Sweet Garlic Dill Pickles

Crunchy and delicious, sweet garlic dill pickles are perfectly balanced sweet and sour, dilly, garlic cucumbers in a sweet, salty, and vinegarry brine!
Sweet garlic dill pickles!pinitView Gallery4 photos

Sweet Garlic Dill Pickles are the perfect crunchy topping for sandwiches, flavorful homemade hamburgers, grilled cheese sandwiches, or just to eat as a healthy, delicious snack!

Sweet garlic dill pickles!

Homemade dill pickles are SO much better than store bought! And, they aren’t very hard to make. Sweet garlic dill pickles are our favorite pickle ever, along with Simple Refrigerator Pickles. The great thing about canning dill pickles recipe is that you have crunchy, tasty, homemade dill pickles all year long! If you don’t want to hot water process these sweet garlic dill pickles, they can become refrigerator pickles and will keep up to 2 months in the refrigerator.

Ingredients for making sweet garlic dill pickles.

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Sweet Garlic Dill Pickles recipe is a must try pickle recipe! Last year, I made both sweet and sour dill pickle recipes. Once we tried the sweet garlic dill pickles, it was really hard to go back to the regular dill pickles. These sweet dills are just so YUMMY!! It’s tough to stop snacking on them!

Jars of cucumbers ready to be canned.

What Cucumbers Make the Best Pickles?

The best cucumbers for making pickles are of course pickling cucumbers! There are many varieties of pickling cucumbers. The common traits of the best cucumbers for pickling are short, stubby, cucumbers with a firm flesh, great flavor, and usually have some type of spines. This article by Canned Nation has great details about choosing the right cucumbers: Best Cucumbers for Pickling

Cucumbers, garlic, dill, salt, and vinegar.

This summer, my cucumber patch was absolutely amazing. I was harvesting so many sweet pickle cucumbers that I could barely keep up. We were eating them raw with everything, making Creamy Cucumber Salad, and then canned dill pickles 3 different times! Our favorite of the various way to eat cucumbers is definitely sweet garlic dill pickles or Simple Refrigerator Pickles. Of course, creamy cucumber salad and Dill Pickle Pasta Salad are also very popular. Even if you don’t have a garden you can use store bought pickling cucumbers for this dill pickle recipe.

Ingredients for sweet garlic dill pickles.

Ingredients

  • Cucumbers, use pickling cucumbers, thickly sliced, with the skin on.
  • Garlic cloves, use as many as you want, depending on how garlicky you like your dill pickles. I usually use 3 cloves per quart jar.
  • Heads of dill, use 2-3 per quart of pickles.
  • White vinegar, I use pickling vinegar, which is a 7% acetic acid instead of the 5% acetic acid which regular white vinegar has. Regular white vinegar will work also, but pickling vinegar makes pickles crispier and their shelf life longer.
  • Water, which really is necessary so that the dill pickles aren’t too sour.
  • Granulated sugar, which is what will cause the sweet taste in these sweet garlic dill pickles.
  • Coarse salt, I use kosher salt, as it doesn’t have anything added to it.

How to Make Sweet Garlic Dill Pickles

1.Put the dill heads and garlic cloves in the bottom of each hot sterilized quart jar. Fill with cucumber slices to within 1/2 inch from the top. Repeat to make 4 quarts.

Quart jar filled with garlic, dill heads, and sliced cucumbers.

2.For the Brine, combine all of the ingredients in a large saucepan. Heat, until it boils, stirring often.

Making the brine with vinegar, water, sugar and salt.

3.Pour the hot brine over the cucumbers in the jars to cover the cucumbers. Place the sterilized metal lids on the jars and screw the metal bands on.

Brine added to the quart jar with garlic, dill heads, and sliced cucumbers.

4.Place the jars in a canner filled with warm water to 1 inch above the jars. Heat the water to 180°F -185°F for 15 minutes. I use a candy thermometer to keep the temperature steady. Heating the pickles too hot will cause them to be soft.

A candy thermometer on top of jars of pickles.

5.When the 15 minutes is done, take the jars out on a cooling rack and do not move for 12 hours. You should hear the lids sealing as they cool down, The pickles will be ready to eat in 2-3 weeks.

Sweet garlic dill pickles.

Why You Will LOVE Sweet Garlic Dill Pickles!!

  • Sweet and Sour contrasting flavors!
  • Super Dilly Flavor.
  • Garlic lovers pickles.
  • Satisfyingly crunchy snack.
  • Low calorie, tasty addition to many meals!

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What to Have Sweet Garlic Dill Pickles With:

Sweet Garlic Dill Pickles

The best garlic dill pickles recipe ever, Sweet Garlic Dill Pickles are a must try pickle! Crispy, and light, with hints of garlic and dill in a slightly sweet and not too sour vinegar brine! These homemade dill pickles truly take any sandwich, salad, burger, or lunch over the top. Even just munching on these delicious pickles with cheese or just plain is a great snack.

Prep Time20 minsCook Time27 minsTotal Time47 minsDifficulty:IntermediateServings:64Calories:16Best Season:Fall

Ingredients

Instructions

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How to Make Sweet Garlic Dill Pickles

  1. Put the dill heads and garlic cloves in the bottom of each hot sterilized quart jar. Fill with cucumber slices to within 1/2 inch from the top. Repeat to make 4 quarts.

    Quart jar filled with garlic, dill heads, and sliced cucumbers.
  2. For the Brine, combine all of the ingredients in a large saucepan. Heat, until it boils, stirring often.

    Making the brine with vinegar, water, sugar and salt.
  3. Pour the hot brine over the cucumbers in the jars to cover the cucumbers. Place the sterilized metal lids on the jars and screw the metal bands on.

    Brine added to the quart jar with garlic, dill heads, and sliced cucumbers.
  4. Place the jars in a canner filled with warm water to 1 inch above the jars. Heat the water to 180°F to 185°F for 15 minutes. I use a candy thermometer to keep the temperature steady. Heating the pickles too hot will cause them to be soft.

    A candy thermometer on top of jars of pickles.
  5. When the 15 minutes is done, take the jars out on a cooling rack and do not move for 12 hours. You should hear the lids sealing as they cool down, The pickles will be ready to eat in 2-3 weeks.

    Sweet garlic dill pickles.

Note

If you don't have a canning pot, use a deep saucepan with a wire rack placed on the bottom.

Make sure to cut the ends off the cucumbers. Leaving the blossom end on will cause soft pickles due to an enzyme on the blossom end.

Be sure not to get the hot water bath hotter than 185°F. Hotter will cause the pickles to be soft.

The fresher the cucumbers are, the crunchier your pickles will be.

Fresh dill will always make the best tasting dill pickles.

Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:
Why do you use Kosher or pickling salt for making sweet garlic dill pickles?

Kosher or pickling salt is very important to use because it is free of iodine and preservatives which cause the brine to be cloudy.

Can I use any kind of cucumbers to make sweet garlic dill pickles?

Yes, you can, although, the crunchiest, best tasting pickles are made with pickling cucumbers.

How do you store cucumbers while you're waiting to pick enough to make pickles?

Wash the cucumbers, scrubbing to remove all the spines, and let them dry at room temperature. Then, place in a plastic grocery bag with some paper towel. Do not seal the bag. Refrigerate for up to a week and the cucumbers should still be super crunchy.

What vinegar is best for making Sweet Garlic Dill Pickles?

Pickling vinegar definitely delivers more of a flavor punch than regular white vinegar. It also will create crispier, longer-lasting pickles with the higher acid rate.

Why do I have to use kosher or pickling salt for making sweet garlic dill pickles?

Using pickling or kosher salt is important as these forms are the purest form of Sodium Chloride. The pure salt will ensure that your pickling brine is crystal clear. Kosher salt has larger granules that will dissolve by boiling in the brine.

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Rebekah Callahan

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