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AR15.COM
12/22/2013 5:37:39 PM EDT
Anyone have good recepies?

I am tired of spending $6 for a quart of the stuff. I can eat a jar in two days....one sometimes.

Would like to make my own. Napa cabbage is cheap, raddishes are cheap, I can even buy daikon at a good price.

What I am concerned about is the right spices and fish sauce. Another concern is getting it to ferment correctly......always a bit iffy on fermenting myself.
12/22/2013 5:38:23 PM EDT
[#1]

12/22/2013 5:38:43 PM EDT
[#2]
Tag for info as well.  I would love to be able to make some kimchi at home.  Yummmmmmm
12/22/2013 5:39:23 PM EDT
[#3]
Make enough and you will be up to your keister in Kimchi
12/22/2013 5:39:36 PM EDT
[#4]

You must have great ventilation at your place.
12/22/2013 5:39:36 PM EDT
[#5]
MMMMM Kimchi is awesome!
12/22/2013 5:40:01 PM EDT
[#6]
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FPNI.
12/22/2013 5:41:34 PM EDT
[#7]
it is damn good, but stinks up your body all over. when you sweat and even when you breath days after
12/22/2013 5:42:24 PM EDT
[#8]
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Quoted:
Make enough and you will be up to your keister in Kimchi
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Enough for me would be a gallon at a time...Granted my brother is a huge fan to.
12/22/2013 5:43:08 PM EDT
[#9]
When my ex- use to make Kim Chee for me.   I sort of wrote this down:

Kim Chee


1/8 cup- Salt
1 Large head of Napa Cabbage

Optional:
1 med size- Japanese or Korean Daikon (turnip/raddish), Sliced in strips
1 small bunch- Green onion tops

Paste:
8 oz. Fish sauce (Viet Nam or Thailand makes a good sauce)
3/4 cup- Korean style Red Pepper Flakes
1 Tbsp- Korean style Dashida (dry, beef flavor soup stock)
1 Tbsp- minced Garlic
1 Tbsp- minced Ginger

________________________________________________________________

Cut the vegetables (and optional vegetables) to your favorite size.

Sprinkle the salt among the vegetables. Toss/mix it around every 15-20 mins. to redistribute the salt among the vegetables.  Taste it.   If you think it needs more salt, go ahead and add more. The salt will draw off water, from the vegetables.  Don’t drain the water, yet.  Continue to toss/mix every 15-20 mins. for about an hour, total.  

While waiting for the hour to pass.  In a separate bowl, mix the fish sauce, red pepper flakes, dashida, garlic and ginger.  The mixture should be pasty (like a moist clumpy spread).  If more liquid is needed…..add more fish sauce.

After the hour is over, rinse the vegetables with clear water.  Taste it, if it’s too salty, try another rinse.  Satisfied, place the vegetables in a colander to drain. Squeeze out the excess water.  The vegetables should be limp and moist.

In a large bowl, toss/mix, distribute the paste among the vegetables………note, the beautiful red coloring……….put as much or as little paste, as you like.

Transfer to a closed lid container.  Keep it in the refrigerator.  Come back the next day, toss/mix……………let it sit………….continue the toss/mix routine for as many days as you like.   The Kim Chee will be ready in about 3 days to a week.  Don’t drain off the  Kim Chee water, it helps to preserve the Kim Chee.  The longer it’s kept…....a more “fermented taste,“ will occur.

Always, keep it refrigerated.
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Aloha, Mark

PS....wear plastic gloves during the prep.
12/22/2013 5:43:21 PM EDT
[#10]
I wish I had a recipe. My mom used to make it at home when I was a kid.

I don't remember any fish sauce, just vinegar, red pepper, sea salt and garlic, lots and lots of garlic. I wasn't privy to the whole process though.

Fermenting is interesting. We used mason jars and occasionally you'd get a blowout. We kept the jars in a storage room that was normally fairly cool and one year the curtains were open just a gap. One afternoon the slit of light moved across the shelf and caused 4 jars in a row to explode.
12/22/2013 5:43:54 PM EDT
[#11]
Good recipe.
12/22/2013 5:44:00 PM EDT
[#12]
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Quoted:
it is damn good, but stinks up your body all over. when you sweat and even when you breath days after
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Worth it.





Edit - Would it be overly difficult to make you own dried salted shrimp for it? I've been using a box fan to make jerky with great success, I estimate the process would be similar, just add another day or two for the shrimp to completely dry.
12/22/2013 5:44:36 PM EDT
[#13]
Marry a Korean woman.
12/22/2013 5:44:43 PM EDT
[#14]
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Quoted:



Worth it.
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Quoted:
Quoted:
it is damn good, but stinks up your body all over. when you sweat and even when you breath days after



Worth it.


Says the guy with the Ryan Steakhouse avatar
12/22/2013 5:48:04 PM EDT
[#15]
My Hmart has an entire wall of kimchi.
Cabbage, radish, etc. All the different varieties.
In sizes up to a five gallon bucket.

I imagine if I asked nicely, they could probably furnish a 55 gallon drum of the stuff.
12/22/2013 5:49:36 PM EDT
[#16]
The recipe varys from region to region in Korea.  Some will add oysters or fish or whatever is local.

+1...........just buy it at HMart or marry a good Korean homemaker type woman.

Aloha, Mark
12/22/2013 6:02:15 PM EDT
[#17]
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Quoted:
The recipe varys from region to region in Korea.  Some will add oysters or fish or whatever is local.

+1...........just buy it at HMart or marry a good Korean homemaker type woman.

Aloha, Mark
View Quote



I don't know that we have any around here.

Edit - closest one is about 6 hours away.
12/22/2013 6:03:27 PM EDT
[#18]
I got a jar of kimchi paste at the Asian market that worked well.
12/22/2013 6:05:49 PM EDT
[#19]
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think it takes like 6 months for it to ferment properly.. Well, I think it's at least 8-10 weeks or so.





That is what pushes me away from making my own.





I freegin' LOVE kimchi, though. You're right... it can be expensive.





I also love dolsot bibimbap, jjajangmyun, and a bunch of other Korean dishes.
 
12/22/2013 6:08:17 PM EDT
[#20]
I dated a Korean girl in San Diego for one night. Her kim was the che. Had a perfect little mohawk. I still think about that mohawk on occasion.
12/22/2013 6:08:20 PM EDT
[#21]
This is how I make basic nappa kimchi:

Korean radish
onion
green onion
carrots
nappa cabbage
Korean pepper flakes, must be Korean pepper flakes. There is no substitution, though you can try and it might not be bad
Ginger
baby bok choy cut in half
leeks
sugar
garlic
fish sauce
salt

I like mine cut up and ready to eat, so I do it from the start.  It also helps to get the worms and dirt out of the cabbage and bok choy.

I also don't add things like oyster, dried shrimp, or squid. Just peference. I also usually don't do the rice flour porridge thing that some recipes call for. I have done it and it works fine, I just didn't like the taste or texture as much as without it.


My version is sort or a cross between these two Maangchi recipes with some on the fly changes in technique or ingredients so each batch is slightly different:






12/22/2013 6:08:35 PM EDT
[#22]

12/22/2013 6:11:39 PM EDT
[#23]
My current GF likes her Kim Chee fresh.

I like mine slightly older, if not really really old (AKA: stinky fermented).  And, don't forget to make some Kim Chee Stew or Kim Chee Soup with the older stuff (I like it that way).

Aloha, Mark
12/22/2013 6:26:37 PM EDT
[#24]
Quote History
Quoted:
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think it takes like 6 months for it to ferment properly.. Well, I think it's at least 8-10 weeks or so.

That is what pushes me away from making my own.

I freegin' LOVE kimchi, though. You're right... it can be expensive.

I also love dolsot bibimbap, jjajangmyun, and a bunch of other Korean dishes.

 
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Depends on variety, alot of these local varieties (Even the ones that native Koreans are eating) are fermented for less than a few weeks.

The "True blue" stuff is fermented 6-12mo , but it's such a big consumer product most of it isn't fermented long.
12/22/2013 6:40:18 PM EDT
[#25]
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Quoted:
MMMMM Kimchi is awesome!
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12/30/2013 7:45:13 AM EDT
[#26]



12/30/2013 7:49:15 AM EDT
[#27]
How tight are those lids? Is this going to end hilariously poorly for you?


12/30/2013 7:52:16 AM EDT
[#28]
My mom's Korean. She makes kimchi.






The smell in the house. Zomg. Gag a maggot.







Fuck that rotten shit, and a hex be upon you confused souls that like and eat that nasty garbage.

 
12/30/2013 7:53:20 AM EDT
[#29]
Toast a hamburger bun, lightly coat with mayo, heap on Kim chee, and a freshly grilled hamburger patty. Best burger in the world, had one in HI.
12/30/2013 7:53:34 AM EDT
[#30]
Good in small amounts. Too much and it'll make you smell
12/30/2013 7:55:11 AM EDT
[#31]
We have a guy at work that eats it once a month or so.
God is that stuff awful smelly and nasty.
12/30/2013 7:57:04 AM EDT
[#32]

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Quoted:


MMMMM Kimchi is awesome!
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12/30/2013 7:57:25 AM EDT
[#33]
Damn Your eyes!

It's 9:55 AM and I want Kimchi NOW, damn it!





The Ol' Crew Chief
12/30/2013 8:09:55 AM EDT
[#34]
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Quoted:
How tight are those lids? Is this going to end hilariously poorly for you?
View Quote



Barely on at all.
12/30/2013 8:10:30 AM EDT
[#35]
I like mine deep.
12/30/2013 8:12:00 AM EDT
[#36]
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Quoted:
Marry a Korean woman.
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should have been the first post.
12/30/2013 8:12:56 AM EDT
[#37]

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Quoted:


Marry a Korean woman.
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Although the kimchi is great the drama and relatives deluging your house every Sunday is not an equitable exchange.



First wife was Korean.



 
12/30/2013 8:18:00 AM EDT
[#38]
I going to have to try this.  I like it hot (spicy) which means I have to go around Ft. Sam Houston in San Antonio to get it.

       
 
12/30/2013 8:18:05 AM EDT
[#39]
i used the emergency kimchi recipe posted above, and this one (link). Both work great, but, the one posted at Maangchi was amazing. I found a korean market and was able to get the proper red chili flake and rice flour. That made a big difference.

http://www.maangchi.com/recipe/easy-kimchi