01-02-2016 01:04 PM
Does anyone have a tried and true homemade sauerkraut recipe they can share with me? TIA!
01-02-2016 01:06 PM
Do you mean you want to ferment the cabbage yourself?
01-02-2016 01:34 PM
It takes several weeks to make home made sauerkraut. I made it only one time maybe 25 years ago. I have a large stone crock that belonged to my mother. I followed the Ball Bluebook recipe and then canned it when it stopped bubbling or fermenting. It turned out very good, but it takes a lot of time and patience.
I Googled it for you:
Homemade Sauerkraut Makes about 6 (32 oz) quarts
You Will Need:
Directions:
STAGE 1:
*To make brine, combine 4-1/2 tsp pickling or preserving salt and 4 cups water. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat, stirring to dissolve salt. Let cool to room temperature, then ladle over sauerkraut to cover.
STAGE 2: Raw-Pack Method:
Hot-Pack Method:
01-02-2016 01:55 PM
My family is originally from Czechoslovakia and my mom would make something called zeli. Unfortunately I do not have her recipes but this is very close to what she would make:
01-02-2016 02:17 PM
@momtochloe Some of my family was from Luxembourg.....and made the same cabbage dish (!)
01-02-2016 02:35 PM
@Desertdi @momtochloe This recipe caused a flashback for me. My deceased mother-in-law did this, or something very similar. The difference that I can tell is she poured the hot vinegar mixture over shredded green cabbage, served it immediately and called it "Hot Slaw." I remember thinking it was fabulous.
I never got the actual recipe from her, but wish I had. This surely seems close. Does anyone know if I'm on the right track?
01-02-2016 02:39 PM - edited 01-02-2016 02:40 PM
@momtochloe @Tabbycat thank you so much!
Sounds like alot of work but I am up for the challenge.
@momtochloe my family was from Czechoslovakia too, from an area which is now known as the Czech Republic.
My cardiologist just happens to be from Czechoslovakia as well and he knows alot about the areas and I've learned alot about my family from him, oddly enough, lol.
01-02-2016 02:41 PM - edited 01-02-2016 02:41 PM
@IamMrsG wrote:@Desertdi @momtochloe This recipe caused a flashback for me. My deceased mother-in-law did this, or something very similar. The difference that I can tell is she poured the hot vinegar mixture over shredded green cabbage, served it immediately and called it "Hot Slaw." I remember thinking it was fabulous.
I never got the actual recipe from her, but wish I had. This surely seems close. Does anyone know if I'm on the right track?
@IamMrsGThat sounds interesting, actually! I think I'd like it better than traditional sauerkraut!
01-02-2016 02:48 PM
@IamMrsG wrote:@Desertdi @momtochloe This recipe caused a flashback for me. My deceased mother-in-law did this, or something very similar. The difference that I can tell is she poured the hot vinegar mixture over shredded green cabbage, served it immediately and called it "Hot Slaw." I remember thinking it was fabulous.
I never got the actual recipe from her, but wish I had. This surely seems close. Does anyone know if I'm on the right track?
@IamMrsG I'm not sure of the results of this but I would think it would most definitely work as a hot slaw as long as the vinegar mixture cooked long enough to come together . . . actually I think that's a fabulous idea (minus my mom's addition of the flour for the roux) . . . delicious!
01-02-2016 02:54 PM - edited 01-02-2016 02:55 PM
@IamMrsG wrote:@Desertdi @momtochloe This recipe caused a flashback for me. My deceased mother-in-law did this, or something very similar. The difference that I can tell is she poured the hot vinegar mixture over shredded green cabbage, served it immediately and called it "Hot Slaw." I remember thinking it was fabulous.
I never got the actual recipe from her, but wish I had. This surely seems close. Does anyone know if I'm on the right track?
Seems like it to me. ![]()
My family was German on my Mom's side.
My maternal Gramma would make it in a very similar way. She would chop it in bite-sized pieces, and make it similar to the way your MIL would make it. She called it "sweet and sour cabbage." It was really good. She and I were the only ones who would eat it, so she would make it for the two of us, as just a meal by itself. I loved eating it.
She didn't write any of her recipes down, either. I should have asked her when I had the chance, but I honestly think that she believed that no one was that interested in them. ![]()
The only thing that I can do anymore is try and look on the internet to find the closest fascimile now.