Home-made Kimchi lost all water after being put in the fridge
I've made Kimchi using this recipe (german link, but I think it should be a pretty standard recipe).
I let it ferment for a week at room temperature and everything looked fine (it was covered in water/brine throughout).
I put it in the fridge today (to keep fermenting for another 2-3 weeks), and after a couple of hours in the fridge it now looks like all the water has been removed (I assume it was soaked up by the vegetables).
I am worried that it will go bad now, as it's not covered in water anymore. But I am unsure what to do.
- Is this normal? If not, what went wrong, and how can I prevent it in the future?
- What should I do now? Refill the glasses with water? And if so, should I use salt water?
Best Answer
Brain cells acquired, turning my comment into an answer:
The first thing you should do in a situation like this is to open the container and press the vegetables back down. As fermentation occurs, the active bacteria produce gas as well as acid. The gas will get trapped in pockets under the vegetables, and once enough pressure builds can lift the vegetables out of the brine. When the ferment is chilled, those air pockets will shrink, just a tiny bit. But due to friction or other forces, the vegetables might be stuck in place, and not be able to sink back into their original positions so easily. And so the brine "sinks" to fill the space instead, which causes the appearance of vanishing brine. Ideally, you shouldn't add anything to your ferment once it's under way (unless you're specifically doing a secondary ferment, which is totally different), so attempt to press first before you top off.
But if you do need to top off the liquid in order to keep everything submerged, always use a brine rather than plain water. Your fermenting vegetables are tightly packed, and adding plain water on top could give other undesired bacteria a chance to multiply before the existing salt/acid can diffuse through it. Not to mention that the plain water is going to leach salt away from the top layer of vegetables first, which is more likely to give you uneven results.
If your ferment doesn't call for a brine, a ~3% brine solution is generally reasonable, but if you dig a little you'll find plenty of recommendations.
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Do you drain the water from kimchi?
Salt extracts water from kimchi by osmosis, making it crisp. 2. Drain the water off the cabbage and rinse it very well to remove the excess salt.How do you keep kimchi submerged?
A Small Ceramic or Glass Dish Mini jelly jars, condiment dishes or small dessert ramekins that fit inside the mouth of the jar work very well to weigh down fermenting veggies. Partially fill the jar with water to create extra weight or add these jars on top of fermentation weights to help keep vegetables submerged.What do you do with watery kimchi?
How to Fix Watery Kimchi. If your vegetables are too watery, try adding more salt to help the water extraction process or try squeezing the water out. You can leave the vegetables to dry and flip them after a while to ensure each side is dry.Can you add more liquid to kimchi?
I let it ferment on the counter for 4 days, pressing down on the kimchi with a clean spoon once per day. By day 2-3ish, the veggies had released more liquid to have everything sufficiently covered in brine. I just gave a taste after another 4 days in the fridge, and it tastes great. Perfectly funky and really juicy.Kimchi homemade by mhelchoice madiskarteng Nanay
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Answer 2
Pickling cabbage takes a minimum of three weeks. You will not have proper formation of enough lactic acid by the lacto basilicus micro organism in one week. This may have some health concerns or it may not but at the very least you will not have kimchi. Time is a very important factor in charcuterie
Also the process of osmosis is retarded if the water is cold. You are preserving the cabbage in the brine. You don't need to put it in the fridge. Also it seems your recipe weighs the salt in relation to the cabbage. This is not the correct way to do it.
You need to weigh the salt in relation to the volume of water in the brine 6 percent per liter of brine. This means 60 grams of fine salt per liter of brine. Weigh the salt, different brands of salt vary greatly in volume. This and three weeks fully emerged in the brine gives you sauerkraut/kimchi.
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