Homemade Sauerkraut Recipe & Tips
Introduction to Preserving
Freezing
Making Quick Pickles
Making Quick Jams: Refrigerator or Freezer Jam
Water-Bath Canning
How to Can Tomatoes
How to Can Pickles
How to Can Jam and Jelly
Pressure Canning
Drying
Salting and Brining
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I have sauerkraut in a crock for 6 weeks now and it still smells yeasty is it still good mold floating on top as well
Mold takes advantage of any air-contact space on the top of the brine. Scrape it off. The sauerkraut is still edible. We are concerned about the 鈥測easty smell鈥 though.
Can I use red cabbage? And if I wanted to use just 1 lb what would the amounts be for the salt,and water etc? Thank you
Point 4, to make more brine ... . It states, "add 1-1/2tsp. to 1c. water". 1-1/2tsp. of WHAT to 1c. water? Thanks.
Hi, CJ. Add 1-1/2 teaspoons of salt to 1 cup of water.
If you like curry, add some to the freshly prepared cabbage before you ferment it. Delish.
Just made 10 pints of sauerkraut, cut up the cabbage, stuffed into the jars, added 1/2 teaspoon of salt to each jar, added different spices to each. Filled each jar with hot boiling water to cover the cabbage, left the lids loose. This is my mothers recipe for sauerkraut that turned out great. Except I know she never had a place to store the jars at a cool temperature below 70deg. If I put these pints jars in a refrigerator temp below 40, with lids left loose, will the sauerkraut still make good??
making sauerkraut and kimchi and any naturally-fermented pickled veggies is fine, but remember if you want digestive aid, that will only happen if you consume the finished product WITHOUT heating. if you cook the fermented products, all probiotics die. why do these sites never mention this? same with sourdough bread. unless you eat the raw dough, which i do not suggest, all probiotics die upon reaching a relatively low heat.
Hello. The first part of this thread has Dan Carr commenting on eating it raw for various reasons. Maybe the book he mentions has more info in it.
We've made kraut for years, and used to make about 100 lbs at a time! Canning was always a very time consuming process, and one time after making, my late father mentioned that on the farm, in Manitoba they used to simply put the crock in the back porch over the winter, where it froze! When they wanted some, would go out with an ice pick and chip off the amount, and then cook it! That got me thinking, and tried freezing the raw kraut in zip lock bags! We tried it and would never can it again! Simply open the frozen bag and cook it!