
Learn how to make a delicicous bowl of sauerkraut from fresh cabbage.
Homemade Sauerkraut Recipe & Tips

Introduction to Preserving
Freezing
Making Quick Pickles
Making Quick Jams: Refrigerator or Freezer Jam
Water-Bath Canning
How to Can Tomatoes
How to Can Pickles
How to Can Jam and Jelly
Pressure Canning
Drying
Salting and Brining
Take sterile quart wide mouth jars. New lids and rings. Shred the kraut, fill the jar up to the neck. Add1 level tablespoon of pickling salt,, fill the jar with room temperature water. Make sure the kraut is covered. Do not use city water because it has chemicals and chlorine. I use well water from our spring out of the tap. Put on the lid and ring ,, not tight. Put the jars in the basement or away from sunlight until Christmas. It will ferment and stink, but you will have the easiest and best saurkraut ever.I have done this for 50 years and it is awesome.
I make the sauerkraut the same way, except I add Caraway seed and dill leaves, but I have a question for you. How do you keep the brine from fermenting out of the jar? Mine always ends up with only a 1/2 filled jar with brine so the top half goes bad. Also, how tight do you pack in the sauerkraut? Do you fill the jar with tap water to the rim? Thank you for any help!
I love real, fermented sauerkraut, but generally just buy it because I've never had good luck making it (Bubbies.com is my favorite BTW!) but I think I'd like to try it again using your directions. Part of my problem, I think, was I was fermenting during a really warm summer and had the wrong salt content. Oh well, fermenting is definitely a learning process!
It's already getting warm here in south Texas, even in the house maintaining cooler than 70 degrees will be hard to do. Making my first batch, is being less than 70 critical to the process of making the kraut?
Yes, it must be kept cooler than 70 degrees F. That is important. One reader posted below that they buried their crock in the ground because they couldn’t maintain a temperature lower than 70.
I would like to add white wine to the brine , is that possible , I used to get sauerkraut in Rhine wine in Germany and it was the best ?
Yes, you can add some wine.
People talk about sauerkraut being ready in two to three weeks. The first batch I made I left for five months. My second batch (which I'm working on now I will leave at least that long... I might even try six). This batch has been setting four.... can hardly wait. I've been without sauerkraut too long.
Hi,
How do I keep the cabbage under the brine? I know this sounds silly, but if I put the cloth down and tge plate and Mason jar on the top, won't the cloth wick all of the brine and keep the top exposed?
We make sauerkraut in an old crock. The wood lid's diameter is smaller than the crock's opening.. The top with a brick or so keeps it submerged. I'm the 3rd generation to ferment in the crock. :)