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Free-Form Ferments

September 22, 2014 By Lauren

ferments!

Eight years ago, I moved away from home, the first move in what was to become a long series of geographic fluidity: four-years in New York, a summer in Eastern Maine, a semester in Prague, some months in Sweden and more in Greece, an internship in Tuscany, one season in New Hampshire and one in California, a school-year in Vancouver, BC, and, now, most recently, a one-way-ticket to Geneva.  I’ve lived in a log cabin on a blueberry field, a dorm room opposite Washington Square Park, the bed of a pick-up truck, the loft of a garage; always in furnished rooms or places belonging to other people, sublets for six months, six weeks; always in transition, a temporary stay.

My affection for food, particularly the simmering pot, the wilting onion, the soaking bean, the home-cooked, has grown during these years even during stays in places without proper kitchens.  It’s true that I’ve more often been blessed with plenty—Laura’s kitchen in Oakland with shelves of Le Creuset, a spacious kitchen all to myself on Kitchener Street, my mom’s incredibly well-equipped and appointed kitchen—and for this I am forever grateful, however I feel especially indebted to the make-shift kitchens for teaching me that plenty can be achieved with, say, an induction plate and six-inches of counter-space or a camp-stove.

Making pickles the traditional way—without vinegar, using lactic-fermentation—is one of my favorite home-cooked, or more rightly home-rendered food traditions because it requires so little to produce something so stellar.  No stove?  No oven?  No fridge?  No problem!   In fact, you don’t even really need a kitchen.  All it takes to turn the season’s vegetables from perishable foodstuffs to (beneficial) bacteria-brimming, good-for-your-gut-health preserves is a sealable vessel and some salt.

veg bird'seyetorshi

In his definitive text on the subject, The Art of Fermentation, lactic-fermentation guru Sandor Katz advocates for the free-form ferment: unbound by the restrictions of a “traditional” recipe, promoting experimentation and creativity while utilizing the resources at hand.  The simplicity and safety of lactic-fermentation has been obscured by, what Katz terms as, our “War on Bacteria”.   In fact, this War—the chlorinated water, the pasteurized dairy, the antibiotic—has created conditions where the dietary incorporation of living lactic bacteria is of tantamount importance to our health.

With nearly 80% of our immune function based in our gut, the maintenance of a healthy microbiome–the collective genomes of the microbes, including bacteria, that live inside of us and especially in our guts–is directly correlated to a general sense of wellbeing.  This is why there has been such a major push for probiotics within the naturopathic community.  The theory is that probiotics, which have been selected and cultured in a lab, are better able to populate our intestines than the lactic acid bacteria native to traditional foods (Katz, 26).   As cultures have been preserving foods through lactic-fermentation for centuries, and as the probiotic is relatively new in comparison (albeit with a multi-million dollar nutriceutical industry funding its research), I prefer to receive my bacterial benefits from these home-rendered traditions.

For the first time in a long time, I’m settling in a place, staying permanently, dreaming of a (flea-market-found) Le Creuset-stacked shelf of my own.   With our kitchen out-of-commission due to a fresh coat of paint, L & I celebrated this last weekend of the summer season by making pickles—a hark to transitional times and a reminder of the plenty present, ever-present in even the most make-shift conditions.

krautmaker

 Free-Form Ferments

There are two ways to ferment your vegetables.  You can either chop/grate them or ferment them whole.  I usually grate cabbage, carrots, and radishes for a kind of sauerkraut.  Otherwise, I ferment vegetables like cucumbers, cauliflower, turnips and also carrots and radishes whole, or chopped into big chunks.

#1.  Sterilize your jars with boiling water.

#2.

  1. If you are grating your vegetables, lightly salt them as you grate, pounding and squeezing them until moist. You should use about a tablespoon of salt for a 16-ounce jar.  If your veggies are too salty, simply add more veggies to the mix.
  2. Otherwise, chop into big chunks, or leave whole.

#3.

  1. Pack grated veggies into jar; do so tightly so that they’re forced below their liquid—you can add water if necessary
  2. Pack whole or chunks of veggies into jar, add whole spices (black peppercorns, cumin, coriander), whole cloves of garlic, slices of ginger, or herbs (dill, rosemary) if desired, add one tablespoon of salt to jar, fill jar with de-chlorinated* water making sure to cover vegetables completely.

* If you live in a region where your water is chlorinated, you can de-chlorinate it by letting your water sit in a jar on your counter-top for at least 30 minutes.  The chlorine evaporates and voila: de-chlorinated water.

#4.

  1. I like to use cabbage hearts or rolled cabbage leaves as a kind of seal at the top of my jars to make sure that molds and other oxygen dependent organisms can’t grow in my ferments.
  2. It can be important to seal water-brined ferments, especially since whole vegetables have a tendency to float.

cabbageseal

#5.   Seal with airtight lid and let ferment for 3-5 days. Before transferring to cooler temperature.  I let my veggies ferment on the kitchen counter, where they receive some sunlight/UV rays (which helps inhibit the growth of surface molds).  After 3-5 days, I transfer them to cool storage or the refrigerator.

#6.  You can enjoy your ferments after 3 days, or after 3 months, it depends on what fermentation flavor—new and green or old and sour (and everything in between) you enjoy most.

kraut

Notes:

  • I like to use unrefined sea salt—like Celtic sea salt—in my ferments, but kosher salt will work as well.
  • Beets are a particularly difficult vegetable to ferment.  I’ve had some success using raw beets (sliced thin with a mandolin and placed in a water-brine), but typically it’s better to cook beets before fermenting as their sugar content promotes a yeasty fermentation that produces a thick, syrupy brine.
  • Katz writes, the amount of lactic acid bacteria in a vegetable ferment follows a bell-curve: populations grow after vegetables are submerged, build to a peak, then decline at high levels of acidity (Katz, 102-103).  He suggests enjoying your ferments at various intervals to diversify your bacterial exposure.

References:
Katz, Sandor, 2012.  The Art of Fermentation. White River Junction, Vermont, Chelsea Green Publishing.

Filed Under: Ferments, Kitchen Essentials, Recipes, Sides Tagged With: condiments, howto, lactoferments, nutrition, probitics, sides, traditionalfoods, vegetables, wapf

The Last Word on Lemon Water

August 29, 2014 By Lauren

limonene

For those of you into holistic wellness, your morning routine most likely begins with a big mug of warm lemon water.  The benefits, you’re told, are numerous: it cleanses your digestion, it improves your mood, it boosts your immune system, it detoxifies your liver, it alkalizes your system. 

And even if some of those benefits are so vague as to be incomprehensible–I mean, does my system even need alkalizing?–if you’re anything like me, dear holistic-health-seeker, you often only hear the bottom-line: warm lemon water is wellness.

Or is it?

One of my more candid teachers posed that question in the margins of my nutritional research paper, once, in bright red.

During her class whenever certain holistic clichés like dairy is mucus-forming or grains are inflammatory or animal foods are too acidic were brought up they were met with the same terse appraisal: How so?  Explain the mechanism. What do you mean by that?  Explain further.

Socially, our interest in nutrition is growing; advice is passed on at the farmers market, in the grocery store, and, quite substantially, on the internet. Often this advice consists of commands like eat more kale or go gluten-free. These commands are closed statements and, in some ways, not dissimilar from other commands like have it your way or super-size me. Instead of asking–Why more kale? What do you mean by super-food? What is an anti-oxidant? Please explain–we’ve simply turned our ears from one slogan to another.

Once, while discussing a case of impaired liver function w/ this same instructor, a classmate suggested adding warm lemon water to the protocol.  It would help detoxify the liver.  We nodded our heads in agreement.  “I might buy that,” her raised eyebrows suggesting some doubt, “But what do you mean warm lemon water? How would you make that?”

With a name that describes its ingredients–lemon and, um, water–and preparation–the water should be, well, warm–the room went quiet, trick question?

“You mean, mixing lemon juice with warm water, right,” she prompted and we nodded in agreement.  “Wrong.”

Limonene

Apparently, the hepatic–of, or relating to the liver–qualities of the lemon are in its peel, specifically in the terpene limonene.

Limonene is also, coincidentally, found in oranges, mandarins, limes, yuzus and, oddly enough, bergamont and is the real reason to include citrus, or bergamont I suppose, in your morning routine.  It activates the Phase I and Phase II liver detoxification enzymes that are responsible for clearing toxins, helping to support our hard-working livers.

It’s been shown to support our digestive systems–and particularly sluggish bowels–, our immune systems, and even our nervous systems–yes, this version of lemon water does, in fact, improve our moods–, among other functions.

Receiving the benefits of this wondrous terpene is easy:  simply prepare a limonene concentrate the night before your morning lemon or orange or yuzu water.

Print
Limonene Concentrate

It is especially important to choose organically produced citrus for your limonene concentrate as you are using the rind and conventionally produced citrus is coated in wax, among other things.

As grapefruit contains a Phase I inhibiting compound–the flavonoid naringenin–it should not be used in your concentrate.

Ingredients

  • 1 lemon, or orange, or lime (halved)

Directions

  1. Squeeze citrus of choice into jar, drop rind in same jar, pour hot water over jar & seal it, let sit overnight, add to warm water in the morning. Repeat ad infinitum.
3.1

And that’s the last word on lemon water.

Or is it?

Filed Under: Beverages, Fruit, Nutrition, Recipes, Sidenotes Tagged With: lemon, nutrition, realtalk

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