Monday, January 9, 2012

Farmhouse Culture's Classic Kraut with Caraway



Homemade kraut is the best way to keep a cabbage around. It takes 30 minutes to prepare but 3 weeks to make. This recipe comes from a kraut lovin' company from Santa Cruz, Farm House Culture. I found them first at the Ferry Terminal Farmer's market in San Francisco and then recently featured in Sunset Magazine.

1 head green cabbage (3 lbs), shredded, 3 whole small leaves reserved
1 Tbsp caraway seeds
Coarse sea salt

1. Combine cabbage, caraway seeds, and 1 tbsp salt in a large bowl. Let stand for 20 minutes. Massage to release liquid from cabbage (forming a brine), about 5 minutes.
2. Pack cabbage mixture into 3 pint-size canning jars, making sure brine covers cabbage by at least 1 inch and leaving 1 to 2 inches of space at the top. Fold and push 1 reserved leaf into each, filling the top space(leaves do not need to be fully submerged).
3. Close jars tightly, and transfer to a glass baking dish or a nonreactive container with 2-inch-high sides. Let stand in a cool, dark place (64-70 degrees) for 5 days.
4. Slowly open and quickly close jars to gently release built-up pressure, being careful not to let the liquid bubble out. Let stand for 5 more days. Taste to determine if kraut is sour enough. Let stand until kraut is to your liking (we like a 21-day ferment), continuing to open jars every few days to release pressure.
*kraut can be refrigerated submerged in brine for up to 6 months.

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There is plenty of gozo at Rio Gozo Farm. That is JOY in Spanish and joy is one of the most dependable products we have. Gozo is commonly found in gardens and farms. Once you get a little gozo up and going it is very tolerant of most pests, withstands dry periods, and grows with a modicum of fertilizer. After gozo becomes a staple of one's diet, it goes with about anything. Actually folks crave it so much it is a wonder everyone does not have a patch of it growing close at hand. Grab up some gozo and get with the flow.