Sauerkraut Recipes

   / Sauerkraut Recipes
  • Thread Starter
#91  
Next Friday will be 4 weeks on the first batch. Twice the water level in the rim went lower faster than evaporation could account for. I did not want to add water if the kraut was drawing a vacuum and have the rim water get sucked into the brine. So I lifted the lid and sure enough, water gurgled back out and the rim water level was back to normal. I am not recalling this or in the past I just assumed the lower level was due to evaporation. Unfortunately this gave the crock a dose of oxygen. Does anyone see this with their water lock crocks? House is running on the heat pump and fairly constant at 69 degF.
 
   / Sauerkraut Recipes #92  
Next Friday will be 4 weeks on the first batch. Twice the water level in the rim went lower faster than evaporation could account for. I did not want to add water if the kraut was drawing a vacuum and have the rim water get sucked into the brine. So I lifted the lid and sure enough, water gurgled back out and the rim water level was back to normal. I am not recalling this or in the past I just assumed the lower level was due to evaporation. Unfortunately this gave the crock a dose of oxygen. Does anyone see this with their water lock crocks? House is running on the heat pump and fairly constant at 69 degF.

My Harsch crocks do the same thing. I just add some more water to the gutter (never take the lid off). When you do you'll get Kalm on the surface of the brine because the oxygen will react with the fermentation inside. Resist that temptation (to remove the lid). My big open top crocks, I use a tight fitting ceramic dinner plate (inverted) with a clean stone on top of the plate (for pressure) and cover the entire crock with a black plastic garbage bag (new of course, not used) and forget about it for a month.

Didn't pickle anything this year, have plenty of canned stuff in the root cellar. Just did taters in mesh sacks, onions in mesh sacks and carrots, layered in sand in tubs. I like to leave my carrots in the ground until we have at least one hard frost before digging. That way, the carrots get 'sweeter'. Next year will be a cabbage and tomato year and probably green beans too. Maybe some corn relish as well.
 
   / Sauerkraut Recipes #93  
Both my wife and me can, from our gardens, but we have more than enough tomatoes already canned, so I'm not going to can any this year... I did start a batch of ketchup yesterday, and she finished it and canned it last night...

I grew up with my dad making kraut every fall from our own cabbage, then as a kid I started making it with him. He learned from his mother, and of course, I from him, but once dad was gone, I quit making it...

I still have numerous crocks around here that we made kraut, dills ect.. in... Long ago, I use to make corned beef in crocks too, except it was corned moose and caribou... lol

SR

I love good corned beef; and I know from experience that some is better than others. I met a lady once upon a time that told me that she made her own, and it was better...much better...than anything that you could buy in the grocery store. Has this been your experience? And if so...do you have a recipe that you like and could share with the boys?
 
   / Sauerkraut Recipes
  • Thread Starter
#94  
I love good corned beef; and I know from experience that some is better than others. I met a lady once upon a time that told me that she made her own, and it was better...much better...than anything that you could buy in the grocery store. Has this been your experience? And if so...do you have a recipe that you like and could share with the boys?

I would like to hear about corned beef in a crock as well. I would like to give that a try, I assume in a wide top crock?

Another thing I am going to try this afternoon that I never have done before is pickled green tomatoes. I have too many that are not going to ripen.
 
   / Sauerkraut Recipes #95  
I've never had anything to do with making corned beef; wouldn't even know where to start, but I sure do like corned beef that I buy.

And I've never had anything to do with pickling tomatoes; green or otherwise. But I've certainly enjoyed eating pickled green tomatoes at the Catfish Corner in Ardmore, OK.
 
   / Sauerkraut Recipes #96  
I've never had anything to do with making corned beef; wouldn't even know where to start, but I sure do like corned beef that I buy.

And I've never had anything to do with pickling tomatoes; green or otherwise. But I've certainly enjoyed eating pickled green tomatoes at the Catfish Corner in Ardmore, OK.

Tomatoes are easy. In fact, any acid based vegetable is easy to can.

How you doing Bird? I see you don't post much anymore.
 
   / Sauerkraut Recipes #97  
How you doing Bird? I see you don't post much anymore.

I reckon I'm doing as well as could be expected for an old man.:laughing: But I had to move back to town some time ago to care for my mother, so I don't have as much to do, or to say, about tractors as I used to.:laughing:
 
   / Sauerkraut Recipes
  • Thread Starter
#98  
Tomatoes are easy. In fact, any acid based vegetable is easy to can.
I am going to try fermenting, then refrigerating them rather than canning but yes, it sounds like the results should be good.
 
   / Sauerkraut Recipes #99  
I am going to try fermenting, then refrigerating them rather than canning but yes, it sounds like the results should be good.

Best dill pickles i ever had were fermented. At the time i didn't know there was another, more prevalent way to make pickles, but apparently fermentation was the way it was done, before easy cheap supply of acetic acid.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

PALLET OF PICK BUMPERS (A50854)
PALLET OF PICK...
2016 Ford Fusion Sedan (A50324)
2016 Ford Fusion...
100 GAL FUEL TANK (A50854)
100 GAL FUEL TANK...
2013 CATERPILLAR 420F BACKHOE (A51242)
2013 CATERPILLAR...
2016 JLG 3248RS 32ft Electric Scissor Lift (A50322)
2016 JLG 3248RS...
2012 MAGNUM TRAILER (A50854)
2012 MAGNUM...
 
Top