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Homemade Sauerkraut

Libby

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So I have been eating sauerkraut all this time patting myself on the back for being very healthy only to learn NOW that apparently canned sauerkraut DOESN'T COUNT as the canning process KILLS valuable nutrients and enzymes, essential to its rejuvenative powers. Damn. But never fear recipe for Homemade Sauerkraut right here!
I found it at http://www.nutritionarticlesonline.com/power_foods.html

Homemade sauerkraut is very easy to make. This Recipe is guaranteed to wake up your favorite dishes, especially stir fry, sandwiches, salads and meat dishes of any kind.

All you need is;

6-10 organic summer cabbages (if no summer cabbage available, autumn cabbages are fine)

4-6 Tbsp pickling or Celtic salt

2-4 inches of ginger root

Crock pot OR 5 gallon food grade bucket

2 strong, no leak plastic bags (white kitchen garbage bags work great).

A few gallons of boiled Purified Water

The Process:

The cabbage needs to be organic or the pesticides will kill the natural bacterias required for fermentation. Also, organic cabbage is higher is nutrients since the soil its grown in richer in nutrients than stripped commercial soil.

Salt is necessary for the fermentation process to occur. Use only rock (pickling) salt or Celtic salt or Real Salt, never iodized table salt. Celtic salt is a whole, unprocessed real salt that is rich in minerals and trace minerals, containing roughly 35% sodium, plenty for cabbage fermentation.

As a Nutritionist, I highly recommend you use Celtic or Real salt instead of table salt for your daily salt intake.

OK…cut your cabbages (start with 4-6 for your first try, but if you have a large family, you can easily cut up 10-15 cabbages) with a sharp French knife or food processor. Cut in coleslaw size slices. Put in your cleaned, 5-gallon food safe bucket (left over food buckets from your local restaurant or grocer are perfect).

Add 2-4 inches of chopped ginger root. Try to pick ginger root that’s not too woody, the younger the better, but use whatever you can find. You can add more if you love ginger like I do! I add about 3 times that amount and it’s not too hot at all, but I LOVE ginger!

*If you’re not a fan of ginger, its no problem to omit this entirely.

*Optional, I love to add one chopped lemon at this stage, but that’s a matter of taste, some people like their foods “sour”, others don’t.

Stir Celtic or Real Salt into cabbage/ginger mix at a ratio of 1 tsp per pound of cabbage. Most cabbages are about 1-2 lbs each.

Mix well but gently; you don’t want to bruise the cabbage.

When well mixed, pound it to the bottom of the bucket with your fists or potato-masher until it’s all compacted in the bottom. Layer a few whole cabbage leaves on top (if you remembered to leave some unchopped).

Pour boiled, purified water (if you only have chlorinated tap water available, boil this water for 5 minutes) over the cabbage with an inch covering the top. So you should have about an inch of water showing on the top of the cabbage.

Fill your two kitchen garbage bags (must have no leaks; shopping bags do not work) with about a gallon of tap water each. Gently put the two bags on top of the cabbage, one on top of the other, as a lid. The softness of the bags will allow the natural gasses to escape, while keeping oxygen off of the cabbage. Do not put a tight lid on this container now. The bags of water are the lid.

Put in a cool but not cold corner of your home; don’t leave near a heating vent or out in the cold porch. OR, you can put it in a warm place (but not hot) for two days, then move to a cooler place for 2-3 weeks. I know successful sauerkraut makers who just leave it for 2-3 weeks in room temperature quite succesfully. Myself, I like to leave it in my living room for two days so that I can giggle at the little burps it makes. If you have kids, they’ll love this part. Within hours of mixing this up, the pot will start to burp for a few days, and then it will slow down after the initial fermentation slows down. Then I move it to the coolest room in my home (not the freezing porch) for about 2-3 weeks. Let sit undisturbed, savoring the tastes its about to deliver.

You can start removing the sauerkraut as you need it, for weeks. If you have any left after about a month, you should store in your fridge while you start a new batch.

Gardeners like to use up their cabbage by making enough sauerkraut to can for the year. You can do this and its OK, but fresh, uncanned kraut is superior to canned, in taste and nutrient value. However, home canned kraut is far superior to commercially canned. And sometimes you just need to do something with all those cabbages in the garden.

Note on Crock Pots; this is not essential but if you have a good crock-pot, use it. The ideal crock-pot is a Harsch Crock Pot, which has a nifty water well at the top for the lid to sit in, the water creates a seal so the gasses can escape but oxygen cannot get in. The Harsch Crock Pot is extremely solid and well made. You’ll most likely have to order this through your local health food store or online. They aren’t cheap but they work perfectly and will last long enough to be passed onto your great-grand children.

This ginger-sauerkraut is so delicious, you’ll want to give it away to your loved ones, but don’t be too generous, or you’ll soon be missing your favorite nutritional ingredient.
 
^I only eat sauerkraut for the minerals and probiotic benefits, not so much the taste.
However I am looking forward to this homemade sauerkraut being better than the canned kind, which is not really sauerkraut but apparently just cabbage canned in vinegar lol.

I do the whole 5 healing foods (Kelp, Sauerkraut, Ginger, Cayenne Pepper, Garlic) thing.

Eating lactic acid-fermented cabbage is the number one way to restore your natural digestion so it doesn’t have acid reflux, burping and indigestion. Rich in Vitamin C and digestive enzymes, sauerkraut has a unique harmonizing effect on the stomach; it strengthens the acidity of the gastric juice when hydrochloric acid production lags, and reduces the acidity when production is up! No other food does this. It’s inherently a booster and an inhibitor of HCL.

So when you eat a little sauerkraut before or with every meal, especially later in the day with heavier meals, you’re basically unlocking your secretion glands according to their need. Besides chewing your food well, there’s not a more important step to take in assimilating your food.

You’re not what you eat; you’re what you assimilate. If you have poor stomach acids, you’re not taking the necessary step to assimilate your food. Sauerkraut will also “sweeten” your small and large intestine, as well as provide you with vitamin C.

To promote optimal digestion, include with most meals and if you already have indigestion, drink a few tablespoons of sauerkraut juice (never throw your excess juice away!) and you’ll feel instant relief. You don’t need to eat a lot of sauerkraut, 3-5 tablespoons a day is highly beneficial.

As I mentioned earlier, commercially canned sauerkraut is not the same as homemade. Homemade, unpasteurized sauerkraut is a Power Food. Once you’re tasted homemade kraut, you’ll never want commercial again, it doesn’t taste or act the same. Some commercial kraut isn’t even fermented; it’s just canned in vinegar, and tastes like it too.

If you’ve only experienced this type of kraut, you’re in for a treat. I include it in most of my recipes. It’s an excellent flavor booster to salads, stir fries, fruits, salsas and sandwiches, try it in everything!
 
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I love sauerkraut but I would never eat it if I knew that plastic trash bags where used in the process of making it. Those cannot be "food safe" since they're designed to hold things to be thrown out...

(Yes, I read that the bags are sitting on top--They're still touching the cabbage for quite awhile, amidst all that fermentation... Yeah, no thanks.)
 
addictivepersona - Umm clean kitchen garbage bags, not used ones.
How can they be bad? They are just plastic, just like eating off of plastic plates or drinking out of plastic cups I would imagine. I think you just have an aversion to the trash bags because the word "trash" is stuck in your psyche, at no point will any garbage come in contact with your fabulous kraut. I would have started mine today but am yet to procure a 19 litre food safe bucket (hadn't registered just how large 5 gallons really is, being used to metric and all).

i like kraut on a hot dog... Kind ruins the goodness of the kraut by eating the pink slime with it i know. Still tastes good.
On the contrary! the kraut actually lowers some of the negative effects of the hot dog, indigestion for example GONE. Probably the best time to have sauerkraut is when eating something like a hotdog.
 
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addictivepersona - Umm clean kitchen garbage bags, not used ones.
How can they be bad? They are just plastic, just like eating off of plastic plates or drinking out of plastic cups I would imagine. I think you just have an aversion to the trash bags because the word "trash" is stuck in your psyche, at no point will any garbage come in contact with your fabulous kraut. I would have started mine today but am yet to procure a 19 litre food safe bucket (hadn't registered just how large 5 gallons really is, being used to metric and all).
Nah, I'm aware it would be a clean plastic bag--My aversion comes from the plastic that isn't food-grade and meant to store food sitting next to fermenting food for days on end.
 
Yeah, using kitchen garbage bags wouldn't be ideal - I doubt it would be particularly dangerous, but it would probably leave a strange taste. I would use Oven Bags instead - you can find them at any grocery store.
 
Are you worried about BPA or something?
I figured the only reason they mention "food-safe" in reference to the bucket is just so you don't use the same bucket you clean your floors with or use for puke when someone is sick/drunk. Didn't really think general plastic was really unhealthy to store foods in *shrug* Oven bags it is then.
 
As a Nutritionist, I highly recommend you use Celtic or Real salt instead of table salt for your daily salt intake.

I won't comment on taste, but these health claims are nonsense. The levels of trace minerals in rock salt are always too low to matter. The only thing present in any noticeable quantity is magnesium, and there's more magnesium in a handful of almonds than an entire pound of rock salt. There is also some iodine in sea salt, which I'm not even going to say it.

Fancy salt is like fancy bottled water. Except sometimes it's pink.
 
Iodine is good for you so... I don't see the problem with either salt.

I use loSalt generally, it accommodates for occasional diet pepsi... just sharing...
 
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Libby, after looking for ingredients of LoSalt, I found that in order to reduce sodium intake, LoSalt's main ingredient is potassium chloride. I see no reason why we need to stray from what has been fine for humans and other creatures on earth for millions of years to take part in trying to lower your intake of an important mineral.

Salt is needed in the human body and in the bodies of other organisms. Just don't eat a lot of it.
 
addictive persona said:
Nah, I'm aware it would be a clean plastic bag--My aversion comes from the plastic that isn't food-grade and meant to store food sitting next to fermenting food for days on end.

What is the problem? Would polymers somehow leech out differently in comparison to other plastic containers?

libby said:
So I have been eating sauerkraut all this time patting myself on the back for being very healthy only to learn NOW that apparently canned sauerkraut DOESN'T COUNT as the canning process KILLS valuable nutrients and enzymes, essential to its rejuvenative powers.

Well, stomach acid denatures most enzymes quite effectively, and all mineral nutrients can weather canning processes. Would the main issue be killing pro-biotic cultures?

ebola
 
What is the problem? Would polymers somehow leech out differently in comparison to other plastic containers?
The smell of plastic garbage bags lead me to presume that they would leave a foul taste and therefore have leeched into the 'kraut. But no, it wouldn't be any different than other plastics as far as I know. Guess I should've said up there that I tend to avoid the use of plastics, especially one-time-use plastics.
 
ebola - yes I think the main issue is the killing pro-biotic cultures

Simply_Live - are you saying I should be using regular salt not LoSalt? It seemed like a good idea to switch to LoSalt as diet sodas are high in sodium and I like to drink them even though they are not terribly healthy.
 
I'll tell you something right now and you may or may not believe me, but diet sodas are no less worse for you than regular sodas. I believe there is nothing wrong with having a higher sodium intake as long as you're not getting it from the things we normally associate with it: fast food, 2,000 + calorie meals, etc.

I just don't see the point of switching to a low-salt alternative when salt isn't even bad for you! If I'm not mistaken, it's a mineral that is necessary for our bodies.
 
Yeah I don't drink diet soda over regular soda because of some false belief that diet soda is less unhealthy. Drinking a glass of soda that has 351 calories when I could have pretty much the same thing for 0.8 calories is just something I could not bring myself to do. I know it's unhealthy but that's why I try not to drink it too often (same with drugs, only occassionally).

And I know salt is good for you, but too much of it isn't and apparently most people consume too much of it. I get salt in my sauerkraut, and kelp, and sometimes I use soy sauce, drink diet soda etc. Although it is hard to quantify exactly how high my sodium intake is so.. not sure if using LoSalt in my cooking is necessary or not really. *shrug*
 
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