Saturday, October 9, 2010
Napa Cabbage Kimchi
I found out while looking for kimchi recipes that everyone has their own variation. Some have sugar. Others call adding sugar a sin. Some ferment for a few days outside the fridge, others buried in the ground for months, others begin in the fridge. Soon I was overwhelmed by the variations in recipes I had been finding and decided to settle with the Momofuku cookbook's version since it was one of the most simple and I've actually tried the end result.
Kimchi is a fermented pickle so the flavor of the end product will vary on how long it is left to ferment. Some recipes call for leaving it at room temperature for 3-7 days then sticking it in the fridge. I even found a refrigerator specifically for making kimchi! Momofuku's recipe calls for starting the fermentation in the fridge, which seemed a bit odd to me since it seems to cold inside to really get a good ferment going, but whatever. I'll take their word for it.
The basic ingredients are cabbage, carrots, green onion, sugar, garlic, ginger, kochukaru (Korean chile powder), fish sauce, and soy sauce. Everything besides the cabbage, carrot, and green onions is pureed and then added to the vegetables and put in the fridge. The book says it's best after 2 weeks of fermentation so that is when I tried it. Two things. First, there was WAY to much brine...I could probably half or fourth the recipe next time. Second, I didn't think the kimchi actually tasted all that great. It was OK, but didn't taste ferment-ey enough for me (and I like fresher rather than funkier kimchi)!
But, both of these problems turned out to be good. I used the kimchi for a kimchi fried rice so the extra brine turned out to be great flavoring and the kimchi worked really well. I think I'd opt for a new recipe next time I do this, but it wasn't terrible for a first try. Or, I'd try leaving it out on the counter for 2-3 days before sticking it in the fridge to find out if the flavor is enhanced at all.
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Yes a lot of recipes actually ask you to use the kimchee juice, including one of my favorite easy kimchee soups which has a 1:4 kimchee juice to water ratio. So maybe this batch has too much brine but you don't want to cut it down too much, as you indicated.
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