Sauerkraut (Home Made)
- NorCal Kid
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Pickles are still on my 'to-do' list....
Someone steered me to this site, which has some interesting items for pickling/food preservation....
http://www.wisementrading.com/foodprese ... crocks.htm
Good price on the stainless cabbage slicer, too.
http://www.wisementrading.com/cooking/s ... ndolin.htm
Someone steered me to this site, which has some interesting items for pickling/food preservation....
http://www.wisementrading.com/foodprese ... crocks.htm
Good price on the stainless cabbage slicer, too.
http://www.wisementrading.com/cooking/s ... ndolin.htm
Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever. — Hebrews 13:8
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I have found that 65 degrees and 2% salt are perfect for sauerkraut if you can maintain the temperature and exclude oxygen.
I don't use an airlock, I fill the container (1/2 gallon canning jars) all the way to the very top then place on the lid (no ring) with a 1 pound weight on top.
There will be some burping, but DON'T open the container until the ferment is finished (about 3 weeks) It's always perfect, there's never a sign of kahm yeast or molds.
To get a great texture I shave the cabbage at no more than a couple mm on an imaginary plane that is parallel with the center of the core, this exposes the most cells and tames the tough lignins.
I salt the cabbage and let it sweat overnight before tightly packing into the fermenter, never pounding.
I have a tiny apartment fridge with a controller set at 65 degrees so I can ferment year-round.
Bob
I don't use an airlock, I fill the container (1/2 gallon canning jars) all the way to the very top then place on the lid (no ring) with a 1 pound weight on top.
There will be some burping, but DON'T open the container until the ferment is finished (about 3 weeks) It's always perfect, there's never a sign of kahm yeast or molds.
To get a great texture I shave the cabbage at no more than a couple mm on an imaginary plane that is parallel with the center of the core, this exposes the most cells and tames the tough lignins.
I salt the cabbage and let it sweat overnight before tightly packing into the fermenter, never pounding.
I have a tiny apartment fridge with a controller set at 65 degrees so I can ferment year-round.
Bob
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Bob
Bob
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Welcome to the forum, Bob.
I have heard of that process, and even tried it with dill pickles many years back. I just had a bad feeling about using an unsealed jar sitting on a shelf in the basement. They were probably fine, but I tossed the lot when it got rather cloudy looking.
I like the water seal process. It makes great pickles, so I thought it could do the same with sauerkraut. And it sure is less expensive using a plastic bucket rather than an expensive imported crock.
Thanks for the tip, I may just try a small batch to check it out.
Jim
I have heard of that process, and even tried it with dill pickles many years back. I just had a bad feeling about using an unsealed jar sitting on a shelf in the basement. They were probably fine, but I tossed the lot when it got rather cloudy looking.
I like the water seal process. It makes great pickles, so I thought it could do the same with sauerkraut. And it sure is less expensive using a plastic bucket rather than an expensive imported crock.
Thanks for the tip, I may just try a small batch to check it out.
Jim
Kimchi
This is my first try at making my own Kimchi. I purchased the Book " Sauerkraut, Kimchi, Pickles and Relish" By Stanley Marianski and His brother Adam.
Started out with 2 heads of napa Cabbage. I used the "Easy Kimchi" Recipe.
Then I made a brine of three cups of salt to 4 quarts of water and soaked the cabbage for three hours.
Then triple rinsed it in the salad spinner
Chopped up the cabbage in 2" slices and then cut the Scallions, Finely diced the ginger root, Red pepper powder, Crushed 3 cloves of garlic and got the salt and sugar ready for mixing.
Mixed in all the spices and goodness...
Put it in the homemade fermintation jar for a three day ride, or maybe more....
Started out with 2 heads of napa Cabbage. I used the "Easy Kimchi" Recipe.
Then I made a brine of three cups of salt to 4 quarts of water and soaked the cabbage for three hours.
Then triple rinsed it in the salad spinner
Chopped up the cabbage in 2" slices and then cut the Scallions, Finely diced the ginger root, Red pepper powder, Crushed 3 cloves of garlic and got the salt and sugar ready for mixing.
Mixed in all the spices and goodness...
Put it in the homemade fermintation jar for a three day ride, or maybe more....
I too use 2% salt. I usually make sauerkraut in the fall when the fall/winter cabbage is in season. I set the furnace thermostat for the house at 65 degrees. After four or five weeks when most of the fermentation has taken place, I move the crock into the garage. My garage is insulated so it stays cool, but does not freeze during our Michigan winters. I leave the kraut in the crock and go out to the garage to fill up a jar to store in the fridge when I need some. This year the unseasonable warm temperatures in March hurt my batch. With the 80 degree temperatures it started fermenting again, it is still good to eat, but not as good as it was before the March heat wave.
Occasionally I read about a culture that prepares a mixture like that and then buries the covered crock in the ground. Until just now I didn't understand why anyone would do that. But the ground temperature remains quite constant so storing pickled food in that manner would be good.
Ross- tightwad home cook
Ross, I sure am glad Stanley and Adam did not call out for the kimchi to be buried in the backyard. I was chasing racoons off my back porch yesterday morning, they acted like they owned the place, someone in the neighborhood is feeding them and their used to people because they didn't even back down when I put my arms above my head like a big bear I had to retreat back in the house.
- NorCal Kid
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One of our former pastors was half-Korean, and he used to recall his Korean mother (who came to the US when the pastor-to-be was a child) making kimchi at home on a regular basis. He didnt have fond memories of it-something to do with an off-putting smell that permeated his home. Made it quite uncomfortable for him to have friends over.
I enjoy kimchi. It's on my list of fermented products to make.
I gotta have success with the 'kraut first.
Kevin
I enjoy kimchi. It's on my list of fermented products to make.
I gotta have success with the 'kraut first.
Kevin
Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever. — Hebrews 13:8
My priest is Korean. Like most Koreans, his family would never consider a meal at home without kimchi, and they make many varieties of it, always bringing some whenever they come over. It is the National Dish! I made it some years ago and it came out fine, but it's hard to get motivated to make any these days since our "presvytera" is always bringing over such fine stuff.
Put my second batch of kraut in jars yesterday and into the refrigerator. Two heads of cabbage, a one gallon crock, two jars of sauerkraut. This time the salt was just right and the kraut is great. I will not be making this in the house with a crock in the future untill the windows are open again! I might try in in a glass container with airlock if no one reports about strong smell always present doing it this way..
Dick
Never quit learning!
Never quit learning!
We make 120 lbs of sauerkraut each year and only in the fall, when the late hard packed head variety is available. At that time it is crisp, full of liquids and sweet tasting. The results are not as good when you use cabbage that has been in cold storage for 8 months. We use a 15 gallon Medalta stone crock that I place on casters so that I can move it around in the garage. If it gets too ccol there, we move it into the house, and I love that smell! Each day I lift the cover off it and take inhale!
But now this kimchi post got me thinking about giving that a shot. Probably would go well with a batch of smoked oysters.
But now this kimchi post got me thinking about giving that a shot. Probably would go well with a batch of smoked oysters.
- NorCal Kid
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Dick, I'm happy to report that with the airlocks in place, there are no odors nor off-putting aroma present around the jars. To actually get a whiff, one has to unscrew the jar cap.DLFL wrote:I might try in in a glass container with airlock if no one reports about strong smell always present doing it this way.
Nice job on the kraut! I've about another week before I sample the goods...
Kevin
Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever. — Hebrews 13:8