Thursday, May 27, 2010

Russian Grandma Homemade Sauerkraut = Good



Why eat sauerkraut?
  • You won’t get scurvy.
  • Your digestive system will be very happy.
  • And some people even claim your love life will improve. (This was what got Owl interested.)

But these are all just ruses to get you to try sauerkraut—created by people who know a very good secret: good sauerkraut is goooood.

My friend E.D. learned how to make this sauerkraut from a Russian grandma. I must admit, I was skeptical at first. As much as I love a good kitchen experiment, leaving some cabbage in a jar for a month sounded like bacterial roulette. But it works. Read about the science behind it here.

Russian Grandma Sauerkraut

What is most innovative about this recipe is the method of putting the sauerkraut in a manageable size—a quart jar. It requires no large stones on top of vats of fermenting sauerkraut.


Prep time: 15 minutes

Wait time: 3-6 weeks, depending on temperature


1 head green cabbage
2 carrots
2 tablespoons SALT, plain SALT—not iodized salt—sea salt if you are fancy
Wide mouth quart jar

1. Chop cabbage and carrots—E.D. does this with a knife. I use a medium grating disk on my food processor for ease. It needs to be fairly fine to get it into a jar.

2. Put cabbage and carrots in a big old bowl and mix salt into it. Of course, you will be wanting to know if you have enough salt because that is what is keep the bad bacteria at bay. A good test for this is to taste the salted cabbage. If you want to spit it out, then you have enough.

3. Let sit for 10 minutes. At this point, it will release water if you squeeze it.

4. Grab handfuls of cabbage and knuckle them down into the jar, pressing on the cabbage to make sure there are no air bubbles and that the water remains above the cabbage.With the amounts listed, the sauerkraut should fill the jar.



5. Put a jar lid and ring on. Put the jar on a plate and place in a cooler place (60-70ish degrees). It will release more liquid in the first week, which is why you want to have a plate underneath.

6. Let sit without disturbing for 3-6 weeks. This is a step you will just have to learn by trial and error. I usually open mine at 3-4 weeks, and that is perfect for my taste. It will continue to develop its sour flavor the longer you let it sit. But once you open the jar, it is done with fermentation.

7. After opening, refrigerate. (Alternately, if you are like E.D., you can make 11 jars at once and store through the winter in a root cellar. I’m sure Russian Grandma would heartily approve.)

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Why another food blog?

In short, to save my relationships. Not everyone wants to hear about the obsessions of a sauerkraut maker.

I love a food blog that describes not only recipes, but an approach to eating, shopping, and cooking. That’s what I hope to do.

Disclosures: I bake at 4577 feet. I live 46.4 miles from Whole Foods and 339 from Trader Joes.  I have never eaten caviar or a Big Mac.

I’m in it for the pancakes

As far as I’m concerned, this entire blog exists for me to have a place to store my pancake recipe. [Edit: here it is.] At least, that’s my reason for having a blog. (And isn’t it good enough?) Cat has her own reasons.

Cat tells me I need to make some disclaimers:

Disclaimer 1) This blog is not peer reviewed.

But I promise that if I do any double-blind experiments for this blog, I’ll do what I can to make them respectable.

Disclaimer 2) I have the metabolism of a superhero.

Those are her words. I prefer to say that I’m highly inefficient in my energy use. This makes for a cozy arrangement, since she likes to cook and I like to eat. She loves me for the foods that I can eat, and I love her that she can cook them. So to speak.