• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

What did I cook this weekend.....

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Thank you. I'm all over doing it if I don't have to pound it. I'll use the slicer and get it very thin. If you don't mind one more question, should I cover it with some type of liquid?
I made sour cream, which was fun to do, but nothing to write home about or any better than Daisy which uses just cream.

If you're talking about sauer kraut, put the cabbage in your crock or whatever container you're using. Keep it submerged by putting a big ziplock baggie full of water on top of it. That's what I do, anyway, works great.
 
If you're talking about sauer kraut, put the cabbage in your crock or whatever container you're using. Keep it submerged by putting a big ziplock baggie full of water on top of it. That's what I do, anyway, works great.

Thank you. I'll certainly use a bag of water as a weight. That just leaves what liquid to soak the cabbage in unless it's going to generate its own juice as it spoils. Obviously, this will be my first time making sauerkraut.
I'm intend to put cheese cloth on as a cover. I would also appreciate any basic tips like if/when to add salt or who knows what.
 
Thank you. I'll certainly use a bag of water as a weight. That just leaves what liquid to soak the cabbage in unless it's going to generate its own juice as it spoils. Obviously, this will be my first time making sauerkraut.
I'm intend to put cheese cloth on as a cover. I would also appreciate any basic tips like if/when to add salt or who knows what.

I've made it a couple of times. I just shredded it, packed it down into my huge jar as best I could, and added some water and salt. When the cabbage starts getting soft, it compacts down a lot, but it'll still float. You don't want any of it over the level of the water. Don't worry, cabbage just wants to be sauerkraut, just add water and cover and wait.

At least put a couple of tbsp of salt in for a head of cabbage.
 
I have a batch of kraut going now. I sliced the cabbage with a mandolin putting it in a large bowl distributing the salt as I go. I also smush it around with my hands working the salt into the cabbage before I put it in the crock and tamp it down. This past batch made enough liquid to fully cover the ceramic weights... that hasn't happened before, so I guess the cabbage was nice and fresh.
 
8986CFCA-82CE-464E-8915-CBD5533D3D24.jpeg

Had this grilled top round with a green salad.
 
You dont need to pound the cabbage/salt mixture. I never do. Mix in 2% salt by weight by hand. Let it set 2 hours in a bowl covered with a clean cloth. Give it a good mix up every 20min.

9 grams of salt per pound is about 2%. Thats roughly 1/2 tbs of Mortons canning salt.
19 grams per quart of water is about 2%.

After the 2 hours pack it tight in a mason jar. If you dont have a kraut packer use a glass bottle that fits inside the jar.

Place the jar in a cabinet that stays sorta warm like one over the fridge. You dont have to have an airlock. Use the Mason band and lid lightly finger tight. VERY LIGHTLY. It will burp on its own. Leave it alone for at least 5 days then give it a quick sniff. Dont leave the lid off long, do it as fast as possible.

If the jar is very full place it in a bowl or pan in case it overflows.
 
Made some stir fry tonight. Velveting the meat is a PITA, but worth it.

Totally better texture and flavor.
What did you velvet with. I have heard egg whites or baking soda?

Still looking for some doughnut tips, if anyone has them?
 
I got this to go with my new pizza oven. The bottom seems weird, shouldnt it be flat. Anyways hoping perfect fit fo oven
 
Back
Top