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Green Tomatoes with Garlic for Winter in Slices
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Marinating

Green Tomatoes with Garlic for Winter in Slices

Green Tomatoes with Garlic for Winter in Slices is the practical canning approach — uses sliced green tomatoes (rather than whole), which is BOTH easier than whole-tomato preserves AND useful when fruits have minor damage that needs trimming. Result: SWEETLY-SPICY slices, ready-to-eat appetizer straight from jar.
Time 40 min
Yield 3 liter jars
Calories 55 kcal
Difficulty Medium
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Instructions

  1. I prepare the products for green tomatoes with garlic. Peel garlic. Pre-sterilize jars + lids.

    Step 1
  2. Prepare ingredients for marinade.

    Step 2
  3. Cut green tomatoes into slices; remove stems first.

    Step 3
  4. Place in EACH jar: 1 bay leaf + 2 allspice + 2 black peppercorns + 3 garlic cloves (the spice base for each jar).

    Step 4
  5. Pack green tomato slices TIGHTLY into jars (eliminates air pockets, maximizes packing).

    Step 5
  6. Make marinade: pot with water on heat. As water heats: add 7.5 tsp salt + 11.5 tbsp sugar; mix well.

    Step 6
  7. As soon as water boils: pour in 15 tsp 9% vinegar; mix again. Boil 2 minutes; remove from heat.

    Step 7
  8. Fill jars containing tomatoes with hot marinade up to neck-brim. Cover with sterilized lids.

    Step 8
  9. Place CLOTH at bottom of deep pot; place jars on cloth. Pour WARM water in pot up to jar shoulders. Place pot on heat.

    Step 9
  10. After water boils: STERILIZE 5 minutes. Remove jars from pot.

    Step 10
  11. Roll up preparations; turn upside down until COMPLETELY cool (verifies seals).

    Step 11
  12. Green tomatoes with garlic for winter are ready. Send preparations for storage in cool dark place. Best quality at 4-6 weeks after canning.

    Step 12

Tips

  • 1

    THE 5-MIN STERILIZATION FOR LITER JARS. Step 10's "5 minutes" is calibrated for 1-LITER jars specifically. For 0.5-liter (half-liter) jars: 3 minutes sufficient. For 2-liter jars: extend to 10 minutes. The shorter sterilization time (vs the 30 min in some recipes) reflects: smaller jar size + slice format (heat penetrates faster) + relatively low pH from vinegar+sugar. The combination of pre-sterilized jars + hot marinade + 5-min final sterilization + tight rolling produces 1-year shelf-stable preserve. Don't shortcut.

  • 2

    THE SLICE-VS-WHOLE FORMAT ADVANTAGE. The recipe's "slice format" approach has multiple benefits over whole-tomato preserves. EASIER PACKING: slices fit jars more efficiently (more product per jar). DAMAGE-FRIENDLY: minor blemishes can be trimmed off slices easily. SERVE-READY: slices are ready-to-eat from jar (no further cutting). FASTER MARINATION: slices absorb marinade faster than whole tomatoes (peak quality in 4 weeks vs 6+ weeks for whole). Same slice-format advantage for: pickled cucumber slices vs whole cucumbers. For another sliced-format winter preserve worth comparing, see Marinated Tomato Slices.

  • 3

    THE 3-CLOVES-PER-JAR GARLIC RATIO. Step 4's "3 garlic cloves per jar" is calibrated for 1-liter jars. The garlic acts as: PRESERVATION agent (natural antimicrobial), FLAVOR ANCHOR (gentle garlic infuses tomato flesh during storage), AROMATIC COMPONENT (paired with bay + peppercorns). REDUCING garlic: weaker preservation + less flavor. INCREASING garlic: dominates other flavors. The 3-clove standard works for moderate garlic-flavor preference. Garlic-lovers: 4-5 cloves per jar (still safe, more pronounced). Garlic-averse: 2 cloves minimum (preservation requires some garlic).

  • 4

    THE 4-6-WEEK MATURATION RULE. The note about peak quality 4-6 weeks after canning is preservation-tradition wisdom. Just-canned (week 1): edible but vinegar still aggressive, garlic raw-pungent, herbs not yet integrated with tomato flesh. WEEK 4-6: peak quality — vinegar mellowed, garlic-mellowed-aromatic, herbs fully infused. WEEKS 6-12+: continues at peak. Don't open immediately for best experience. Storage tip: label jars with date so you know when to start opening earlier batches first. For another sliced-tomato winter preserve worth trying, try Sweet Marinated Tomatoes with Honey.

Video

FAQ

How long does it keep? +

Properly canned: 1+ YEAR at room temperature unopened. After opening: refrigerate; consume within 2-3 weeks. Visual signs of spoilage: bulging lid, mold growth, off-smell — discard immediately. Storage requirements: dark cool place (cellar, pantry away from sunlight + heat). Avoid temperature fluctuations. Properly stored: bright color, crisp tomato slices, aromatic vinegar character. The combination of: pre-sterilized jars + boiling marinade + 5-min water-bath + tight rolling produces reliable shelf-stable preserve. Best practice: rotate stock annually — eat current year's during winter, start new batch next autumn.

Can I add other herbs? +

Yes — variations welcome. ADDITIONAL aromatic options: dill seeds (1/4 tsp per jar — traditional Russian), coriander seeds (3-4 per jar), mustard seeds (1/2 tsp), horseradish leaves (1 small leaf — adds traditional Russian "khren" character), grape leaves (1 per jar — adds tannins, helps crispness). FRESH HERBS: parsley sprig, dill sprig, basil sprig (1 per jar — adds garden-fresh aromatics). The recipe's basic spice blend (bay + black + allspice + garlic) is balanced + traditional; additions personalize the preserve to family taste. Don't overload — 5+ different aromatics become muddled.

What if I don't have allspice? +

Substitutes: increase BLACK PEPPERCORNS to 4 per jar (replaces 2 allspice with 2 extra black). Or: use 1 CLOVE per jar (single clove provides similar warm-spice character). Or: skip allspice entirely (preserve still works, slightly different flavor profile). The allspice contributes: warm aromatic character, sweet-spice notes that complement vinegar+sugar. Without it: more straightforward Russian-pickled-tomato character (still excellent). The recipe is flexible — work with what's available. Don't substitute with cumin or fennel (wrong character for Russian-tradition preserve).

Can I omit the sterilization step? +

Possible but reduces shelf life. WITHOUT step 10 sterilization: refrigerator-only storage, 1-2 months max shelf life. The 5-min sterilization is fast + worthwhile for 1-year shelf-stable result. The recipe's "no sterilization" alternative would require: substantially MORE vinegar + salt + sugar (changes flavor profile), OR fresh-prep approach (not traditional). For genuine winter pantry stocking: do the sterilization step. For quick refrigerator pickle (eating within month): can skip. Recipe's design assumes shelf-stable goal.

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