Healthy, Easy, Delicious Kimchi Recipe for Optimal Gut Health and Fermenting Fun!
Food production is a huge factor in a sustainable lifestyle and a central element of daily existence in our ecovillage.
Food is free; it comes right up out of the dirt at no charge, and there's more than enough of everything (addictions and cravings, however, lead some to believe otherwise). We live a life of intimate communion with plants and the nourishment they provide us, and we honor this relationship every single day.
We grow and receive donations of more food than we can consume in our ecovillage, but nothing goes to waste. We share generously with our extended community through outreach and work exchange programs, compost prolifically, and preserve food for ourselves and as offerings through our Über Dank Pantry.
Food preservation is something of a lost art, but we still make wine, vinegar, jams, jellies, sauces, preserves, pickles, and fermented foods, and it is our pleasure to share our methods!
Today, we have an abundance of cabbage, so we're going to make a batch of one of our favorite ferments:
KIMCHI!
Fermented food is excellent for the humanimal because it helps balance the gut flora. Digestive health is elemental to mental, emotional, and physical health, as a significant portion of neurotransmitters and immune system cells are actually created in the intestines. Fermented foods like kimchi, sauerkraut, kombucha, jun, and yogurt are great sources of probiotics, enzymes, and vitamins!
Fermentation is an interesting process where bacteria convert starch and sugar in foods to lactic acid; it's kinda like pre-digestion in that it partially breaks down the food and makes it easier for the body to assimilate. Fermentation is easy, economical, and greatly enhances health!
Kimchi is a Korean preparation that is consumed with every meal. Traditionally, it is made with cabbage and can be super simple with just salt. Our process is fully customizable to your favorite vegetables and spices:
Process:
- Prepare cabbage and soak in salt brine ( = water with enough salt to taste like ocean water) for at least one hour, massaging every now and again. You can soak overnight if you wish.
- Drain brine.
- Slice, chop, or shred remaining veggies and mix with soaked cabbage.
- Prepare sauce of soy sauce, curry powder, garlic cloves, and ginger. You can add spicy pepper at this stage if you like the heat (we keep a mild batch for the children and a spicier version for adults). Note that garlic can add a bit of spice too.
- Pour sauce over veggies and allow to soak for 3 days in a breathable container in a cool, dark place. We use a large crock covered in cheese cloth, then transfer the kimchi to mason jars to store in the fridge. If you ferment in jars, you need to open the lid after a day or so to let the gases out. This isn't a hard set formula; you can allow it to ferment longer if you like.
- Kimchi gets stinky - be warned when opening it in an enclosed area.
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Thank you so much, @gardening-trail!
Thank you so very much for sharing such a potent healthy method to stay, becoming or preserving our health!
I love how it is underline that some people believe they don't have enough food to go around for everyone because of their addiction and cravings. If one were to know how to feed themselves and have a parcel of healthy soil, there's no limit as to how much food one can produce on a sustainable level while staying fully healthy and thriving well beyond the survival levels.
Outpacing the grow of unhealthy bacteria in the gut by eating healthy bacteria such as the ones found in fermented foods, like kimchi, we reinstate the potential for health. Kimchi itself is usually eaten in the morning to favour, regulate and promote digestion throughout the day as cabbage usually takes quite some time to decompose entirely. The time taken for it to be digested thoroughly allows for a full day of efficient digestion, leaving the very least of substances to be sent all the way through... Much less waste of energy for all!
Your post was the last straw that is going to make me do it, finally, after years of studying the matter and testing out different styles. I love your recipe too, it contains all of the essentials that I prefer in a kimchi and, to top it all, you don't have fish sauce in it. This is GREAT!!!
Thanks a bunch for all the health pointers, as per usual, you are such a concerned and sustainable world citizen, it is deeply appreciated. All for one and one for all! Namaste :)
Thank you for your thoughtful reply, @eric-boucher! Would love to hear how your kimchi turns out - the world of ferments is great fun, indeed! Our @everlove also makes a fantastic jun, and that's a pretty easy method we will share in the future.
It really is incredible how much food can be produced on even a small parcel of land. Even foraging for wild plants can be hugely abundant!
Hi! I love fermenting foods and have some cabbage in the works right now. I help run a real foods discussion group, Paleo but with room for real food vegetarians, so I reposted your article at the Paleo-Trail discussion group for the members to read and comment
Please join us for discussion about real food diets and lots of great information, stories and support.
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Sweet, thanks @paleo-trail!
I love Kimchi! I have some fermenting 3 mos. now from my Chinese cabbage from the garden along with long Japanese white radish and carrots. Oh it is getting so good now. Great post @gardenofeden
Oooooo, sounds yummy!!!!
I love kimchi, this is such inspirational post!
Thank you for sharing @gardenofeden
Grateful to share with you, @danilamarilu!
Excellent post! Thank you for sharing. ☆☆☆☆☆😎
You're welcome!
@gardenofeden that's a new way of making kimchi - with a soysauce and curry powder and no fiery chili powder ..
I wonder what that would taste like
easy on it though cabbage and non fermented soy could surely mess up your thyroid.
We like this version! We make spicier versions for the adults with our own garden-grown peppers.
@gardenofeden it's an unusual kimchi ;) but it sure is fermented cabbage.
Cabbage is such a great garden crop! So good, so many ways. I'm always amazed how much liquid comes out of plants from the massaging -- and it sure doesn't take much salt compared to the amount of vegetables. Those are great carrots, too! Super carrots! :D
Thanks, @haphazard-hstead! Our carrots are pretty fantastic - we even have rainbow varieties!
I've been enjoying the Wild Carrots in my yard this spring. They are the same as your carrots, but the wild version. It's amazing that people have been able to get all those rainbow colors out of the original white wild carrots! Yay for carrots! :D
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