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Directions:
Use medium-sized cucumbers; wash clean, and lay in jars. Make a brine
of water and salt--one teacup of salt to a gallon of water; boil, and
pour over the cucumbers; move brine nine mornings in succession; boil,
and pour over; then wash in hot water, and put to drain. When cool,
place in stone jars, one layer of pickles, and then a layer of grape
leaves, some horseradish, and a few sliced onions, if you like the
taste of onion. When your jars are full, make a syrup of good vinegar
and sugar, sweetened to taste, and add stick of cinnamon, a little
celery seed; boil, and pour over the pickles. Invert a plate or
saucer, and put on a small weight; tie up closely. They will keep the
year round, and are very palatable.
The Most Popular Pickle Cookbooks
• A New Zealand Country Harvest Cookbook (More than 150 delicious and practical recipes for jams and preserves, pickles and sauces, beverages, cakes, breads and desserts, with decorative ideas for autumn flowers and foliage.)• Hollyhocks and Radishes: Mrs Chard's Almanac Cookbook• The Overlake School Cookbook• The Complete Book of Pickling: 250 Recipes from Pickles and Relishes to Chutneys and Salsas• Myrtle's Country Kitchen• St. Mary's Cookbook Favorite Recipes 1984 from the Women of St. Mary's (Appetizers, Pickles, Relishes, Soups, Salads, Vegetables, Main Dishes, Breads, Rolls, Pastries, Cakes, Cookies, Desserts, Candy, Jelly, Preserves, Beverages, Microwave, Misc.)• Hollyhocks and Radishes Mrs Chards Almanac Cookbook• Graham Kerr's Simply Splenda Cookbook: Recipes for Everything from Jam and Pickles to Cakes and Pies• Pretty Pantry Gifts: A Recipe and Wrapping Kit for Jams, Sauces, and Pickles• Picklicious; 125 Extraordinary Recipes a Cookbook for People Who Are Passionate About Pickles
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