Jump to content
UnevenEdge

Update on my kimchi pt 1


Still Me

Recommended Posts

my recipie says a day and a half or two days...but it can sit out as long as 3 days depending on how I like it...then you put it in the fridge

 

So you intentionally let food spoil and then eat it?

 

I'm sorry but that is disgusting.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

dude....google.....it's nappa cabbage...and it ferments like sauerkraut...but it all spicy...and yummy....it's a Korean side dish

he probably knows what it is already he's just being coyly racist

 

he's a fairly well known troll

Link to comment
Share on other sites

he probably knows what it is already he's just being coyly racist

 

he's a fairly well known troll

 

TIL that not wanting to eat what looks like barf makes you a racist.

 

Can't get much more regressive than that I suppose.

 

-_'

Link to comment
Share on other sites

TIL that not wanting to eat what looks like barf makes you a racist.

 

Can't get much more regressive than that I suppose.

 

-_'

chili looks like a pot of actual feces and people eat that in this country

BX0302_Devons-Award-Winning-Chili_s4x3.jpg.rend.hgtvcom.616.462.jpeg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

d63.jpeg

 

Cheese.

Pickles.

Wine.

Beer.

Sauerkraut.

Kimchi.

Bread.

Chocolate.

Creme fraiche.

Fish sauce.

Ketchup.

Salami.

Sour cream.

Soy sauce.

Yogurt.

Hot sauce.

Vinegar.

Worcestershire sauce.

 

 

That is a list of some of the many foods that are fermented at some point in the process bucket.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Cheese.

Pickles.

Wine.

Beer.

Sauerkraut.

Kimchi.

Bread.

Chocolate.

Creme fraiche.

Fish sauce.

Ketchup.

Salami.

Sour cream.

Soy sauce.

Yogurt.

Hot sauce.

Vinegar.

Worcestershire sauce.

 

 

That is a list of some of the many foods that are fermented at some point in the process bucket.

interesting useless fact, Fish sauce and Worchestershire are almost the same sauce, both sauces use fermented anchovies as a base
Link to comment
Share on other sites

yep that looks like kimchi.

 

i must be some kinda weirdo 'cause i have no strong feeling about kimchi one way or the other.

 

i'll eat it if it's on my plate, but i wouldn't intentionally make it or order it.

 

i don't dislike it... i just don't like it either.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

oh snap! looks good girl :)

 

you should attempt radish or cucumber kimchi and then if you get it right, tell me the secret. i got cabbage down pat but those always turn out on a scale from meh to grossly inedible.

 

i usually ferment mine at different rates. i divide into three batches because i sell it when i make it and some people like it at varying levels. one fresh batch, one batch that ferments for 3-5 days, and one that ferments for a month. i have a storage cubby under the stairs at my house that stays cool no matter what year round. so i just toss it in there until my calendar reminds me to pull it out.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

yep that looks like kimchi.

 

i must be some kinda weirdo 'cause i have no strong feeling about kimchi one way or the other.

 

i'll eat it if it's on my plate, but i wouldn't intentionally make it or order it.

 

i don't dislike it... i just don't like it either.

 

 

samez.

i learned to make it because for a while, i dated a guy who had Korean foreign exchange students. these days i will make it once or twice a year in extra large batches batches because i found out that peeps are willing to pay $$$ for it here, since the only place you can buy it is the grocery store, which is horrible stuff.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Cheese.

Pickles.

Wine.

Beer.

Sauerkraut.

Kimchi.

Bread.

Chocolate.

Creme fraiche.

Fish sauce.

Ketchup.

Salami.

Sour cream.

Soy sauce.

Yogurt.

Hot sauce.

Vinegar.

Worcestershire sauce.

 

 

That is a list of some of the many foods that are fermented at some point in the process bucket.

 

Bread is fermented.

 

>:D

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

samez.

i learned to make it because for a while, i dated a guy who had Korean foreign exchange students. these days i will make it once or twice a year in extra large batches batches because i found out that peeps are willing to pay $$$ for it here, since the only place you can buy it is the grocery store, which is horrible stuff.

I always enjoy seeing your moxie

It's admirable

Link to comment
Share on other sites

×
×
  • Create New...