I love the taste of homemade kimchi, but it can be quite time consuming, mostly from the first part - salting the cabbage, which using the Maangchi recipe, takes hours. While on a flight, I watched a Masterclass episode about fermented foods and the chef, David Zilber, did a very quick kimchi using a 2% ratio of veggies to kosher salt. I tried his recipe, but didn't care for the flavor, so I combined his salting technique with Maangchi's general recipe (with some adjustment, mostly removing ingredients I don't care for) and it worked out great.
I gave some to my friend's mom and she asked for the recipe, so I just went through the whole process of writing it up for her, so figured I would post it here for anyone who is looking for a quicker way to make kimchi that will definitely taste better than store bought.
Email to my friend's mom:
- 1 head napa cabbage (roughly 3 lbs, but any size is fine)
- Kosher salt (roughly 1/4 cup, but you will weigh on a scale)
- 1 cup Korean radish (mu) or daikon radish
- 1/2 cup carrot matchsticks
- 3-4 green onions (scallions), chopped
- 1/2 cup chopped Asian chives, or add 2 more green onions
- 1 cup water
- 1 Tbsp sweet rice flour (aka glutinous rice flour)
- 1 Tbsp turbinado sugar (or brown or white sugar)
- 12 garlic cloves
- 1 tsp ginger
- 1/2 medium onion
- 1/4 cup fish sauce
- 1 cup red pepper flakes (gochugaru 고추가루, coarse bigger flakes, not a fine powder). I usually look for one that is sundried.
- Combine
the water and the sweet rice flour in a pot that looks bigger than
you'd need because this will usually bubble up. Mix well with a wooden
spoon and let it cook over medium heat for about 10 minutes until it
starts to bubble.
- Add the sugar and cook for 1 more minute, stirring. Remove from the heat and let it cool off completely.
- I usually put the garlic, ginger, and onion into a food processor and run it until it's very minced. This is easier than chopping everything by hand. It's almost like a paste consistency.
- Put minced spices into a big bowl that you will later use to mix up the whole thing, so a big bowl.
- Add fish sauce and red pepper flakes.
- Slice the napa cabbage into quarters lengthwise, then proceed to chop those quarters into 3 cm wide strips. Remove the cores.
- Place your large mixing bowl with the spice mixture on a scale and tare it to zero grams.
- Transfer all the chopped cabbage to the mixing bowl.
- Add the cut radish, matchstick carrots, and green onions to the bowl.
- Note the weight (in grams is easiest) and calculate 2 percent of that weight in salt. Add the salt to the bowl, and proceed to mix everything together thoroughly until all the ingredients have been moistened and well mixed.
- Put mixed well kimchi into a container and if possible, put a weight on top to keep cabbage submerged. If you don't have something for this, you can use a ziploc filled with water.
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