wait that long?
Go ahead and try a few the next day. They will be awfully good by then and they just get better every day after. They’ll have their full flavor in about three days.
Have mercy! They sure are good!
Storage
When stored in an airtight container (like a or a mason jar) in the fridge, our refrigerator pickles will last up to 2 months. If you’d like them to last longer, check out my canning tutorial.
Recipe Notes
- If you like, you can use apple cider vinegar instead or a combination of both.
- Some sweet pickle recipes also include 1/2 to 1 cup of thinly sliced onion as well (either white onion, yellow onion, or sweet onion like Vidalia), so feel free to add sliced onion to your jar as well.
- Substitute the whole dill pickles for 2 cups of cucumber slices instead to make an old-fashioned bread and butter pickle recipe. Pickling cucumbers are the best, but any fresh cucumbers will work.
Recipe FAQs
What is pickling spice?
You’ll find pickling spice in the spice aisle at grocery stores like Walmart. It depends on the brand, but it will include a combination of these spices: cinnamon, allspice, , coriander, bay leaves, celery seed, crushed , black , and dill seed.
How do you serve sweet pickles?
Here are some ways to serve your sweet pickle relish:
- Add them as a topping to salads like pasta salad or potato salad, sandwiches, burgers, loaded potatoes, and hot dogs.
- Add to a pizza or casserole.
- Enjoy them on your next charcuterie board with cured meats and your favorite types of cheese.
You may also like these other pickle recipes:
Ingredients
- 1 46-ounce jar whole dill pickles
- 1/2 cup white vinegar
- 1/2 cup pickle juice from the jar
- 3 cups sugar
- 1 heaping tablespoon pickling spice
Instructions
- Drain all the pickle juice from the jar into a bowl and set it aside. Remove the pickles from the jar.1 46-ounce jar whole dill pickles
- Into that pickle jar (or any mason jar), pour 1/2 cup of reserved pickle juice, as well as the white vinegar, sugar, and pickling spice.1/2 cup white vinegar, 1/2 cup pickle juice from the jar, 3 cups sugar, 1 heaping tablespoon pickling spice
- Put the lid on tightly and give it a good shake. Sugar will not be dissolved but that is okay.
- Slice whole pickles into slices, thick or thin, based on your preference. Return sliced pickles to the jar.1 46-ounce jar whole dill pickles
- Place the lid on the jar and shake again. Set it out on the counter for a few hours, turning upside down every hour or so, and then right side up again the next hour. Place pickles in the refrigerator after a few hours. Allow them to marinate for about three days for full flavor.
Video
Nutrition
The cure for anything is salt water: tears, sweat, or the sea.
~Isak Dinesen
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Oh my word!! You crack me up Miss Christy!!
Has anyone made these pickles with Splenda? We can’t have the sugar, but I love sweet pickles! Thanks for the recipe!
I haven’t but I don’t see why it wouldn’t work. I would add a little less Splenda than sugar though, maybe reduce it by 1/2 a cup.
Sounds great! I’m going to give it a try, and I’ll let y’all know how they turn out.
Let me know how they turn out with Splenda….may not be enough liquid.
can you let me know also i have people in my family that are diabetic and they love these
Hi, Jessie. How did the pickles turn out using splenda instead of sugar? Thanks
Does it make a difference to use Kosher dill
Pickles and not whole dills? Asking for a friend
I make mine by throwing out the pickle juice & layering pickles with the jarred jalapeños – and use the juice from the jalapeño jar!! No vinegar – and 4 lbs of sugar to 1 gallon of pickles. Hubby loves them with barbecue!!
OH MY GOODNESS….these would make a great Christmas gift !
I have seen this recipe before, but this one looks delishious, and if you make them, I’m sure they are! So I am going to try these. Just wondering if I can get the 48 oz jar in my fridge, lol.
I bought the gallon square jar from Walmart. Fits a gallon of sliced pickles perfectly. The jar is short a squat to fit in fridge. Just line lid with plastic wrap. It will rust with the vinegar. I just gave up and use plastic wrap with rubber band now.
How long do these pickles last in the fridge, and I wonder if you can can them?
They will keep as long as regular pickles, few months. You sure can can them!
If you can them, how long do you process them?
Do you can them in hot water bath or pressure cooker? How long do you process. Please give complete canning method thank you.
have you canned them before and if so do they lose their crunch? i make these and i also put some in the food processor and make relish for hot dogs and such
I have never canned these so I can’t speak for whether or not they lose their crunch. In order to can you would need to use quart jars specifically made for canning (not the jar they came in) and a new lid and band. Can in a boiling water bath using proper canning methods and process for 15 minutes.
Happy canning (if you try it), please report back.
I made and canned several jars of your sweet and sassy pickles last year following your recipe and water bath canning instructions. They were hands down the best pickles we’ve ever had…so good all the jars were devoured within weeks.
I’ll be tripling the recipe this year!
I am so glad you liked them!!! Enjoy a few for me!!
I make a smiliar pickle recipe but I add Tabasco which gives it that whole “sweet/hot” flavor. If you check the sweet/hot pickes on the grocery shelf, they are pricey! This quick recipe sure beats paying the price when everyone has Tabasco in the refrigerator! They really are unique and super delicious.
Hey Leann (above) … how much Tabasco do you add? Thank you. And, thank you too Christy…. love pickles…bet these are delish. Can’t wait to chop some up in potato salad.
We use 2 oz Tabasco for the gallon size. Yummy.
You keep tobasco in the fridge? It is full of vinegar, I have always kept it on the shelf.
Oh my goodness. Those look amazing. Do they taste like bread and butter pickles??
Yes! Like the really good homemade ones from Grandma’s house 🙂
Gasp! I HAVE to make these. I just hope they don’t turn out like Aunt Bea’s kerosene cucumbers on Andy Griffith. 🙂
LOL…. I just watched that one this morning!
Christy, you’re a doll. No making homemade pickles for me this summer, thank you, Pam
I had 32 oz dill chips on hand so I made these last night, but I reduced the sugar since it was a smaller jar. Can’t wait to try them!