- 3 cloves of garlic minced
- 1 large zip-lock bag of frozen cucumber diced
- 2 large Horseradish leaves chopped finely
I mixed everything together, then packed it into 4 liter mason jars, filled perfectly just to the shoulder... I left them in the cupboard over my stove for only 2 days when it was clear they were fermenting well before moving them to the refrigerator to stabilize and be eaten...
This uses the last of my dried cranberries sweetened with sugar... Unlike my first try with these, I've chosen ingredients that aren't very sweet to mix with them... We'll see how it works this time. Although my first attempt ended up tasting VERY good, it was still a little sweet and took FOREVER to ferment. This time, I've mixed everything together, making enough to fill 2 liter and a 750 ml.mason jars firmly packed to the shoulder. I plan to leave them in the warm cupboard over my stove until I can see they are fermenting well, before moving them to the fridge to stabilize and be eaten.
Well, after almost a week (which is a little slower than normal) they are fermenting well and I've moved them to the fridge... but for the first time ever I've had a problem with mold... probably due to the generally VERY warm temperatures and the fairly high sugar content of the mix. I scraped off about 1/2" from the top of each jar, I think getting anything contaminated with mold and added this to my compost pile... It should do well there. I smelled and tasted what remained and it both smelled and tasted VERY good. I made sure the solids were well submerged in the liquid and then sprinkled about 1/4 tsp. of pink salt over the surface of each jar to inhibit more mold... I hope it works! I HATE throwing out food! Partially because I know what it is to be hungry and partially because my parents both spent their late teens and early twenties pioneering in northern Alberta... Although they worked hard to provide the best food possible both for themselves and their children, neither of them were the least bit squeamish about occasionally eating slightly questionable or less than perfect things ... They'd cut or scoop out the "bad" parts and eat the rest... As long as it was edible it was eaten. Only food that really did taste or smell "bad" was thrown out. They just couldn't toss edible food no matter how it looked, after facing a time when they didn't know if there'd be enough to last through a tough winter into a new summer when more might be available... and that thinking stayed with them. It was what I grew up with as a child... so I too have a LOT of trouble doing differently!
Update: As of Oct 18/20 no mold had reappeared, so it seems adding the extra salt on top is effective...