A few months ago i saw a foodie show called 'Simply Ming' where they featured a Los Angeles food truck restaurateur called Roy Choi. He made some amazing things and included his homemade stock kimchee in just about everything. Ming thought the kimchee was very good.
I watch the Asian cooking shows with fascination but no background since all of my family basically produced early american settler variations, and nearby regional areas had many from europe and britain. I like cooking and have heard about the benefits of fermented foods so decided to give the recipe a try
Hard to track down a few items, but collected all the parts, put it together a few days before a two week vacation and let sit at room temp, then put in the refrigerator when i headed to the airport. Upon return i wasnt sure if the apt would be filled with ugly smells or if everything would be brown and mushy. I took the can out a few days ago and took to work. There are a few foodly adventurous people there and they'd been sampling various new mexico food i'd brought back. I warned that it could anywhere from 'decent' to 'awful' as a newbie . They tried it, and those who said they'd had kimchee before told me it wasn't bad but maybe not as zingy fermented as some (it's still a baby)
Can in frig before heading to work. Deep mysteries reside inside
View in top of can immediately after filling and pre fermentation
I'll take a few pics of product. I can post the recipe if people would like to see. Its probably a bit more expensive kimchee version to start with. One thing i would change after reading other recipes is use a glass container instead of aluminum. Used to have glass but need another. Metals can cause bitterness where contact
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I watch the Asian cooking shows with fascination but no background since all of my family basically produced early american settler variations, and nearby regional areas had many from europe and britain. I like cooking and have heard about the benefits of fermented foods so decided to give the recipe a try
Hard to track down a few items, but collected all the parts, put it together a few days before a two week vacation and let sit at room temp, then put in the refrigerator when i headed to the airport. Upon return i wasnt sure if the apt would be filled with ugly smells or if everything would be brown and mushy. I took the can out a few days ago and took to work. There are a few foodly adventurous people there and they'd been sampling various new mexico food i'd brought back. I warned that it could anywhere from 'decent' to 'awful' as a newbie . They tried it, and those who said they'd had kimchee before told me it wasn't bad but maybe not as zingy fermented as some (it's still a baby)
Can in frig before heading to work. Deep mysteries reside inside
View in top of can immediately after filling and pre fermentation
I'll take a few pics of product. I can post the recipe if people would like to see. Its probably a bit more expensive kimchee version to start with. One thing i would change after reading other recipes is use a glass container instead of aluminum. Used to have glass but need another. Metals can cause bitterness where contact
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk