There are several recipes in the book, but I decided to start with the basic. Step 1 was to make a brine of 3 tablespoons of sea salt and 6 cups of water. Then core the cabbage and cut into large cubes (2 inches / 5cm).
Combine cabbage and brine in a large non-reactive dish (ie not metal), weight the top with a plate and leave stand for about 12 hours.
The next day drain the cabbage and reserve the brine (you will need that in a minute). To the cabbage add 1 1/2 tablespoons ginger (minced or grated) and 1 1/2 tablespoons minced garlic (I bashed mine in a mortar and pestle). The recipe calls for 2 tablespoons korean chilli powder which is apparently not very hot. I used about 1/2 teaspoon of my home grown thai chilli powder - which is hot). At this point it's already smelling DIVINE (even Jerry agrees). Put the cabbage mix into a large jar (2L size, or a 1.5l and a 350ml one like me!) and just cover the cabbage with the reserved brine. Then put a food grade plastic bag in the jar and fill with brine to create a weight to keep the cabbage in the brine and allow to ferment in a cool place (no more than than 20 (68F)) for 3-5 days. Not the fridge though as that is too cold for fermentation to occur. As it's summer here I'm using my cheese fridge, which I can keep at about 15-16.
Here's how it looks today - I'll post an update in 3-5 days :-)
If you're interesting in learning more about fermented foods then Sandor Katz's wild fermentation site is the place to start.
This post was part of Fight back Friday (even though it was a Sunday LOL)
This post was part of Fight back Friday (even though it was a Sunday LOL)
4 comments:
That looks like an easy process. I have some cabbage that re the size of a softball and more seedlings newly planted. I want to try this when I have some mature enough to pick. THanks. Emily
I bought some kimchi once, and it went to waste because I wasn't sure what to do with it! guess I need to keep watching here to see what you do with yours.
Do you close the jars during the 3-5 days? I make fermented chillis and keep the lid tightly closed...
Hi E - no I don't close the jars - the bags on top with t extra brine act as a lid that keep the jar sealed but allow fermentation gasses to escape
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