BRK #181
Happy Fermentation Day to you...!!!
This was one of the best Half-Assed Holidays I've experienced yet, personally speaking. This is in large part to the presence, coaching, and enthusiasm of our guest,
SEPPer Austin Durant! An
enormous thanks goes out to him for the planning and shepherding he did for us today, leading the team through a menu of all manner of fermented goodies that we'll enjoy for months to come.
We had an impressive agenda set up for us today. We tackled all the items on this list with the exception of kimchi, as we used all the cabbage for the sauerkraut. Not sure how we'd have been able to cram it into the schedule anyway...
Here's a photo of
Grey with a jar of soaking, salted cashews. We'll be using some of these for the
sourdough granola, however they're a nice treat on their own.
Speaking of sourdough, here's one of the loaves ready to go into the
oven.
Boot Jeff and I worked with Austin to prep two loaves last night.
A personal highlight for me was the preparation of sourdough granola. Austin was here for this past summer's
PTJ, and he and his team prepped a bunch of this stuff. I enjoyed it as part of my morning oatmeal for over a month afterward. I definitely wanted to replenish the
Wheaton Labs supply while he was here.
Here's the oat and flour base.
Making brine from
water and salt was a near-constant practice today. Here's the brine I prepared for some of the seeds to be used in the sourdough granola.
After mixing, the brine is added to a jar with the seeds, just
enough to cover them.
We'll drain all the seeds tomorrow morning, then after mixing all the ingredients it will be added to the dehydrator to dry it all out for preservation.
Around 3pm, we were done with our first set of projects, and ready for round two! Here's the setup for sauerkraut.
We ended up making two separate batches, and I was fascinated with the process. The first step was to - of
course - chop up a bunch of cabbage.
You then add a bunch of salt to your cabbage and begin mixing-and-mashing with your hands, and let the cabbage "sweat out" some of its moisture.
With this particular batch, the salt turned the exudation from the red cabbage a lovely blue indigo colour. I'd never seen this before and it was fascinating.
The final mix for the first batch I helped with included green and red cabbage, turnip, and ginger.
I jammed it into a large glass jar, then weighed-down the contents with some glass "pickling pebbles." This will work to keep the solids completely submerged in the brine.
The second batch included red and green cabbage, turnip, carrots, onions, and fresh oregano.
Other projects included pastrami, which ought to be ready by the middle of next week. Hope the crew enjoys it! Here's
Caleb dropping the brisket into the brine he mixed.
Another
project we completed was
escabèche. This consisted of coarsely-chopped carrots, cauliflower, jalapenos, and onions all set in a brine to ferment.
Boot Jeff whipped-up this mustard, and it
should be officially-ready in three days. I had a taste today however, and I'd say it's ready to go.
And for a historic moment: the first time I've photographed my food... And it's worth it! This was my first-ever sourdough loaf. Eating a toasted slice with some oat-based, fake-buttery spread on it was an incredibly satisfying, simple meal: most-definitely delicious.
That's all for now. Thanks for reading, and enjoy your day...!