Recipes
Sauerkraut
This traditional and humble dish truly is a part of nature’s pure magic. Did you know that when you make sauerkraut, the nutritional value of the vegetables multiplies!
Fermentation process increases the bioavailability of nutrients rendering sauerkraut even more nutritious than the original cabbage. It is rich with live active enzymes and probiotics. The tart flavour helps to stimulate digestive acids, contains immune supportive and anti carcinogenic acids that further improve gut heath. And it tast super yummy too. A spon full of fermeted food balances the flavours on your plate by adding a sour element to contrast more subtle flavours making your dish bounch around your palette in a deliscious and exciting way.
Ingredients
Himalayan crystal salt
Cabbage
Filtered water
Optional ingredients
Ginger
Caraway seeds
Garlic
Onion
Ratio
15 gram (1 table spoon) per 1 kg cabbage (vegetable)
Special tools
A crock pot or a jar with a fermentation/air-lock lid that seals the jar and stops air coming in and lets the gas from the fermentation process out.
Method
Keep 2 healthy cabbage leaves aside. Grate the remaining cabbage finely.
Weigh the cabbage and measure out the correct amount of salt.
Mix the salt and cabbage. Kneed together to allow the salt to draw out the cabbage juice. Add your choice of spices and mix into the cabbage.
Place the cabbage mixture in a crock pot or fermentation jar, pushing the cabbage firmly in place. Cover the cabbage with the cabbage leaves tucking the leaf around the edge, making a cover that stops the cabbage from floating into the brine. Poor over the brine. Fully submerge the cabbage and include a minimum of 4 – 6 cm centimeters brine above the surface of the cabbage.
The cabbage must be covered by the brine throughout the fermentation process or it can go moldy. Seal the jar and leave in a dark place at room temperature for a minimum of 3 weeks and up to 8 weeks. Check to make sure there is enough brine during the process, warmer temperatures will induce faster fermentation.
When the sauerkraut has the desired taste and texture, store in clean glass jars in the fridge. Serve as a condiment alongside breakfast lunch or dinner.
Salting & brine
Salt for the cabbage: Use 15 gram salt (1 table spoon) per 1 kg cabbage.
Brine: Dissolve 15 gram salt (1 table spoon) in 1 litre filtered water (water with fluoride, chlorine and other chemicals will slow down and or inhibit the fermentation process). The salt dissolves easier in warm water. Leave to become room temperature, do not add to the cabbage mixture when hot as this will kill the natural bacteria that induces the fermentation process..
Enjoy!