**Cabbage kimchi**, a staple food in Korean cuisine, is a fermented dish made from napa cabbage and Korean radish. It has a spicy, sour, and savory flavor, due to the fermentation process. Cabbage kimchi is a versatile dish, used in a variety of dishes, from traditional Korean stews and soups to modern fusion dishes. With this article, we bring you the ultimate guide to making delicious and authentic cabbage kimchi at home. Our recipes cover a range of variations, from traditional to modern, to suit various tastes and preferences. Whether you're a kimchi-making pro or a beginner, our detailed instructions and tips will help you create the perfect kimchi. So, get ready to embark on a culinary journey and discover the delightful flavors of this Korean classic.
**Recipes included in the article:**
1. **Traditional Cabbage Kimchi**: This recipe follows the classic method of making kimchi, using napa cabbage, Korean radish, garlic, ginger, gochugaru (Korean chili powder), and other traditional seasonings. It provides step-by-step instructions for preparing, fermenting, and storing the kimchi.
2. **Vegan Cabbage Kimchi**: For those following a plant-based diet, this recipe offers a delicious vegan version of kimchi. It uses tofu instead of fish sauce, and offers alternatives for other ingredients to ensure a fully vegan kimchi.
3. **Spicy Cabbage Kimchi**: If you love spicy food, this recipe is for you. It includes a generous amount of gochugaru, along with other spices, to create a kimchi with a fiery kick.
4. **Modern Cabbage Kimchi with Apple**: This fusion recipe adds a sweet and tangy twist to the classic kimchi. It incorporates grated apple, along with traditional kimchi ingredients, resulting in a unique and flavorful kimchi.
5. **Quick and Easy Cabbage Kimchi**: Short on time? This recipe offers a simplified version of kimchi, using a quick fermentation method. It allows you to enjoy delicious kimchi in a shorter time frame.
ULTIMATE CABBAGE KIMCHI
Use this traditional kimchi recipe from Marja Vongerichten's "The Kimchi Chronicles" to make Grilled Steak with Kimchi Butter and Hot Dogs with Kimchi Relish.
Provided by Martha Stewart
Yield Makes about 6 quarts
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- Remove outer leave from cabbages and quarter each lengthwise; remove and discard cores. Slice each quarter crosswise into 2-inch pieces.
- Fill a clean sink with cold water and add cabbage to the water; let dirt and grit sink to bottom. Remove cabbage from water, leaving dirt behind. Drain sink and rinse. Refill sink with water and repeat process.
- Using very large bowls, layer cabbage with salt; let stand 45 minutes. Using your hands, toss cabbage, and let stand 45 minutes more. Fill sink with cold water and add cabbage to the water. Remove cabbage; drain sink and rinse; repeat process to remove all the salt.
- Fill a large saucepan with 3 cups water; whisk in rice powder. Bring rice powder mixture to a simmer over low heat, whisking constantly, until mixture thickens, about 3 minutes. Add sugar and cook 1 minute more. Remove saucepan from heat and let cool completely. To speed cooling process, fill a large bowl with ice water. Submerge pot into ice-water bath until liquid is cooled.
- Place ginger, garlic, and onion in the jar of a blender or bowl of a food processor; puree until smooth. Add fish sauce and mix to combine.
- Place cooled rice powder mixture, ginger mixture, radish, scallions, red pepper powder, and salted shrimp in a large bowl. Wearing disposable plastic gloves and, using your hands, mix until well combined. Add cabbage and continue mixing until well combined.
- Transfer cabbage mixture to six glass quart containers or a large plastic container, packing cabbage tightly to remove as much air as possible. Place plastic wrap directly on surface of cabbage before covering containers with lids. Let stand at room temperature for 2 to 4 days. Transfer to refrigerator for up to 6 months. Be sure to press down on kimchi to remove as much air as possible after each use.
SPICY CABBAGE KIMCHI
Kimchi, a popular Korean dish, is best described as a spicy, slightly sweet, pickled or fermented cabbage. I spent a year in South Korea and fell in LOVE with Kimchi! My friend Myong was kind enough to share her recipe and technique with me. Some ingredients may not be readily available in your local supermarket. Look for Kimchi (Fish) Sauce and Korean chili powder in Asian markets or online. Use kimchi in stir fries or your favorite Korean dishes.
Provided by GochisosamaDeshita
Categories Side Dish Sauces and Condiments Recipes Canning and Preserving Recipes
Time P4DT7h
Yield 56
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- Cut the cabbages in half lengthwise and trim the ends. Rinse and cut into pieces about 2 inch square. Place the cabbage into large resealable bags and sprinkle salt on the leaves so they are evenly coated. Use your hands to rub the salt in to the leaves. Seal the bags and leave at room temperature for 6 hours.
- Rinse the salt from the cabbage leaves and then drain and squeeze out any excess liquid. Place the cabbage in a large container with a tight fitting lid. Stir in the fish sauce, green onions, white onion, garlic, sugar and ginger. Sprinkle the Korean chile powder over the mixture. Wear plastic gloves to protect your hands and rub the chile powder into the cabbage leaves until evenly coated. Seal the container and set in a cool dry place. Leave undisturbed for 4 days. Refrigerate before serving, and store in the refrigerator for up to 1 month (if it lasts that long!).
Nutrition Facts : Calories 11.7 calories, Carbohydrate 2.4 g, Fat 0.2 g, Fiber 0.8 g, Protein 0.6 g, Sodium 1916.5 mg, Sugar 1.2 g
KIMCHI (KOREAN FERMENTED SPICY CABBAGE)
I finally made my first official batch of kimchi (fermented spicy cabbage) last week with great success.
Provided by mykoreaneats
Categories Side Dish Sauces and Condiments Recipes Canning and Preserving Recipes Pickled
Time P2DT9h25m
Yield 14
Number Of Ingredients 16
Steps:
- Remove discolored, bruised outer leaves of cabbage and rinse cabbage under cold water. Cut cabbage head into 2-inch pieces.
- Divide 3 cups water among 3 bowls. Stir 1 cup sea salt into each bowl of water. Sprinkle the remaining 1 cup sea salt over cabbage.
- Place salted cabbage in the 3 bowls salted water until partially submerged; let sit 6 to 12 hours.
- Rinse cabbage thoroughly under cold water several times. Squeeze cabbage to remove excess water. Cabbage should have a rubbery texture. Transfer cabbage to a colander or basket to thoroughly drain the cabbage, at least 2 hours.
- Combine 3 cups water and rice flour in a saucepan; bring to a boil. Whisk mixture until a glue-like consistency, 5 to 10 minutes. Remove saucepan from heat and cool rice mixture to room temperature.
- Combine onion, garlic, ginger, and 1 tablespoon water in a food processor; pulse until smooth, adding more water if needed.
- Pour chile flakes into a large bowl; stir in onion-garlic mixture, cooled rice flour mixture, fish sauce, shrimp, brown sugar, and sesame seeds until well mixed. Add radish and green onions and mix well.
- Coat each cabbage piece with chile mixture by using your hands. (Rubber gloves are highly recommended.) Pack coated cabbage leaves inside air-tight glass jars or containers; cover each tightly with a lid. Keep jars at room temperature for fermentation to occur, about 2 days. Refrigerate kimchi after the 2 days.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 88 calories, Carbohydrate 17.9 g, Cholesterol 3 mg, Fat 1.2 g, Fiber 5 g, Protein 3.9 g, SaturatedFat 0.2 g, Sodium 24795.6 mg, Sugar 4.7 g
TONGBAECHU KIMCHI (WHOLE NAPA CABBAGE KIMCHI)
This tongbaechu kimchi, made with whole napa cabbage, is a wonderful way to witness firsthand the magic of preservation by salting. Though the first step - salting quartered cabbages to drain excess liquid - may require an afternoon, that time is entirely inactive. The bundles of sauced cabbage are jarred and left at room temperature for the first couple of days to jump-start the fermentation process, then refrigerated to continue souring slowly for weeks and even months. Fermenting bundled quarters - versus chopped pieces - results in a crisper, more flavorful cabbage kimchi. This recipe is pared down to its essentials, though you could supplement the funky, savory-sweet flavors here with traditional additions like a sprinkle of raw pine nuts, a palmful of Korean radish cut in matchsticks or a spoonful of saeujeot, salted fermented shrimp.
Provided by Eric Kim
Categories condiments, vegetables, side dish
Time P2DT4h15m
Yield 1 (2-liter) jar (about 4 pounds kimchi)
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- Dry-brine the cabbage: Rinse the cabbage quarters under cold running water and place on a large rimmed sheet pan. Generously salt the cabbage all over, making sure to season between the leaves as well as the outsides. (Don't worry about being too precise; since the cabbages leak water, the salt will distribute evenly into the brine.) Set aside to brine at room temperature, cut sides up, until the hard leaves become limp and soggy, about 4 hours, flipping once or twice halfway through. During this brining time, the cabbage quarters should release plenty of water into the sheet pan.
- Make the sauce: Quarter one of the apples, leaving it unpeeled. Core it, coarsely chop it, then add it to a food processor. Add the onion, garlic and ginger, and process until finely chopped. Add the mixture to a large bowl and stir in the fish sauce, gochugaru and sugar. Peel the remaining apple, quarter it, core it, then thinly slice it crosswise. Fold the chopped scallions and thinly sliced apple into the sauce.
- Rinse the salted cabbage quarters under cold running water, squeezing them of their excess liquid. Place one cabbage quarter into the bowl with the sauce. With clean hands, smear 1/4 of the sauce all over the outsides and between each leaf, tucking in the larger pieces of scallions and apple as well. Fold the cabbage quarter in half crosswise, gathering the leafy tail ends together and bringing them up and over the root end, to create a compact bundle. Place the bundle in the jar and repeat with the remaining three cabbage quarters until you have used up most of the sauce and the jar is filled with sauced cabbage, leaving about an inch of room on top. (A few air gaps are fine; they'll fill with liquid over time.) Top the jar with any remaining sauce left behind in the bowl. Loosely close with a lid (see Tip). You can wash your hands at this stage.
- Let the jar of kimchi begin fermenting on the kitchen counter at room temperature for 2 to 3 days. After this, the cabbage should have released even more of its liquid; it's OK if the liquid doesn't completely cover the cabbage at this point, though it may. (This is a very juicy recipe.) Refrigerate the kimchi to finish fermenting until it's sour, 2 to 3 weeks and up to 6 months, at which point it will be very, very sour and should be eaten or turned into jjigae. Check (and taste!) the kimchi every 2 to 3 days both to familiarize yourself with the fermentation process but also to allow gas to escape, which you can do by opening the lid every so often. As you go through the jar over time, take out one cabbage quarter at a time and chop it into bite-size pieces to serve. You can eat the core or toss it.
TRADITIONAL NAPA CABBAGE KIMCHI
This is the mother of all kimchi. When Koreans say "kimchi," this is the kind that comes to everyone's minds. Good either fresh or fermented, it goes with everything from meats to noodles. You will need a one-gallon glass jar or four 1-quart jars.
Provided by Cecilia Hae-Jin Lee
Categories Garlic Pepper Vegetable Side Lunar New Year Shrimp Radish Cabbage Pescatarian Dairy Free Wheat/Gluten-Free Peanut Free Tree Nut Free Soy Free
Yield Makes enough kimchi to fill 1-gallon jar
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- 1. Dissolve 1 cup salt in 1/2 gallon water. Soak cabbage in the salt water for 3 to 4 hours.
- 2. Combine garlic, ginger, and fish sauce or shrimp in food processor or blender until finely minced.
- 3. In large bowl, combine radish, green onions, mustard greens, garlic mixture, chili powder, 1 tablespoon salt and optional sugar. Toss gently but thoroughly. (If mixing with your hands, be sure to wear rubber gloves to avoid chili burn.)
- 4. Remove cabbage from water and rinse thoroughly. Drain cabbage in colander, squeezing as much water from the leaves as possible. Take cabbage and stuff radish mixture between leaves, working from outside in, starting with largest leaf to smallest. Do not overstuff, but make sure radish mixture adequately fills leaves. When entire cabbage is stuffed, take one of the larger leaves and wrap tightly around the rest of the cabbage. Divide cabbage among 4 (1-quart) jars or 1-gallon jar, pressing down firmly to remove any air bubbles.
- 5. Let sit for 2 to 3 days in a cool place before serving. Remove kimchi from jar and slice into 1-inch-length pieces. If serving before kimchi is fermented, sprinkle with a little bit of sesame oil and sesame seeds. Refrigerate after opening.
Tips:
- Choose fresh, firm cabbage for the best kimchi.
- Cut the cabbage into even-sized pieces so that it cooks evenly.
- Add salt to the cabbage and let it sit for at least 1 hour to help draw out the moisture.
- Rinse the cabbage thoroughly after it has been salted.
- Use a variety of spices and seasonings to create a flavorful kimchi. Some popular options include gochugaru (Korean chili powder), garlic, ginger, onion, and jeotgal (fermented seafood).
- Ferment the kimchi in a cool, dark place for at least 2 weeks, stirring it occasionally.
- Once the kimchi is fermented, it can be stored in the refrigerator for up to 6 months.
Conclusion:
Kimchi is a delicious and versatile Korean dish that can be enjoyed in many different ways. It is a great source of probiotics, which are beneficial for gut health. Kimchi can be used as a condiment, side dish, or even an ingredient in other dishes. If you are looking for a new and exciting way to add flavor to your meals, give kimchi a try!
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