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124 lines
9.1 KiB
Plaintext
124 lines
9.1 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2374
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Title: HPR2374: How to Make Sauerkraut
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2374/hpr2374.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 01:55:36
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---
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This is HBR episode 2,374 entitled How to Make Sour Crout and is part of the series
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cooking.
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It is hosted by Tony H.1,212 and is about 10 minutes long and carrying a clean flag.
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The summary is, this is a short show on making Sour Crout.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by An Honest Host.com.
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At 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15, that's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honest Host.com.
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Hello, hi Republic Radio listeners, this is Tony Hughes in Blackpool in the UK, and this
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episode is about how to make Sour Crout.
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First off, I have to admit to being a bit of a foodie and I love Sour Crout, but getting
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naturally fermented Sour Crout here in the UK in my experience is almost impossible.
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And if you can, it tends to be expensive.
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So I went and had a look on YouTube for instructions on how to do it, and my first efforts were quite
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well.
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I just made another batch and I took pictures as I was doing it.
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So this is a house to show on making Sour Crout.
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Just to say that this is about making basic Sour Crout, but you can add additional flavours
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with garlic, other veg and spices at some point.
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I will try chili, but this week I want the clean taste of a basic Sour Crout, so that's
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what I made.
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I used a large white cabbage which you need to strip off the outer leaves that are blemished
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or any dirty that can't be cleaned, then quartering the cabbage and cut out the hard
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core.
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Now be full shredding it, wait a cabbage, it's easy to do at this stage when it's still
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in large lumps, rather than when it's shredded.
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As you need to work out how much salt you will need to add for each kilo of cabbage and
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other vegetables.
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The recommendation is about 2%, so for each kilo you'll need about 20 grams of salt.
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It doesn't have to be a fancy salt, but don't use one with any additives like anti-cake
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and agents or anything like that, just a pure salt, either a sea salt, I use a rock salt
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which I then grind down in a pestle and mortar.
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This cost me about £1.35, £350 in the local supermarket, so after you've done that you
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can start thinking about shredding the cabbage.
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You'll also need a little bit of salt as well for making a little bit of a top up brine,
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again 2% solution of salt to liquid, so for about 100 ml of water you'll need a little
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2 grams of salt, if you need a bit more, then it's just 200 ml, you need 4 grams of salt,
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and this is to make sure that when you've jar up the sauerkraut you've got enough liquid
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to make sure that the veg and cabbage is all covered by at least a centimetre liquid.
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OK, so shred the cabbage, put it into a bowl with salt, and now the fun bit starts, you
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need to get your hands in and start to crush and mash the cabbage and the salt together
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to start drawing out the moisture.
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It's going to take several minutes or longer depending on the quantity you've got, but
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you'll feel the texture starting to change quite soon after you've started doing this,
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and you'll feel it starting getting wet in your hands, and this is the moisture starting
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to be drawn out.
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You can continue with this process until the cabbage seems to shrunk about half and
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is juicing the bottom of the bowl.
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If you want to, you can mash the cabbage for about 5 minutes or so, then cover it, pass
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it down, and then cover the bowl with a bit of food wrap, or in the UK we call it cling
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film, and leave it for up to an hour, and this, the salt in the liquid that started to
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come out, and it's surrounding the cabbage, you'll start naturally drawing out the moisture,
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and it just saves some of the hard work, but you test it when you've left it for half
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an hour, test it again, and the cabbage needs to be fairly, fairly pliable when you're
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crushing it, and you can tell when it's at least half the volume it was prior to starting
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to crush it, and you'll have a decent amount of liquid at the bottom of the bowl.
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Now you need to jar it up at this stage, and like I say, one of the things is you need
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to make sure that when you compress the cabbage in the jar, that there is enough liquid,
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that it comes up to about a centimeter above the top of the, the veg in the cabbage.
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If you're worried about sterilizing the jars, you can either give them a hot rinse in
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soapy water, and stick them in the oven for a little while, or you can use a sterilizing
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solution, I don't bother, I just use hot soapy water, rinse them out, drain them to make
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sure that there's no water left in there in the jar, give them a wipe on the outside, obviously,
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and then just use that, the salt solution itself actually kills any bad bacteria, and
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encourages the good bacteria in the cabbage, and on surrounding the cabbage to start growing
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and fermenting the cabbage, and listening to people on the internet that have done this,
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that doesn't seem to be a problem with it.
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Okay, so if you can get a big enough jar, that it will all go in to the same jar, pack
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it down, and like I say, make sure that the juice is coming above the cabbage, you can
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use something to push it down, because you'll see in the photos that I include in the
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show notes, I've used the lid of a smaller jar inside the jar, and I've used that to push
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down the cabbage, so it's submerged below the liquid, and I did have to top it up slightly
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with some saline solution, and finally you just need to seal it up with the lid off the
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jar, but when you put the lid on the jar, don't put it on, so it's dead tight, tighten it
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up, and then just release it a fraction, you need to allow it not to be quite airtight,
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because what's going to happen over the next week is that everything's okay, the natural
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bacteria that surrounds the veg will start to ferment the cabbage, and whatever else
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you've added to it for flavour, etc, and you'll get carbon dioxide coming off. It's a bit
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likely making wine process, and if you don't, if you have a lid that's too tight, then obviously
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the pressure in the jar is going to build up, and you can get the jars breaking, exploding,
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if you're going to be doing a lot of fermenting, some people who are fermenting kits with
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the lids that have got one of these pressure bubbles on them, like they're using wine
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and making, but again, it's not strictly necessary, and it's an added expense when you're
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trying to just make something that's nice to it, so as long as you're careful, you keep
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an eye on it, after two or three days, well, when you've finished it, took the jar away
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in somewhere to store it, preferably somewhere that's not too warm, not too cold, roughly
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room temperature, but in a dark place, you don't want it in somewhere that's fludgy
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then light, I stick mine in the enemy storage cupboard for all my jams and marmalades and
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stuff, and it's the storage cupboard under the spheres. Every couple of days, just go
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and have a look at it, if you can see that the saline started to evaporate a bit, you
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may want to get a little bit more brine and just top it up again, so it comes above the
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sauerkraut. After about a week, gradually you'll start to see bubbles appearing, and
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that's the fermentation process going. After about a week, take the lid off, have a ferret
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around and just give the sauerkraut a taste, and you'll taste that sourness that the brine
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started to take on. Now some people like it, very sour, other people like it, mildly sour,
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so this is the time when you decide whether it's ready, that you're ready to eat it or
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not. If you're not quite ready, if it's not quite ready for your taste, stick it back
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it, make sure there's enough brine over the top of it, stick it back in the cupboard
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and leave it for another few days, but once it's ready, you need to put it either in the
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bottom of the fridge or in a cold place, but if you've got a cold garage or somewhere
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you keep things cool, maybe even a cellar, somewhere where the temperatures have round
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about four or five degrees, so that stops the fermentation process, and you can just keep
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it, store it there, and it lasts that ages. The only thing you've got to do now is start
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eating it, oh, and make your next batch ready for when it's all gone, because once you get
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used to it, you used to it, and you like the taste of homemade sauerkraut, you're going
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to want more, I can guarantee so, so that's how you make homemade sauerkraut, like I
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say in the show notes, I'll put some photos in that I took as I was going through the process
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today, but that's it for today, I'll be back soon, bye for now.
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