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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Oh, my, I am shocked you arenât promoting the excellent probiotic qualities of homemade sauerkraut. For many years I would make kraut in my Marshall pottery five gallon crock every summer and then would can it for long term storage. We seldom ate it all before a new season began, and by âcookingâ the fermented cabbage, the resulting product lost the wonderful flavor of raw sauerkraut. At the time, I failed to realize I was âmurderingâ the wonderful health benefits of uncooked sauerkraut.
I would encourage those of you who are serious about creating a delicious, healthy food rich with friendly bacteria to hold off making sauerkraut in large quantities, but rather use quart jars with fermenting lids (such as Pickle Pipes or The Easy Fermenter brands) and DO NOT can the final product! One tablespoon of raw sauerkraut far exceeds the benefit of taking several probiotic capsules to promote gut health.
When should I add caraway seeds & in what amount?
I have seen them, I have one, but it's not exactly an official potato masher , They were used for canning and packing the product . My grandma had one and I got it. And yes, it will mash up potatoes in a pinch. If there are any official type wooden potato mashers, I haven't seen one.
You mention wooden spoon and/or potato masher...."wooden potato masher"??? I have a metal can I use a metal potato masher? Never saw a wooden potato masher? Please clarify! Thank You!!
This is second year attempting kraut (1st yr disaster). This year we are trying small batch of carrot and cabbage kraut, fermenting w/o warmth (our daytime average high temp in summer is 70F, low 60F at night in house). We started, kept clean and skimmed and then after two weeks forgot it. Today I took out weights and rinsed them. Noticed few fruit fly eggs on top of upper weight out of brine and at edge of crock lip. No scum visible but did notice few ribbons about the width of egg noodles barely rise then settled to bottom out of sight -- its not cabbage as it splits easily into pieces. It doesn't smell bad in the crock but there isn't a sharp smell of kraut either. I'm afraid to taste it because of this white thing(s) that floated. Can someone out there advise? Do you think it is safe to eat?
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