Farmacy And Pickling
Red Cabbage Kimchi
Homemade kimchi is a pungent and complex blend of flavors owing to traditional spices (gochugaru, garlic and ginger) as well as a puree of Asian pear and yellow onion, which adds a subtle sweetness without the need for sugar.
Ingreadient
- 2 pounds red cabbage, chopped
- 1/4 cup pickling salt
- 1/2 pound daikon, julienned
- 1/2 pound carrot, julienned
- 6 green onions, sliced into 1-inch segments
- 4 cloves garlic, minced
- 1-inch piece fresh ginger, peeled and minced
- 1 small Asian pear (or apple), peeled, cored and chopped
- 1 small yellow onion, chopped
- 1 cup dechlorinated water
- 1/2 cup gochugaru (Korean red pepper powder)
- 2 tablespoons fish sauce
Direction
- Chop Cabbage
- In a very large bowl, massage the salt into the cabbage until the leaves start to release liquid.
- Cover with water and let the cabbage sit at room temperature for at least two hours while the salt draws out moisture.
- Periodically toss the cabbage and work your hands through the leaves to expel more moisture.
- After about two hours, the cabbage should be soft and limp, and the volume reduced in half. (If yours is still firm and full, come back to it after another hour or two.)
- Strain the cabbage and rinse under running water to remove excess salt.
- Strain again, then return the cabbage to the bowl. Add daikon, carrot, green onions, garlic, and ginger.
- In a blender, combine the Asian pear (or apple, if using), yellow onion, water, gochugaru, and fish sauce, and give everything a whirl until smooth. Pour the sauce over the vegetables.
- Now, don some gloves (the sauce can be pretty spicy and smelly to work with!) and give the kimchi a good rubdown, making sure the veggies are well combined and coated with sauce.
- Pack the kimchi into jars, leaving 1 to 2 inches of headspace. The veggies will expand and release more liquid as they ferment, so you don’t want to overfill the jars.
- Tamp down the veggies with the back of a spoon to fully submerge them. I find that there’s always enough liquid in the jars to keep them submerged, and since the liquid is more of a paste, the veggies don’t float to the top as in other ferments.
- Wipe the rims clean, then loosely seal with lids and let the jars ferment at room temperature, out of direct sunlight, for at least three days. (It wouldn’t be a bad idea to place the jars in a shallow baking dish to catch any overflow of liquid.)
- Every day, press down on the veggies with a spoon to expel more liquid and make sure everything is shipshape. A proper ferment should have no mold and no off smell.
- After three days, you can start tasting the kimchi; refrigerate when the flavor has fermented to your liking. It should take on a spicy, sour taste
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