Guest guest Posted March 5, 2003 Report Share Posted March 5, 2003 > I received my Harsch crock yesterday and set about making my first > batch of kraut today. The directions that came with the crock call > for about 2.5 grams of salt per kg of cabbage, which is more than the > traditional 3TBS per 5 lbs. I used 3TBS per 5lbs, and ended up > putting about 7TBS of salt in the crock with about 12 lbs of > cabbage. I tasted the stuff before I sealed the jar, and it was > REALLY salty--I never tasted kraut that salty before. I never even > noticed kraut had salt in it, actually. Does the lactic acid somehow > obscure the salt taste? Has anybody made sauerkraut and noticed that > it tastes really salty before fermentation and OK after? Thanks! I use 5 level Tbsp of salt per 10 lbs cabbage, and it tastes perfect to me. I tried a batch with only 3 Tbsp instead of 5, and it had an off taste, as if the low salt allowed a different spectrum of beasties to work on it. And, in storage, that low-salt batch would get slimy on the surface very quickly, and I'd have to keep scraping off and throwing away the top layer. My advice to you is to reduce the salt from 3T/5lbs to 2.5T/5lbs. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 5, 2003 Report Share Posted March 5, 2003 While I have never lacto fermented saeurkraut, I have done a few others in NT such as apple butter and pickles. I have noticed they are very salty. Has anyone else noticed this? Could the salt be significantly reduced or even eliminated, especially with the addition of whey? Any suggestions would be appreciated. thanks danny Creek Bend Dairy Farm Harry & Peggy Strite 11917 Snug Harbor Lane port, MD 21795 301-582-4135 cbdfarm@... ----- Original Message ----- From: Price Sent: Wednesday, March 05, 2003 4:18 AM Subject: Too Much Salt in My Sauerkraut? I received my Harsch crock yesterday and set about making my first batch of kraut today. The directions that came with the crock call for about 2.5 grams of salt per kg of cabbage, which is more than the traditional 3TBS per 5 lbs. I used 3TBS per 5lbs, and ended up putting about 7TBS of salt in the crock with about 12 lbs of cabbage. I tasted the stuff before I sealed the jar, and it was REALLY salty--I never tasted kraut that salty before. I never even noticed kraut had salt in it, actually. Does the lactic acid somehow obscure the salt taste? Has anybody made sauerkraut and noticed that it tastes really salty before fermentation and OK after? Thanks! DJ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 5, 2003 Report Share Posted March 5, 2003 > While I have never lacto fermented saeurkraut, I have done a few > others in NT such as apple butter and pickles. I have noticed > they are very salty. Has anyone else noticed this? Could the > salt be significantly reduced or even eliminated, especially with > the addition of whey? Before I got my Harsch crock I would ferment cabbage with little or no salt in a glass cookie jar using either kefir whey or kefir grains. For more on kefirkraut, see: http://users.chariot.net.au/~dna/kefirkraut.html Kefirkraut is good stuff, but it does have a different taste than traditional sauerkraut. Personally, I much prefer sauerkraut, so I bought a Harsch crock so I could make it myself and eat it raw. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 5, 2003 Report Share Posted March 5, 2003 >Does the lactic acid somehow >obscure the salt taste? Has anybody made sauerkraut and noticed that >it tastes really salty before fermentation and OK after? If it is too salty for you, you can rinse it before you use it. I've used the Harsch recommendations and it didn't seem very salty though. Using too *little* salt can be a problem, unless you use whey, because the " bad critters " can grow and throw off the taste. Heidi S Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 5, 2003 Report Share Posted March 5, 2003 >While I have never lacto fermented saeurkraut, I have done a few others in >NT such as apple butter and pickles. I have noticed they are very >salty. Has anyone else noticed this? Could the salt be significantly >reduced or even eliminated, especially with the addition of whey? Any >suggestions would be appreciated. >thanks >danny The Koreans reduce the salt by adding red pepper. Basically you are dealing with " desirable " vs. " undesirable " bacteria, and adding vinegar, pepper, ginger, sugar, and likely other spices really help in this area. Adding whey might help too. My latest batch uses ground up salted shrimp as an " additive " . The Korean recipes really work well for me though, never slimy, moldy, and they keep forever in the fridge. Using Napa cabbage and daikon radish helps too -- they are just more forgiving and maybe have better bacteria built in. Heidi S Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 5, 2003 Report Share Posted March 5, 2003 Heidi, could you share YOUR kimchi recipe? I make kimchi more like a salad as we eat it at less than a day old, made with a little rice vinegar and some cold pressed sesame oil. TIA Dedy ----- Original Message ----- From: Heidi Schuppenhauer Sent: Wednesday, March 05, 2003 4:33 PM Subject: Re: Too Much Salt in My Sauerkraut? >While I have never lacto fermented saeurkraut, I have done a few others in >NT such as apple butter and pickles. I have noticed they are very >salty. Has anyone else noticed this? Could the salt be significantly >reduced or even eliminated, especially with the addition of whey? Any >suggestions would be appreciated. >thanks >danny The Koreans reduce the salt by adding red pepper. Basically you are dealing with " desirable " vs. " undesirable " bacteria, and adding vinegar, pepper, ginger, sugar, and likely other spices really help in this area. Adding whey might help too. My latest batch uses ground up salted shrimp as an " additive " . The Korean recipes really work well for me though, never slimy, moldy, and they keep forever in the fridge. Using Napa cabbage and daikon radish helps too -- they are just more forgiving and maybe have better bacteria built in. Heidi S Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 5, 2003 Report Share Posted March 5, 2003 Heidi, could you share YOUR kimchi recipe? I make kimchi more like a salad as we eat it at less than a day old, made with a little rice vinegar and some cold pressed sesame oil. TIA Dedy ----- Original Message ----- From: Heidi Schuppenhauer Sent: Wednesday, March 05, 2003 4:33 PM Subject: Re: Too Much Salt in My Sauerkraut? >While I have never lacto fermented saeurkraut, I have done a few others in >NT such as apple butter and pickles. I have noticed they are very >salty. Has anyone else noticed this? Could the salt be significantly >reduced or even eliminated, especially with the addition of whey? Any >suggestions would be appreciated. >thanks >danny The Koreans reduce the salt by adding red pepper. Basically you are dealing with " desirable " vs. " undesirable " bacteria, and adding vinegar, pepper, ginger, sugar, and likely other spices really help in this area. Adding whey might help too. My latest batch uses ground up salted shrimp as an " additive " . The Korean recipes really work well for me though, never slimy, moldy, and they keep forever in the fridge. Using Napa cabbage and daikon radish helps too -- they are just more forgiving and maybe have better bacteria built in. Heidi S Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 6, 2003 Report Share Posted March 6, 2003 >Heidi, >could you share YOUR kimchi recipe? >I make kimchi more like a salad as we eat it at less than a day old, made >with a little rice vinegar and some cold pressed sesame oil. >TIA >Dedy That sounds good too. I think the Japanese version is not old at all -- sometimes I eat the 'mixings' before they've fermented. Salted napa is real good on it's own! I don't really have a recipe. I sort of adopted some of the principles from " Kimchi, a Korean health food " . But it goes something like this: 1. Dump a cup of sea salt in a big bowl. 2. Add a napa cabbage or two, in quarters. Fill with water, let it set a few hours or a day. 3. Next day, chop some: Diakon radish (with leaves! That's the best part), grated carrot, broccoli, ginger, garlic (lots), and whatever else suits your fancy. The amounts vary -- I like it to look colorful. 4. Dump about a cup of " salted shrimp " in the blender and blend. These look like baby shrimp, come in a jar in the fridge section of a Korean store. You could use dried ones, I'd guess. 5. Add to the shrimp: salt (maybe 1 Tbls), some sugar, Korean red pepper (more like paprika, not as hot as cayenne). Add some juice from the last batch of kimchi. 6. Drain and rinse the cabbage, chop it up, add everything, mix. But reserve a few leaves for the next step. 7. Put it in the Harsch crock, pound it with a dowel. Add water if needed. Cover with a couple of leaves from the cabbage. 8. Add the stones, add water if needed, add some salt on top. I usually am pretty liberal with the water, because the kimchi " juice " makes a great flavoring agent for cooking. I keep the juice separate in a jar. When you add water, you are supposed to add 2 T salt per quart of water, but at this point I wing it. I let it go 3 days or so, then put it in smaller jars. It takes a week or so in the fridge to really get tasting good. You can add raw fish too, and oysters, which makes the calcium content rather high. Mine has been getting spicier and spicier, but you don't have to make it all that spicy. I don't measure the salt -- if it tastes kind of sweet-salty then it's ready to ferment. Adding the kimchi juice from the last batch helps prevent mold (it adds acid) and gets it started quicker, I think. I've been told you should use the kimchi in cooking (like stir fry, or grill it (???)) if it gets too sour, it is supposed to be crunchy and not too sour. The more salt you use, the less sour it gets. Heidi S Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 6, 2003 Report Share Posted March 6, 2003 Good morning Heidi, [yes, it's 9 am here in London] thanks for the recipe... sounds good to me... never used the daikon leaves but then they always chop them off here even at the Chinese supermarket... I can get dried shrimp powder in the same place, might give it a try soon... how about using some fish sauce?.... BTW - Napa cabbage is called 'Chinese leaf' here... have a look at - http://asiarecipe.com/asianveg.html good info, incl. pics and recipes. Dedy ----- Original Message ----- From: Heidi Schuppenhauer Sent: Thursday, March 06, 2003 8:03 AM Subject: Re: Too Much Salt in My Sauerkraut? >Heidi, >could you share YOUR kimchi recipe? >I make kimchi more like a salad as we eat it at less than a day old, made >with a little rice vinegar and some cold pressed sesame oil. >TIA >Dedy That sounds good too. I think the Japanese version is not old at all -- sometimes I eat the 'mixings' before they've fermented. Salted napa is real good on it's own! I don't really have a recipe. I sort of adopted some of the principles from " Kimchi, a Korean health food " . But it goes something like this: 1. Dump a cup of sea salt in a big bowl. 2. Add a napa cabbage or two, in quarters. Fill with water, let it set a few hours or a day. 3. Next day, chop some: Diakon radish (with leaves! That's the best part), grated carrot, broccoli, ginger, garlic (lots), and whatever else suits your fancy. The amounts vary -- I like it to look colorful. 4. Dump about a cup of " salted shrimp " in the blender and blend. These look like baby shrimp, come in a jar in the fridge section of a Korean store. You could use dried ones, I'd guess. 5. Add to the shrimp: salt (maybe 1 Tbls), some sugar, Korean red pepper (more like paprika, not as hot as cayenne). Add some juice from the last batch of kimchi. 6. Drain and rinse the cabbage, chop it up, add everything, mix. But reserve a few leaves for the next step. 7. Put it in the Harsch crock, pound it with a dowel. Add water if needed. Cover with a couple of leaves from the cabbage. 8. Add the stones, add water if needed, add some salt on top. I usually am pretty liberal with the water, because the kimchi " juice " makes a great flavoring agent for cooking. I keep the juice separate in a jar. When you add water, you are supposed to add 2 T salt per quart of water, but at this point I wing it. I let it go 3 days or so, then put it in smaller jars. It takes a week or so in the fridge to really get tasting good. You can add raw fish too, and oysters, which makes the calcium content rather high. Mine has been getting spicier and spicier, but you don't have to make it all that spicy. I don't measure the salt -- if it tastes kind of sweet-salty then it's ready to ferment. Adding the kimchi juice from the last batch helps prevent mold (it adds acid) and gets it started quicker, I think. I've been told you should use the kimchi in cooking (like stir fry, or grill it (???)) if it gets too sour, it is supposed to be crunchy and not too sour. The more salt you use, the less sour it gets. Heidi S Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 6, 2003 Report Share Posted March 6, 2003 At 09:08 AM 3/6/2003 +0000, you wrote: >Good morning Heidi, [yes, it's 9 am here in London] >thanks for the recipe... sounds good to me... never used the daikon leaves >but then they always chop them off here even at the Chinese supermarket... >I can get dried shrimp powder in the same place, might give it a try >soon... how about using some fish sauce?.... Sure, fish sauce is great. It IS hard to get diakon leaves, they sure don't *look* edible. Plain radishes are sometimes sold with the leaves though, and they work too. Mainly they just taste good and keep their crunch. Fish sauce is great. Ground up whole anchovies are supposed to be good too. You can also add apples and pears (Asian pears are supposed to be good), chestnuts, pinenuts, seseme seeds. Heidi S Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 6, 2003 Report Share Posted March 6, 2003 In a message dated 3/6/03 4:38:03 PM Eastern Standard Time, jopollack2001@... writes: > Maybe it's just a normal part of the fermenting process that others > haven't noticed cos they have the patience to wait until a food is > properly fermented! lol! :-) I think it is mostly a difference in taste for salt. Were you on previously on a no-salt or low-salt diet? I've noticed that many people on this list have mentioned a problem with the salty taste of l-f foods, and others have never noticed. Given that this list is largely made up of people who have experimented with a variety of different diets that either didn't fix their health problems, made them worse, or caused them, quite a few vegetarians for example, there are probably a lot of salt-free people, another common fad. I've never noticed a salty taste, but I've always eaten salty food. Chris ____ " What can one say of a soul, of a heart, filled with compassion? It is a heart which burns with love for every creature: for human beings, birds, and animals, for serpents and for demons. The thought of them and the sight of them make the tears of the saint flow. And this immense and intense compassion, which flows from the heart of the saints, makes them unable to bear the sight of the smallest, most insignificant wound in any creature. Thus they pray ceaselessly, with tears, even for animals, for enemies of the truth, and for those who do them wrong. " --Saint Isaac the Syrian Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 6, 2003 Report Share Posted March 6, 2003 To the person asking about salty sauerkraut - I'm a novice at fermenting. I have just made ginger carrots which only had a little salt in them. I have just tasted a little moouthful and they were disgustingly salty! Also had a slightly soapy taste to them (is that indicative of an alkaline substance?) Maybe it's just a normal part of the fermenting process that others haven't noticed cos they have the patience to wait until a food is properly fermented! lol! :-) Jo Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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