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Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 1 (64g)

Recipe makes 50 servings

The following items or measurements are not included below:

4 heads napa cabbage

korean radishes

shrimp sauce

Calories 114
Calories from Fat 49 (43%)
Amount Per Serving %DV
Total Fat 5.6g 8%
Saturated Fat 1.0g 5%
Monounsaturated Fat 0.9g
Polyunsaturated Fat 2.7g
Trans Fat 0.0g
Cholesterol 0mg 0%
Sodium 7151mg 297%
Potassium 675mg 19%
Total Carbohydrate 20.8g 6%
Dietary Fiber 8.9g 35%
Sugars 4.6g
Protein 4.3g 8%

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Kim Chi or Kim Chee

Recipe #173218 | 2¾ hours | 45 min prep | add private note

By: Upsidedown Again
Jun 17, 2006

I decided to post this because none of the other Kim Chi recipes have a key ingredient that all Korean women I know use: pul, or rice water. I have made kim chee with many different Korean women who come from all over South Korea. I have never made Kim Chee the same way twice, even when I've made it more than once with the same woman. Like good Korean cooks, these women never measure, and I never have either, so the amounts listed are estimates. The taste buds are the ultimate judges, so taste a little of the Kim Chee before you've mixed it all up. Read the entire recipe for tips before buying ingredients. Good luck!

SERVES 50 , 3 -4 gallons (change servings and units)

Ingredients

Directions

  1. 1
    Cut cabbage into four sections through the core.
  2. 2
    Starting at the end of the leaves, cut cabbage diagonally back and forth until you reach the core. (Cabbage will be in large square pieces).
  3. 3
    Cut radish into large chunks (if you want to be able to use them independently) or into julienne strips.
  4. 4
    Layer cabbage and radish in your sink with the salt. Put about 1/2 cup salt for every two inches of cabbage. Make sure you end with salt.
  5. 5
    Add water to almost cover cabbage.
  6. 6
    Let stand. After 1 1/2 hours start checking the cabbage by rubbing a piece between your fingers. If it's slippery, rinse it and taste it. If it's pleasantly salty then it's ready. Be sure not to let the cabbage stand too long or it will become too salty and will be inedible.
  7. 7
    Fill the sink with water until it covers the cabbage then fish the cabbage out of the sink. Return the cabbage to the sink and rinse it this way two or three times until all the cabbage is thoroughly rinsed.
  8. 8
    Drain cabbage by placing it in large colander or by letting it sit in your unstopped sink.
  9. 9
    Make the pul by mixing the rice flour and water in a small sauce pan and heating to boiling, stirring constantly. Let cool. If you don't have rice flour you can add water to cooked rice and boil it until the water is very cloudy. Use one cup of this water.
  10. 10
    Mix pul and remaining ingredients in very large bowl. The amount of red pepper you use should depend on how hot you want your kim chee. There are many kinds of fish sauce. The one cup measurement is for a thin sauce (consistency like soy sauce). For thicker sauces, use less sauce (1/4 to 1/2 cup).
  11. 11
    Wearing plastic or rubber gloves, begin mixing the cabbage with the sauce. Use your hands and mix a little cabbage at a time then push it to the side of the bowl until you have mixed all the cabbage. This will help you mix the cabbage and sauce evenly.
  12. 12
    Place kim chee in large containers that have tight fitting lids (otherwise it will smell up your fridge).
  13. 13
    You can eat the kim chee immediately, but most Korean women recommend that you leave it outside of the fridge for one day, then store it in the fridge but wait one week after that before you eat it. I can't tell you what the difference is because my husband doesn't wait that long.
  14. 14
    Enjoy.

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Featured Reviews for This Recipe

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From: Chef #592157

On Jul 16, 2008

Thank you for posting this recipe! I see what you mean about never making it the same way twice, but it's a great foundation. I really like the addition of the pul.

0 people found this review helpful

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  • From: Estizeus Chef #520378

    On Jun 18, 2007

    This recipe is easy n taste good but i replaced the shrimp sauce with fish sauce as i can't get it...

    0 people found this review helpful

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  • From: Richard P

    On Oct 17, 2006

    I made this the other day. Lots of work but worth it. I cut the recipe in half with two heads of napa cabbage. I followed the recipe almost. The result was great. I think next time I will cut the red pepper flakes in half and add some Korean hot sauce to give it more of a red color. I posted a picture so you can see not to much red in the sauce but it tastes just as good as in any Korean Restaurant. Thanks for sharing upsidedown again. Rick

    0 people found this review helpful

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  • Read all 3 reviews

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