21 of the Best Pickling Cucumbers | Gardener’s Path (2024)

Instead of pondering just how many pecks Peter Piper could pick, here’s a much more enjoyable way to spend your time:

Figure out which variety of pickling cucumber would be best to grow in your garden.

That will lead to you doing the picking, and then the pickling, and that’s a really fun prospect.

You won’t have to get your tongue in a twist, nor will you need to stress, with this handy list. It details the most desirable pickling cucumber plants to grow in your garden, including helpful tips for the ones that are best for growing in containers, trellising, disease resistance, and so forth.

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You’ll be prying open the seed packets pronto, with a bumper crop to follow in 40 to 85 days.

Before you get to the list, though,I’d like to fill you in on what makes certain varieties pickling cucumbers instead of slicer, English, or some other type.

You can actually make a version of refrigerator pickle or relish from any kind of cuke, if you’re willing to peel and perhaps seed them first.

But this compilation focuses only on the Cucumis sativus cultivars that were passed down as heirlooms or bred as hybrids because their fruits are ideal for pickling.

The cucumbers mature at one and a half to six inches long, for example, the perfect range of sizes for gherkin pickles, or those pre-cut into sandwich slices or spears.

They’re also blockier than slicing types, which is intentional. The flatter sides and blunt ends allow them to fit easily into pickle jars with less wasted space.

The fruits also have bumpy skin that stays crisp after water-bath canning or becoming freezer pickles.

Note that pickling cucumber plants can be vining, bush, or dwarf varieties.

You can grow them in containers, let them sprawl along the ground, or – my preferred method – grow them on a trellis or fence where they’re easy to care for and pick.

First, though, let’s make some introductions. Here are the top varieties I’ll present:

1. Boston Pickling

This one dates back to 1877, but is as fast-maturing as some of the more recent hybrids.

It produces sweet, tender fruits with black spines that are ready to harvest 55 days from sowing.

Keep it picked and this plant will keep you supplied with enough bright green, blunt-end fruits for all the pickles you could desire.

This is the one my sister Cathy grew when she lived in Boston, and it produced so generously that the neighbors stopped answering the door when they saw she had bags of extras with her.

But the output’s not a problem if you’re a dedicated gardener and artisanal pickler. These have such few seeds and are so crisp you can use them in sushi, gazpacho, and other recipes where you’d typically employ thin-skinned or Asian cucumbers as well.

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‘Boston Pickling’

If you’re a small family or not intending to preserve the harvest for the long haul, I’d suggest growing just a few ‘Boston Pickling’ plants at a time.

They mature so quickly you can plant for a second harvest to coincide with late summer or even early fall. Just remember that they’ll grow and flower a little less enthusiastically in cooler air and soil temperatures.

‘Boston Pickling’ seeds are available in a variety of package sizes, from True Leaf Market.

2. Boothby’s Blond

The Boothby family of Livermore, Maine, gave the world these petite heirloom cucumbers generations back.

The fruits have a creamy, off-white skin with black spines, giving them a salt and pepper appearance. They mature 55 to 65 days from sowing.

Harvest them at four inches to use in home canning projects. They’ll still taste great for fresh eating when they’re up to seven inches long, and don’t usually need peeling.

Though the vines produced by this type can grow more than six feet long, the plants do well in containers.

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‘Boothby’s Blond’

The harvest is perfect for bread and butter pickles. Their crisp, tender flesh absorbs both the sweetness and the spice in that much-loved recipe.

These are heirlooms, so they’re not as disease-resistant as some. To grow them, make sure they have plenty of space available between the plants, and support them on trellises.

They need good air circulation to fend off powdery mildew, a common ailment for this variety.

‘Boothyby’s Blond’ seeds are available from Palm Beach Medicinal Herbs via Amazon.

3. Burpee Pickler

‘Burpee Pickler’ is a hybrid cultivar developed by – you guessed it – Burpee. This early maturing vining type produces heavy yields of three- to five-inch cukes after 53 days.

Disease resistant and tolerant to cucumber mosaic virus, the pale green fruits are uniform in shape with small seeds and thin skin.

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‘Burpee Pickler’

Grow on a trellis or fence for best results as the vines can grow up to eight feet long.

You can find ‘Burpee Pickler’ seeds in packets of 100 available at Burpee.

4. Bushy

‘Bushy’ is a Russian cultivar introduced to the US by the American Seed Savers Exchange in 1992.

As its name suggests, this bush variety is compact, with vines growing just three to four feet long.

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‘Bushy’

Ideal for growing in containers or smaller gardens, ‘Bushy’ is cold-tolerant and produces a bumper crop of medium green, four- to five-inch fruits after just 48 days.

Find one-gram, one-ounce, and four-ounce packets of seeds available at True Leaf Market.

5. Calypso

‘Calypso’ is a hybrid cultivar with exceptional disease resistance. It shrugs off powdery mildew, anthracnose, scab, and cucumber mosaic virus.

Originally developed as a high-yielding pickling cucumber for commercial growers by the University of North Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station, ‘Calypso’ produces three-inch-long, firm, dark green cukes.

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‘Calypso’

This vining type will require trellising and you can expect a prolific harvest after 50 to 60 days.

Find seeds available from David’s Garden Seeds via Amazon.

6. Double Yield

Got a lot of big jars to fill? This vining heirloom, introduced by the Joseph Harris Company in Coldwater, New York, is here for that.

The plants produce early, yielding four- to five-inch fruits just 52 days from sowing.

And they are relentless. They’re known for producing two fruits at a time at many of the leaf joints, and if you keep them picked, they’ll produce over a long period of time.

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‘Double Yield’

The slender cucumbers have small black spines and a dark green skin that retains its color a good while after harvest.

If you’d like to kick off the canning and freezer pickle season as soon as possible, this could be a good match for you.

‘Double Yield’ seeds are available in 250- and 1,000-seed packets via Amazon.

7. Fresh Pickles

This Burpee exclusive hybrid grows to just 12 to 15 inches high and spreads 35 tp 40 inches, making it a natural choice for container gardening.

But don’t think that space saving quality will compromise the yield. If you can keep the plants picked and watered, they’ll repay you with up to 55 fruits each over the harvest season.

That’s a lot of relish and hot or sweet pickle ingredients!

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‘Fresh Pickles’

Or you can pluck the three-inch fruits off the plants and consume them on the spot while you’re grilling on the patio, like I do. They have the same crisp crunch pickled or fresh.

And heads up to gardeners in humid growing areas: This plant resists downy mildew like a champ.

‘Fresh Pickles’ seeds are available in 20-seed packets at Burpee.

8. Hokus

‘Hokus’ is an heirloom cultivar that produces itty-bitty spiny gherkins of uniform shape. You can harvest early when the fruits are just one to two inches long or allow them to reach their mature size of four inches long.

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‘Hokus’

These cute cukes have very few seeds and a crisp, crunchy texture. Vines reach up to six feet long and produce a prolific harvest after 60 days.

You can find 500 milligram packets of seeds available at Botanical Interests.

9. Homemade Pickles

Another high-yield variety, ‘Homemade Pickles’ delivers pretty quickly, about 55 days from sowing.

For those interested in making gherkin pickles, this is a solid choice.

The fruits are a medium green color and have a great texture, crispy and sweet, as long as you harvest them when they are between one and a half and six inches long.

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‘Homemade Pickles’

Another advantage you might be looking for: This cultivar produces vines just four or five feet long, ideal for small-space and container gardening.

It’s also quite tough, resistant to angular leaf spot, cucumber mosaic virus, and powdery mildew, among other diseases.

‘Homemade Pickles’ is available in one-and-a-half-gram seed packets from Botanical Interests, and as live baby plants from Ferry Morse via Walmart.

10. Honey Plus

At a glance, ‘Honey Plus’ might look too smooth-skinned for pickles, but it actually holds up to the brine and heat quite well.

The skins have a distinctive color, very light gold to super-pale green. It’s appealing paired with white vinegar and colorful red peppers in a clear jar.

One recommendation though: pick the fruits at three to four inches if you’re going to can or freeze them. Any bigger and the texture isn’t as crisp.

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‘Honey Plus’

To me, the most alluring aspect of this cultivar is its race to the finish. Just 40 days from sowing, the fruits start maturing. Each plant can yield more than 20.

‘Honey Plus’ is available in 30-seed packets from Burpee.

11. Lemon

For something a little bit different, why not try ‘Lemon’ cucumbers? These spherical fruits resemble their namesake, but do not taste in the least bit citrusy –instead they have a sweet, mild flavor and a crisp texture.

Ideal for eating fresh as well as pickling, the bright yellow fruits have attractive light orange mottling on the skin and are about the size of a tennis ball.

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‘Lemon’

Ready to harvest after 60 to 65 days, this heirloom cultivar grows six to eight feet tall, and will require trellising.

Sometimes called ‘Apple,’ this cultivar dates back to the 19th century, first appearing in seed catalogs in 1894.

You can find packets of 35 or 100 seeds available at Burpee.

12. Little Leaf H-19

As its name suggests, ‘Little Leaf H-19’ features smaller leaves than is typically seen on cucumber plants. This makes harvesting the three- to five-inch, bright green, white-spined fruits a breeze.

It’s not just the leaves that are diminutive, either. Compact, disease-resistant plants have short, multibranched vines that grow up to three feet tall, ideal for container gardening.

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‘Little Leaf H-19’

You can expect an abundant harvest after 57 days. We have the experts at the University of Arkansas to thank for developing this hybrid, which was released to the market in 1991.

You can find seeds available from David’s Garden Seeds via Amazon.

13. Miniature White

If sweet and crunchy immature cucumbers are a go-to snack for you or your kids, this open-pollinated variety will be a welcome addition to your vegetable plot.

It’s compact, with vines that grow to just three feet long, which means staking is optional.

And the creamy skin on the fruits makes them easy to see at harvest time.

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‘Miniature White’

When you’ve had enough for fresh eating, the rest are just the right size to make extra-crispy three-inch dills.

‘Miniature White’ seeds are available in a variety of packet sizes from Eden Brothers.

14. National Pickling

Also known as ‘National Pickle’ or ‘National Association Pickle,’ this hybrid cultivar was bred for the National Pickle Packers Association by George Starr at the Michigan Agricultural Experiment Station.

Available to the public since 1924, this prolific cultivar produces medium green, crunchy fruits with a mild flavor and no hint of bitterness after 55 days.

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‘National Pickling’

Resistant to scab and cucumber mosaic virus, vines reach up to five feet tall.

You can find seeds in a variety of package sizes and in bulk available at True Leaf Market.

15. Northern Pickling

Hailing from Maine, open-pollinated ‘Northern Pickling’ is an early variety, producing medium green, three- to five-inch fruits after just 48 days.

Crunchy, with a sweet flavor and no hint of bitterness, these uniform cukes can also be eaten fresh.

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‘Northern Pickling’

Compact, disease resistant plants grow three to three and a half feet tall, ideal for growing in smaller gardens or in containers on the patio.

You can find packets of seeds available from David’s Garden Seeds via Amazon.

16. Parisian

First introduced into the US in 1892, ‘Parisian,’ aka ‘Improved Bourbonne,’ is a French heirloom that produces slender, six-inch fruits with medium green flesh and pronounced spines.

You can harvest at two inches long after just 50 days for classic French pickled cornichons to enjoy with a cheese platter, or leave them to mature to full size and enjoy either pickled or freshly sliced.

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‘Parisian’

Semi-vining plants grow up to five feet, with a bushy growth habit.

You can find packets of 30 seeds available at Burpee.

17. Pick a Bushel

’Pick a Bushel’ is a hybrid cultivar that produces an abundance of three- to six-inch-long medium green fruits with a sweet taste and crisp, firm texture after just 50 days.

This bush variety was an All-America Selections winner in 2014, and boasts good disease resistance.

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‘Pick a Bushel’

Ideal for growing in containers, ‘Pick a Bushel’ grows up to two feet wide and two to three feet tall.

You can find packets of 30 seeds available from Burpee.

18. Picklebush

Bred by Burpee, ‘Picklebush’ is a hybrid variety that features white spined, three- to four-inch, light green fruits on bushy, compact plants in 52 days.

With a mature height of just two feet tall, ‘Picklebush’ is ideal for pickle-lovers with very small growing spaces – they’ll do just fine on a sunny apartment balcony.

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‘Picklebush’

Plants are resistant to scab, powdery mildew, and mosaic virus.

If you’re ready to add this space-saving cultivar to your vegetable garden, you’ll find packets of 50 seeds available at Burpee.

19. Rhinish Pickle

My Deisinger forbears may be the reason I’m so fond of ‘Rhinish Pickle’ cucumbers, which also go by the name ‘Vorgebirdstauben.’

They’re an early-season German heirloom that matures in 55 days.

In Europe, they harvest ‘Rhinish Pickle’ fruits at three or four inches, and use them to make those little sour pickles that are so tasty on charcuterie boards and alongside hearty sandwiches.

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‘Rhinish Pickle’

They’re crunchy and sweet straight off the vine, too. Just don’t let them grow bigger than about five inches, or the fruits get a bit softer and the seeds a bit bigger.

‘Rhinish Pickle’ seeds are available in a variety of packet sizes at True Leaf Market.

20. Supremo

‘Supremo’ is another hybrid variety bred by Burpee. Dark green, three- to four-inch fruits with pale stripes are produced on vigorous, compact, bushy plants that reach mature heights of one to two feet.

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‘Supremo’

Sweet and mild-flavored, with a firm, crunchy texture, fruits may also be enjoyed fresh in salads and sandwiches.

You won’t have to wait too long, either, as they’ll be ready for harvest after 52 days.

Find 30-seed packets available from Burpee.

21. Wisconsin SMR 58

This variety was developed at the University of Wisconsin, with vines that produce mature fruit 55 to 60 days from sowing.

The yields are massive. ‘Wisconsin SMR 58’ cucumbers have filled many a Midwestern larder with an array of pickles for the lean months of winter.

The fruits are a little different than those of typical varieties. Green with black spines, they grow six inches long, two and a half inches wide, and taper at the end a bit.

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‘Wisconsin SMR 58’

I’d recommend a trellis or fence to support these vines, to help keep those longer fruits growing straight, not curving.

If you’re looking for a good disease package, this cultivar is resistant to scab and cucumber mosaic virus.

‘Wisconsin SMR 58’ seeds are available in various package sizes at True Leaf Market.

Forget the Peppers for Now, Peter Piper

One of the things I like best about growing these particular vegetables is that they’re central to my canning recipes, but we can also enjoy the yield all season long in salads and with dips.

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I also love selecting a new one to grow in my raised beds every year or two. Variety is the spice of the veggie patch!

What about you? Do you have experience with any of the cultivars mentioned here, or any favorites that didn’t make my list?

We’d love to get your thoughts and questions into the mix in the comments section, which you’ll find below.

And if you’re on a quest to grow a bumper crop of these home garden favorites, for pickling or fresh eating, check out these cucumber guides next:

  • Add Cooling Crunch to Your Cuisine All Season: How to Grow Cucumbers
  • The Best and Worst Cucumber Companion Plants
  • Top 33 Cucumber Varieties to Grow at Home
  • What Causes Holes in Homegrown Cucumbers?
21 of the Best Pickling Cucumbers | Gardener’s Path (2024)

FAQs

How many cucumbers does one pickling cucumber plant produce? ›

Depending on who you ask, a healthy cucumber plant can be expected to produce 10 large cukes or 15 small ones within a harvest period of about three weeks.

How many days does it take for a cucumber to turn into a pickle? ›

How long does it take for cucumbers to become pickled? It takes a solid 72 hours to get them prime pickled form. But you can of course eat after a day or so – but the longer the better!

Why do you soak cucumbers in salt water before pickling? ›

This salt treatment draws water out of the cucumbers and flavors them, so it's critically important. After layering or mixing in plenty of sea salt, I cover the salted cukes with ice cubes and a tea towel and forget about them for a few hours.

What kind of vinegar is best for pickling cucumbers? ›

Most pickle recipes call for distilled white vinegar. This is the clear, colorless vinegar made by fermenting grains. It has a mellow aroma, tart acid flavor and does not affect the color of light-colored vegetables or fruits.

What type of dill is best for pickling cucumbers? ›

Bouquet – Bouquet dill offers high seed and leaf yields. This variety turns out large flowers, long sturdy stems and large leaves. Many people use bouquet dill for cut flower arrangements. It's also favored for pickling and this variety of dill tends to be the most popular home garden choice.

What is the highest yielding cucumber? ›

The most productive types of cucumbers are called parthenocarpic cucumbers.

How do you increase cucumber yield? ›

Additionally, cucumber plants require regular fertilization with a balanced nutrient solution, including nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium, as well as micronutrients such as calcium, magnesium, and iron. Proper plant spacing and trellising are essential for maximizing yields and preventing overcrowding and disease.

How many cucumber plants per 5 gallon grow bag? ›

Two or three plants will fit in a five-gallon bucket or grow one cucumber in a 10-inch-wide container. Mix soil with equal parts of compost, potting soil, perlite and peat moss. The compost or rotted manure will get plants off to a good start, or blend in granules of a balanced fertilizer, such as 10-10-10.

How deep do pickling cucumber roots grow? ›

Although cucumbers do best in loose sandy loam soil, they can be grown in any well-drained soil. Cucumbers must be grown in full sun- light. Because their roots reach 36 to 48 inches deep, do not plant them where tree roots will rob them of water and nutrients.

Is it too late to plant pickling cucumbers? ›

Is it too late to plant cucumbers? Depending on your local climate, June or July is the latest possible date you can plant cucumbers in order for them to be able to yield any fruit. When planted in warmer weather, the plants will establish much more quickly than when planted in the spring.

Can I pickle without vinegar? ›

Pickles without vinegar have a short shelf life, but they are The Best. We take cucumbers for granted; they're year-round staples with little character that you chop up and put into salads, make Sichuan-style, throw into smoothies.

What is the secret to a crunchy pickle? ›

The best way to keep your pickles crisp is by taking an extra moment to remove the blossom from the end of the cucumber. By adding this extra cut, you have a crisper pickle. Other ways to ensure a crisp pickle is by adding grape leaves to your jar. I tend to cut off both ends of the cucumber as I quickly process them.

What ingredient makes pickles crisp? ›

Use Calcium Chloride

Calcium chloride (CaCl2), sometimes known as “pickle crisp”, is a type of salt that helps preserve the crunchiness of food. It is used in the food industry to help preserve the texture of canned fruit and vegetables. Sea salt is sodium chloride. In this case, we're talking about calcium chloride!

Why are Vlasic pickles so green? ›

As the lactic acid bacteria multiply, they produce lactic acid that makes brine even more acidic. This acid reacts with the chlorophyll of the cucumbers causing it to become an olive-green.

What is the most flavorful cucumber? ›

The most remarkable variety we have tested in recent years is Green Light. This snacking cucumber is harvested when only three inches long. The slender, smooth fruits of Green Light are sweet, crisp and flavorful. Gardeners are amazed at the earliness and productivity of the variety.

What cucumber has the best flavor? ›

A few favorites include 'Beit Alpha,' which is grown for its sweet flavor and exceptionally thin skin. 'Suyo Long' is a seedless, mild-flavored variety from northern China that grows about 18 inches long. 'China Jade' has striking yellow-green flesh and long, thin-skinned fruit.

What is the best tasting cucumber to grow? ›

The best-tasting cucumbers are those that are slicing cucumbers. English cucumbers don't have the bitter chemical cucurbitacin that some cucumbers have. They also have higher natural sugar content, making them sweeter. ​The lack of seeds and thinner skin also English cucumbers more enjoyable to eat.

Is there a difference in pickling cucumbers? ›

Pickling cucumbers are shorter and bigger around than slicing cucumbers. They are bred to have thinner skins and black spines so the pickled product will look better. Pickling varieties can be eaten fresh and slicing varieties can be pickled, but the differences can be discerned by the average consumer.

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