Watermelon Rind Pickles

As for the watermelon rind pickle recipe you will find below, you may be shocked. They’re actually quite good! These make a unique and novel gift – or you could make a huge batch and sell them at a local flea market with samples laid out for your booth visitors. They’ll buy them up – once just for the novelty, but twice for the great tasting pickles these make.

This recipe makes 3 pints and requires the rind of one medium watermelon.

Ingredients:

  • 8 cups prepared rind
  • 1/2 cup pickling salt (coarse)
  • 8 cups cold water
  • 3 cups white granulated sugar
  • 2 cups white vinegar
  • 5-6 cinnamon sticks

Prepare The Rind

  1. Remove dark green peel from watermelon.
  2. Cut rind into rectangular pieces approximately 1"x2" until you have 8 cups of rind strips.
  3. Layer rind and salt in a stainless steel bowl or pickling crock.
  4. Soak 12 hours.

Drain and rinse twice in cold water, then place rind and 8 cups cold water into a stainless steel saucepan and boil until fork tender (10 minutes). Drain again.

Prepare The Solution

Combine sugar, vinegar and broken cinnamon sticks in a saucepan and bring to a boil, reduce heat but keep at a slow boil for one hour.

…And Can

  • Immerse glass mason jars in boiling water for 10 minutes.
  • If using self-sealing lids boil as well for 5 minutes.
  • Into hot (now sterilized) jars distribute rind strips and add pickling solution to within 1" of jar top.
  • Wipe jar rim before securing lids.

Shelf Life of Watermelon Rind Pickles

Store jars in a cool, dark place and let set for 6-8 weeks before opening. Consume within 8 months.

Tip on Pickling Basics

Pickling has come far since the early days. Where once they were overly salty and sour we now enjoy a wide range of flavors from pickled vegetables, fruits or blends.

Pickles are made in one of two fashions: Quick Process or Fermentation. Fermentation processed pickles are generally made in a crock, and are worth the extra time and trouble I promise you! You can get my crock dill pickle recipe here.

Quick process pickles are certainly most modern preserver’s choice (given our over-loaded schedules), but if you can invest 5 minutes a day I urge you to at least try the fermented variety once. Most people prefer them over quick process pickles.

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