My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (2024)

My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (1)

by Angela Gallardoin Fermented, Recipes,

22 comments

My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (2)

One of the best things I eat for my health right now is fermented foods. Things like kombucha and kefir have become very popular. But for some reason, other lacto-fermented products have remained obscure. To read more about the lacto-fermentation process and the benefits of consuming fermented foods, see this post.

For now, we’ll be focusing on sauerkraut and why it’s much tastier than the stuff you’ve eaten on a hot dog (or hopefully you haven’t had the misfortune of that experience). Most store-bought sauerkraut is packed in a vinegar-based solution. The strength of the vinegar will preserve the cabbage but will not create live cultures like a homemade lacto-fermenting solution. And I’ve found that the vinegar degrades the cabbage much more than I’d like. Plus, why eat something as off-putting as store-bought sauerkrat when you’re not getting much nutritional benefit from it? You can find jarred sauerkraut with live cultures made in an authentic way but it’s generally just specialty markets or small-batch companies (aka, pricey).

Homemade sauerkraut has a distinctly different taste than most store-bought versions. You get the crunch (probably more-so) and the tangy edge. But it’s a milder edge and you can control the strength of the tang. You can also flavor your sauerkraut with any spices you like. It’s a very diverse food.

My favorite recipe is listed below. Garlic, cumin, and celery seed add a flavorful, savory profile. Warming the fermenting solution before pouring over the cabbage will bring out the flavors of the spices. This sauerkraut goes well with steak, chicken, eggs, or in salads.Kraut and eggs is one of my favorite combos! Plus it starts the day with beneficial gut bacteria right from the get-go.

Read more about the benefits of lacto-fermentation on the gut in this recent post.

My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (3)

Garlic Cumin Sauerkraut

Yields: 5 quarts

  • 10 garlic cloves, peeled
  • 2 tbsp. whole cumin seeds
  • 2 tbsp. whole celery seeds
  • 1 tsp. ground black pepper
  • 2/3 c. sea salt*
  • 13-15 c. filtered water (will vary depending on size of your cabbage)
  • 2 heads organic green cabbage
  • dry goods: 5 quart jars, coffee filters (optional) and rubber bands

Directions:

  1. In a large saucepan, combine the garlic, cumin seeds, celery seeds, black pepper, sea salt, and filtered water.
  2. Heat over medium heat until the water just begins to simmer, whisking occasionally to help dissolve the salt.
  3. Remove from heat and allow to cool to room temperature.
  4. Peel the outer leaves of the cabbage and rinse well with a veggie wash.
  5. After cleaning, peel 2 large leaves from each head of cabbage and set them aside.
  6. Chop the remaining cabbage into manageable bite-size pieces (I like to use the shred or blade attachment on my food processor, saves A LOT of time).
  7. Pack the chopped cabbage very tightly into 5 sanitized glass quart jars. 2 heads of cabbage should fill 5 jars, give or take.
  8. From the cooled saltwater mix, move two garlic cloves into each of the jars.
  9. Portion the liquid between the 5 jars, tapping the jars once or twice to make the jars are filled.
  10. Tear a section from the reserved outer leaves (you’ll need to make sure you have 5 pieces total) and press into a jar, allowing it to submerge the chopped cabbage completely. Using your fingers, press the large piece down on the chopped cabbage until it’s submerged and you see bubbles rise to the surface.
  11. Do this once or twice until you no longer see bubbles rising.
  12. Repeat with remaining 4 jars.
  13. Cover each jar with a coffee filter and seal with a rubber band, as shown above.
  14. Leave at room temperature for 5-7 days to ferment (or longer if your house is on the cooler side).
  15. Test for taste at 3 or 4 days and press the top cabbage layer to remove bubbles that have formed from the fermentation process. The longer the jars are left out, the stronger the soured taste will be.
  16. Once it’s fermented to your liking, seal well with regular quart lids and move to the refrigerator.
  17. Fermented veggies keep for 3-6 months (sometimes longer!) when refrigerated because the cold slows the fermentation process dramatically.

Notes:

1. A thick layer of cheesecloth can be substituted for the coffee filters but coffee filters are cheaper! You can also seal them with the regular jar lids instead but you’ll need to make sure the lids are not screwed on tight. Fermenting foods creates natural gases from the chemical reaction happening within the jar. These gases need room to escape and I’ve found that a coffee filter works best, while still keeping critters out. Also-using jar lids makes it hard to tell how much room there is for the gases to escape, occasionally resulting in too much pressure build-up and a consequent leak in the solution. AKA, a wet mess on your counter!

2. The amount of salt looks very high but trust it, it’s necessary for the fermentation process. The resulting sauerkraut will barely taste salty at all, as much of it is used up in the fermentation.

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22 Comments
  1. October 12, 2013 at 1:09 pm

    I am heading to the farmer’s market now, and will be picking up cabbage to make this – thank you!! I miss my mom’s sauerkraut, and love the idea of adding cumin and celery seed!

    Reply

    1. My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (5)Angela Gallardo says:

      October 12, 2013 at 5:07 pm

      Jenn, thanks for sharing! I hope it’s very satisfying 🙂

      Reply

  2. My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (6)Jessica says:

    October 26, 2013 at 7:55 pm

    I just made this from fresh cabbage out of our garden. It is delicious but a couple of the jars had tiny fuzzy spots on top of the cabbage and some turned darker than the others. This was the very first time I’ve made kraut so I have no idea why that happened.

    Reply

    1. My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (7)Angela Gallardo says:

      Hey Jessica! Thanks for sharing your experience with it. Fuzzy is usually not good. If it’s just at the top leaf that is exposed to air, chuck it and you’re probably fine. Best advice for avoiding fuzz is to try and get it as submerged as possible next time. They even sell glass weights you can place at the top of the jar to weigh things down.

      Dark spots on the cabbage or dark color liquid? Liquid-ok, spots on cabbage-not ok. Again, I’m guessing air exposure.

      Also, they shouldn’t be exposed to much light and preferably a room temperature 70-75F. Sun and heat will make the process go quicker and sometimes lead to mold. It should be ready in 5-7 days, if it takes less or more time than that, you need to adjust some variables. 🙂

      Reply

  3. My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (8)Cheryl says:

    March 31, 2014 at 2:18 pm

    is there a way to copy the recipe so I can put it in my recipe file

    Reply

    1. My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (9)Angela Gallardo says:

      March 31, 2014 at 6:27 pm

      Hi Cheryl, I replied to your email about this. 🙂

      Reply

  4. My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (10)Nadir says:

    April 21, 2014 at 1:28 pm

    Hi there! Reading you from Spain, I just found this wonderful recipe… I am willing to try as soon as possible 😉 But I have a (probably) silly question… What do you mean when you write 2/3 c. sea salt or 15 c. water? Cups? For water it seems logical to me, but for salt I am not so sure…is that two thirds of a cup? Is it not much?

    Thanks a lot! Cheers!!

    Reply

  5. My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (11)Nadir says:

    April 21, 2014 at 2:58 pm

    Oh, ohhh, I have just read again the whole recipe, and found that you say that all that salt is necessary for the fermentation process… Sorry for my other comment ;-/

    I have my shopping list ready! Let’s start fermenting 😉

    Reply

    1. My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (12)Angela Gallardo says:

      April 21, 2014 at 9:34 pm

      No worries, Nadir! 🙂 You are not the first to ask that question so I’m going to add some clarification next to the ⅔ c. measurement so others don’t have the same problem in the future. Good luck with your fermentation!

      Reply

  6. My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (13)Mike says:

    November 6, 2014 at 2:23 am

    Actually you only need about 1-2 Tablespoons of salt per head of cabbage. So 2/3 Cup does sound like a lot. I have never had a problem with a lack of fermentation using this ratio.

    Reply

    1. My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (14)Angela Gallardo says:

      November 6, 2014 at 4:08 am

      Hey Mike, I actually always use the ratio of 2-3 tablespoons of sea salt per quart of water. I don’t gauge it by the amount of veg I’m using or I may have different salt:water ratios all the time depending on how small I’ve chopped and how tight I pack the veg.

      Reply

  7. My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (15)Helen says:

    November 6, 2014 at 4:58 am

    This is a great sauerkraut recipe, Angela. A friend of mine tasted it and said, "You knocked it out of the park with this one!" Second opinion from a text, "Holy sh*t that kraut is good."

    Reply

    1. My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (16)Angela Gallardo says:

      November 11, 2014 at 4:55 pm

      Helen, that is the biggest compliment I think I could ask for!

      Reply

  8. My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (17)Jenny says:

    November 28, 2014 at 2:26 am

    Hi Angela from Melbourne Aus 2T 2 tablespoons or 2 teaspoons ???

    Reply

    1. My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (18)Angela Gallardo says:

      November 28, 2014 at 5:20 pm

      Hi Jenny, capital T. is tablespoons (lowercase t. would be teaspoons).

      Reply

  9. My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (19)Jane says:

    February 18, 2018 at 6:58 am

    Can this recipe be canned in a hot water bath

    Reply

    1. February 21, 2018 at 7:21 am

      If you want a shelf stable (non-refrigerated) kraut, I’d search out a recipe with vinegar. Water bath canning is a high enough heat that it will kill the beneficial bacteria present fermented foods.

      Reply

  10. My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (21)Shelley Hansen says:

    October 22, 2018 at 8:23 am

    My cranberry ferment is quite active. Very bubbly and needs the occasional burping. My question is… should it smell like strong rotting fruit? Like the smell of bad apples on the ground. I don’t even know if what I am saying makes sense.

    Reply

    1. October 24, 2018 at 4:12 am

      Hey Shelley, that does make sense. And no, I don’t think it should smell that way… :/ Did you use honey that you’re positive was raw? If not, it wouldn’t work to preserve and you’ll get a growth of bad bacteria rather than good.

      Reply

  11. My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (23)Kylee says:

    April 1, 2020 at 12:34 am

    My jars are on their 5th day on my counter. I’ve been finding it a bit tricky to keep the cabbage down and air out. Is it normal for the liquid to look a bit cloudy?

    Reply

    1. May 20, 2020 at 5:37 am

      Hi Kylee! Sorry for the delay. Yes, cloudiness is very common. I hope the kraut turned out well 🙂

      Reply

  12. My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (25)Helen Goché says:

    July 15, 2021 at 8:49 am

    Angela, I know I already said how much everyone loves your sauerkraut recipe a few years ago. I just now posted a link on the Eugene Area Gleaners Facebook page. So you can expect even more compliments!

    Reply

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My Favorite Sauerkraut Recipe • Bare Root Girl (2024)

FAQs

What can I mix with sauerkraut to make it taste better? ›

Ten Delicious Kraut Additions
  1. Juniper Berries. Small and dark, these little raisin-sized berries pack a flavor punch. ...
  2. Beets. Peeled and grated or thinly sliced, even a tiny bit of beet stains the whole ferment fuchsia. ...
  3. Ginger. ...
  4. Lemon Peel. ...
  5. Dill. ...
  6. Caraway Seed. ...
  7. Fennel. ...
  8. Celery Root (celeriac)

Is it OK to use iodized salt for sauerkraut? ›

Salt: Use non—iodized salt with no added anti—caking agents for best quality. Salt helps form the brine and acts as a preservative. Salt causes the cabbage cells to release fermentable sugars and inhibits growth of undesirable yeasts, molds, and bacteria.

How do you cut tartness out of sauerkraut? ›

Nutritional value of sauerkraut

It's high in sodium because of the salt used in fermentation. Reduce the sodium content, as well as the tartness, by rinsing sauerkraut in cold water before using.

Should you rinse sauerkraut before eating? ›

According to Everyday Health, store-bought sauerkraut is often saltier than homemade versions, making it more than acceptable to dilute the product with water. That said, if you're trying to limit your sodium intake or simply aren't a fan of super salty flavors, then feel free to rinse the shredded cabbage.

Why put caraway seeds in sauerkraut? ›

Juniper berries and caraway seeds add beautiful flavor, but they also are anti-fungal and help to keep mold, yeast, and other microorganisms from growing that could ruin your developing kraut's flavor.

Why do you put vinegar in sauerkraut? ›

To Speed Up The Ferment

For example, sauerkraut starts out with a ton of different bacterial cultures, but by day 5, the acid-loving lactic bacteria have taken over. By adding a bit of vinegar to a ferment, it creates an environment that is ideal for acid-loving bacteria, thus speeding up fermentation time.

Is Himalayan salt OK for sauerkraut? ›

We recommend Himalayan Pink Salt for use in fermenting due to its mineral-rich profile, being less processed than other salts (meaning no chemicals went into the production of the salt). Salt is not only a factor in taste; it also affects the texture of your sauerkraut.

How much salt for 2 lbs of cabbage to make sauerkraut? ›

You want 2% salt by weight, so 20 grams of salt for every kilogram of cabbage, or roughly one tablespoon of Diamond Crystal kosher salt per pound of cabbage. Trim and core the cabbage, removing the outermost leaves.

What is the salt to cabbage ratio for sauerkraut? ›

The most widely used ratio of 2.00%–2.25% weight of salt to weight of cabbage gives the best results. This means you add 2g to 2.25g of salt for every 100g of finely sliced cabbage in your recipe.

What can you put in sauerkraut so it's not so sour? ›

Place the sauerkraut in a large glass bowl and cover it with apple juice and let it soak for at least 30 minutes. Drain and press out the excess moisture. The apple flavor will reduce the sourness in the sauerkraut, making it much more fun to eat.

How do you burp homemade sauerkraut? ›

How to “Burp” a Jar of Sauerkraut
  1. • 1. Take the lid off, and wash it clean.
  2. Press on the weight until everything is tamped down and the gas is released.
  3. Clean up the sides of the jar and replace the clean lid.
  4. Do it again daily until the bubbles stop.
Feb 18, 2023

Why does my sauerkraut taste sour? ›

Under those conditions, of all the good and bad bacteria on the leaves that could grow, only Bacillus lactis can grow. B lactis chews on the leaves and produces lactic acid, which makes sauerkraut sour. So if you left it in longer there could be more acid, making it stronger.

What happens if you don't burp sauerkraut? ›

If you are using a completely sealed container (like a jar with a screw on lid), with no means of releasing the built-up gas created during the fermentation process, you run the risk of having the container explode from pressure.

Should I eat sauerkraut in the morning or at night? ›

The best time to eat sauerkraut for gut health is during or before a meal since stomach acid, and enzymes can aid in breaking down food and killing harmful bacteria. Incorporating sauerkraut into your diet regularly can be beneficial, aiming for at least 1-2 servings per day.

What's the difference between German sauerkraut and regular sauerkraut? ›

In Germany and Austria, cooked sauerkraut is often flavored with juniper berries or caraway seeds; apples and white wine are added in popular variations. In South Tyrol, it is made with Juniper berries, Extra-virgin olive oil and smoked pancetta.

Can you make sauerkraut taste better? ›

To freshen it up without losing any flavor — better yet, while adding flavor — drain the can and then top it up with an inexpensive dry white wine instead. Draining the brine reduces the sauerkraut's salt level, while the white wine gives it a fermented flavor that's missing from canned sauerkraut.

How do you make sauerkraut easier to eat? ›

The best way to eat sauerkraut is to enjoy it as a side dish or topping. It can be served cold or hot, and can be added to salads, sandwiches, burgers, or even tacos. It can also be used as a topping for pizza or nachos. Sauerkraut can also be cooked with other ingredients such as sausage, bacon, onions, and potatoes.

What extra liquid for sauerkraut? ›

If your cabbage isn't submerged in about 1cm depth of liquid after 24 hours, add some extra brine. Dissolve 1 tsp salt, (always use pure sea salt), into 250ml water and add, or multiply and add enough to cover the cabbage.

How do Germans eat sauerkraut? ›

Depending on your taste, onions, bacon, juniper berries, caraway, and/or cream can be added to and cooked with the Sauerkraut. In many parts of Germany, pork ribs or pork cutlets are cooked in the Sauerkraut to give it a smokey flavor. The pork absorbs the liquid and becomes very soft and juicy.

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