Guest guest Posted June 13, 2002 Report Share Posted June 13, 2002 At 04:39 PM 6/13/2002 -0400, you wrote: >I used the NT recipe for LF red bell peppers and put them up on Tues. This morning there were two spots of white mold on the top. Bits of the peppers are above the liquid line in the jar--is this my problem? Should I open the jar (even though it hasn't been three days yet) and take the mold off and put a bit more water in? Are they ruined? > > When I talked to a Korean person about kimchi and mold she said they just remove the mold and eat the kimchi. BUT -- I've found since I added a bit of vinegar or brine from the previous batch, I haven't had that problem. I've heard that vegies don't get the dangerous kinds of mold, but I don't like mold at all or trust it. But people who make cheese let it mold all the time ... Heidi Schuppenhauer Trillium Custom Software Inc. heidis@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 14, 2002 Report Share Posted June 14, 2002 I have removed the mold off a couple of jars myself (of cucumbers and broccoli). For me, too, I think it was because the cukes got above the liquid. Do someone have a brilliant idea of something that could be put on top of the veggies to keep them from floating to the surface? Thanks! Judy in Connectictu --- Heidi Schuppenhauer <heidis@...> wrote: > At 04:39 PM 6/13/2002 -0400, you wrote: > >I used the NT recipe for LF red bell peppers and > put them up on Tues. This morning there were two > spots of white mold on the top. Bits of the peppers > are above the liquid line in the jar--is this my > problem? Should I open the jar (even though it > hasn't been three days yet) and take the mold off > and put a bit more water in? Are they ruined? > > > > > > When I talked to a Korean person about kimchi and > mold she said they just remove the mold and eat the > kimchi. BUT -- I've found since I added a bit of > vinegar or brine from the previous batch, I haven't > had that problem. I've heard that vegies don't get > the dangerous kinds of mold, but I don't like mold > at all or trust it. But people who make cheese let > it mold all the time ... > > > > Heidi Schuppenhauer > Trillium Custom Software Inc. > heidis@... > > > > __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 14, 2002 Report Share Posted June 14, 2002 Hey this idea is what some saurkraut makers do: Float a plastic bag of water on the surface. If I were making something in a jar I would use a smaller thinner plastic bag, and perhaps I would still double bag it as some saurkraut makers say. Gosh, now I want to try it! Has anyone tried this? On thinking, perhaps it really does not keep them below the liquid. Hmm. Steve --- Judy G <auntjudyg@...> wrote: > > I have removed the mold off a couple of jars myself > (of cucumbers and broccoli). For me, too, I think > it > was because the cukes got above the liquid. > > Do someone have a brilliant idea of something that > could be put on top of the veggies to keep them from > floating to the surface? > > Thanks! > > Judy in Connectictu > > ===== # Steve Veeneman - svnmn@... # What do you really want... __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 14, 2002 Report Share Posted June 14, 2002 Yeah, I think that would do it! Thanks! --- Steve Veeneman <svnmn@...> wrote: > Hey this idea is what some saurkraut makers do: > Float > a plastic bag of water on the surface. If I were > making something in a jar I would use a smaller > thinner plastic bag, and perhaps I would still > double > bag it as some saurkraut makers say. > > Gosh, now I want to try it! Has anyone tried this? > On thinking, perhaps it really does not keep them > below the liquid. Hmm. > > Steve > --- Judy G <auntjudyg@...> wrote: > > > > I have removed the mold off a couple of jars > myself > > (of cucumbers and broccoli). For me, too, I think > > it > > was because the cukes got above the liquid. > > > > Do someone have a brilliant idea of something that > > could be put on top of the veggies to keep them > from > > floating to the surface? > > > > Thanks! > > > > Judy in Connectictu > > > > > > > ===== > # Steve Veeneman - svnmn@... > # What do you really want... > > __________________________________________________ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 14, 2002 Report Share Posted June 14, 2002 I had a somewhat similar thing happen with my fermented beets. What I did was remove the mold and added enough liquid to cover all the veggies. The beets ahve been fine. Peace, Kris , gardening in northwest Ohio ----- Original Message ----- From: " " <jc137@...> < > Sent: Thursday, June 13, 2002 4:39 PM Subject: Help! Mold in my LF Peppers > I used the NT recipe for LF red bell peppers and put them up on Tues. This morning there were two spots of white mold on the top. Bits of the peppers are above the liquid line in the jar--is this my problem? Should I open the jar (even though it hasn't been three days yet) and take the mold off and put a bit more water in? Are they ruined? > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 14, 2002 Report Share Posted June 14, 2002 Judy, Be sure to use a wide mouth quart jar. I think a small jar like a pickled herring jar might just fit. Peace, Kris , gardening in northwest Ohio > Do someone have a brilliant idea of something that > could be put on top of the veggies to keep them from > floating to the surface? > > Thanks! > > Judy in Connectictu Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 15, 2002 Report Share Posted June 15, 2002 At 12:14 PM 6/14/2002 -0700, you wrote: >Hey this idea is what some saurkraut makers do: Float >a plastic bag of water on the surface. If I were >making something in a jar I would use a smaller >thinner plastic bag, and perhaps I would still double >bag it as some saurkraut makers say. I've also heard of people using a rock, or a ceramic disk. Wouldn't it be neat to have a line of ceramic disks made just to fit Mason jars? I'd bet it would be pretty easy to contract with a person who does stoneware. Or better, maybe there are glass disks made for some purpose that would suit (paper weights? coasters? ashtrays?). If you don't mind plastic, you can also do the initial fermentation in a big freezer ziplock bag, which is really easy -- no air bubbles, no mold. Then I decant into jars after it is nice and sour. Some of the kraut makers actually make it in a garbage bag (which I WOULDN'T recommend -- garbage bags aren't exactly food-grade ... ). The bags also take up less room on the countertop. Heidi Schuppenhauer Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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