Kimchi
- 2 Napa cabbages, weighing 3 to 4 pounds total
- 13 cup salt
- 2 tablespoons soy sauce
- 1/4 cup fish sauce
- 1 1/2 cups Korean chili powder, also called gochugaru
- 2 bunches of scallions, thinly sliced
- 1/4 cup garlic, minced
- 1/4 cup ginger, minced
- 4 cups thin carrot sticks (optional), about 3 inches long
- Cut the cabbages lengthwise into quarters, then across into thick ribbons.
- Put the cabbage in a big bowl and use your hands to toss it with the salt.
- Pour in cold water to cover the cabbage.
- It will float, so invert a plate on top, or a zipper-lock plastic bag of water, or whatever is handy, to keep it submerged.
- Cover the bowl with a towel and leave it out overnight.
- The next day, use your hands to lift the cabbage out of the brine and put it in a big bowl.
- (Keep the brine, too.)
- In a small bowl, make a chili paste of the soy sauce, fish sauce and Korean chili powder.
- (Check the ingredients list to make sure you get pure chili powder, not the kind that has salt mixed in.)
- Add the chili paste to the cabbage along with the scallions, garlic, ginger and, if you like, the carrot sticks.
- Mix the kimchi well and pack it into hard plastic or glass containers.
- Pour in enough of the brine to cover the vegetables.
- Cover the containers and leave out at room temperature (but not more than 75 degrees, or it ferments too fast).
- Taste it after three or four days, and every day after.
- As the vegetables shrink, the kimchi can be combined in ever-smaller containers; just keep it covered with brine.
- When it tastes good to you, its done.
cabbages, salt, soy sauce, fish sauce, korean chili powder, bunches of scallions, garlic, ginger, thin carrot
Taken from cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1016209 (may not work)