Best Vegetarian Kimchi Recipes

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VEGETARIAN KIMCHI



Vegetarian Kimchi image

This is a great authentic Korean dish: unlike in some kimchi, the sugar is from natural sources like persimmon and cucumber. It has a great flavor and just enough spice.

Provided by henry

Categories     Side Dish     Sauces and Condiments Recipes     Canning and Preserving Recipes     Pickled

Time P3DT2h25m

Yield 30

Number Of Ingredients 11

1 head napa cabbage, chopped
¼ cup salt, divided
6 cloves garlic
1 (1 inch) piece fresh ginger root, peeled and chopped
1 small white onion, peeled and chopped
2 tablespoons water
3 green onions, minced
cayenne pepper to taste
1 ripe persimmon, chopped
1 small radish, shredded
1 cucumber, diced

Steps:

  • Rinse cabbage well. Put the cabbage in a bowl and sprinkle liberally with salt, tossing to mix. Set aside for 1 hour.
  • Mix more salt into the cabbage and set aside for another hour. Wash and drain the cabbage. Combine the garlic, ginger, and onion in a blender with the water. Blend on high speed until smooth.
  • Stir together the rinsed drained cabbage, garlic-ginger mixture, minced green onions, cayenne pepper, persimmon, radish, and cucumber and mix well. Transfer the mixture into airtight containers, and refrigerate for 3 days before serving.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 6 calories, Carbohydrate 1.3 g, Fiber 0.3 g, Protein 0.3 g, Sodium 1.9 mg, Sugar 0.4 g

VEGETARIAN AND VEGAN KIMCHI (CHAESIK-KIMCHI: 채식김치)



Vegetarian and vegan kimchi (Chaesik-kimchi: 채식김치) image

Hello everybody! I am so excited to show you how to make vegetarian or vegan kimchi today. It's from my new cookbook! How long have you been waiting for this recipe? Or maybe you made your own adaptation of my traditional kimchi recipe or my easy kimchi recipe? When people asked me how to make...

Categories     Kimchi

Time 2h36m

Yield Makes about 4 pounds

Number Of Ingredients 10

3 ounces buchu (Asian chives, aka garlic chives), chopped (optional)
6 green onions, sliced diagonally
2 ounces carrot matchsticks (about ¼ cup)
1⅓ cup vegetable stock
1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon sugar
9 garlic cloves
1 teaspoon peeled ginger
1 medium onion, cut into chunks
1 cup gochu-garu (Korean hot pepper flakes)
6 ounces Korean radish, cut into matchsticks (about 1 cup), or daikon

Steps:

  • Cut the cabbage lengthwise into quarters. Cut away the core of each quarter. Cut the leaves crosswise into 1-to-1½ inch bite size pieces. Transfer to a large bo
  • Toss with 6 tablespoons of the salt and 1 cup water. Let stand for 2 hours, tossing the cabbage every 30 minutes to salt evenly.
  • Combine the glutinous rice flour and 1 cup of the vegetable stock in a small saucepan and place over medium high heat. Stir until the mixture begins to bubble, 2 to 3 minutes. Add 1 tablespoon of the sugar and stir until the mixture is slightly translucent, 2 to 3 minutes. Remove from the heat and let cool thoroughly.
  • Put the cooled porridge, the remaining ⅓ cup vegetable stock, the remaining 3 tablespoons salt, the remaining 1 teaspoon sugar, garlic, ginger, and onion in a food processor and process to a puree. Transfer the puree to a medium bowl. Add the gochu-garu (hot pepper flakes) and mix it well. Set aside.
  • Rinse the cabbage 3 to 4 times with cold running water to remove any dirt and excess salt. Drain well.
  • Well dry a large bowl with kitchen cloth. Add the cabbage, radish matchsticks, green onion, chives (if used), and carrot. Add the kimchi paste and mix all together by hand (wear disposable gloves if you like). Transfer to an airtight container or glass jars. Press down the on the kimchi so it's well packed and no air can get inside, then put the lid on the container.
  • You can serve the kimchi right away, sprinkled with sesame seeds.
  • It takes about 2 weeks to ferment in the refrigerator; for faster fermenting, leave it at room temperature for 1 to 2 days, depending on the warmth of your kitchen, until the kimchi smells and tastes sour. Once the kimchi is fermented, store in the refrigerator until it runs out. After 2 weeks, the kimchi will have fermented nicely, and it will continue to ferment and become more sour as time goes one. It never goes bad and you can enjoy it at every stage.

VEGAN KIMCHI



Vegan Kimchi image

I love kimchi but am not a big fan of those that use fish sauce. So after trying several kinds and spending over $10 a pint at our local farmers' markets, I came up with my own vegan version which costs less and is great to share with family and friends. After fermentation, it can be stored in the refrigerator for up to 6 months, and will get stronger and spicier as it sits. Mine never lasts that long!

Provided by jaybu

Time P3DT3h

Yield 24

Number Of Ingredients 8

6 pounds napa cabbage
2 (16 ounce) packages rainbow carrots
⅓ cup kosher salt, or more to taste
2 bunches scallions, trimmed
4 ounces ground fresh chili paste (sambal oelek), or more to taste
4 tablespoons white miso
6 large cloves garlic, peeled and roughly chopped
1 (4 inch) piece fresh ginger, peeled and roughly chopped

Steps:

  • Quarter each head of cabbage; remove and discard the cores. Chop cabbage into 1-inch pieces. Transfer in batches to a large salad spinner. Fill with water, agitate with your hands, drain and spin. Repeat with remaining cabbage.
  • Peel and trim carrots. Cut into 1-inch lengths, then julienne cut.
  • Divide cabbage and carrots evenly between 3 large anti-reactive bowls. Sprinkle 1/3 of the salt over each bowl, then massage with your hands until cabbage is well coated and starting to soften. Fill bowls with cold water to cover. Cover with plastic wrap and let sit on the counter for 2 to 3 hours.
  • Drain cabbage and carrots in a strainer. Reserve 1 to 2 cups brine in a sealed container.
  • Meanwhile, trim scallions. Cut dark green parts into 1-inch lengths and set aside. Cut off white parts (the bottom 3 to 4 inches), cut into 1/2-inch pieces, and place in a food processor. Set light green parts aside for another use.
  • Add chili paste, miso, garlic, and ginger to the food processor. Process until fully blended; it will be thick.
  • Transfer cabbage and carrots back to the bowls and add dark green scallions. Spoon 1/3 of the chili paste mixture into each bowl. Use food-safe gloves and massage it all over until vegetables are completely covered.
  • Pack kimchi into six sterilized pint-sized jars. Cover with a 2-piece lid and screw partway to keep lid in place but not to seal.
  • Transfer jars to a rimmed baking dish and let sit at room temperature until bubbly and fragrant, about 72 hours. Every 24 hours, open the jars and slide a clean chopstick or knife down all 4 sides of each jar to release air bubbles. Press veggies down with a spoon so they are submerged in liquid, adding a spoon or two of reserved brine if necessary, but veggies do release a fair amount of liquid. Because the lids are not sealed fully, there may be some overflow. That's okay, just wipe the jars and continue on with the process. It just means the fermentation is very active.
  • After the 72 hours, clean outsides of jars and inner rims as necessary. Seal lids tightly and store in the refrigerator.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 58.7 calories, Carbohydrate 12.6 g, Fat 1.2 g, Fiber 3.1 g, Protein 2.5 g, SaturatedFat 0.4 g, Sodium 1452.6 mg, Sugar 4.9 g

KIMCHI



Kimchi image

Sometimes called mak kimchi, this kimchi formula starts with chopped napa cabbage and is as easy as dressing a salad. You just toss everything together in a large bowl. Fish sauce anchors the kimchi sauce with incredible savoriness, while gochugaru, the Korean red-pepper powder, lends a deep crimson sheen and mild, fruity heat. Whatever chopped vegetables you add to the onion-garlic-ginger purée will lend their own natural sweetness as they ferment with the cabbage; scallions and daikon are the most traditional, but carrot works in a pinch and lends great color. We all need a good burp every now and then, so be sure to open the lid of your jar every couple of days to allow the gas from the fermentation process to escape. For the spice-averse, start with 1/4 cup of gochugaru, or turn to baek kimchi, which is a fragrant, chile-free version.

Provided by Eric Kim

Categories     condiments, vegetables, side dish

Time P2DT2h30m

Yield 1/2 gallon

Number Of Ingredients 12

1 medium head napa cabbage (2 to 2 1/2 pounds), any dirty outer leaves removed
3 tablespoons coarse kosher salt or 5 tablespoons kosher salt (such as Diamond Crystal)
1 medium green apple or Asian pear, peeled, quartered and cored
1 small yellow onion, peeled and quartered
10 garlic cloves, peeled
1 (2-inch) piece fresh ginger, peeled
1 tablespoon granulated sugar
1/3 cup gochugaru (Korean red pepper)
1/3 cup fish sauce
3 scallions, trimmed
1 medium carrot or 1/2 medium daikon, peeled
1 tablespoon pine nuts (optional)

Steps:

  • Dry-brine the cabbage: Rinse the head of cabbage under cold running water, making sure to get in between the leaves. Trim the root end off the cabbage and cut crosswise into 1-inch-thick slices, carving out any core if it's especially big and tough. Transfer the cabbage strips to your largest bowl. Sprinkle over the salt and toss with your hands until evenly distributed. Set aside to brine at room temperature until the hard leaves shrink and become wet and limp (but are still crunchy), 1 1/2 to 2 hours.
  • Rinse the cabbage: Fill the bowl with cold running water and swish the leaves around to rinse them of their salt (and to clean off any dirt). Lift them up out of the water and transfer to a colander. Repeat once or twice until the cabbage leaves still taste discernibly salted, but not too salty that you can't eat it like a salad. Rinse out the bowl.
  • Make the sauce: To a food processor, add the apple, onion, garlic, ginger, sugar and process until very finely chopped into a fluffy purée. Transfer the sauce to the empty bowl and stir in the gochugaru and fish sauce. Cut the scallions into 1-inch-long pieces and add to the bowl. Cut the carrot into matchsticks: slice crosswise into 1-inch lengths, then thinly slice lengthwise, stack the slices and cut lengthwise again into thin strips. Add to the bowl, along with the pine nuts, if using. Stir to combine. Add the drained cabbage to the sauce and toss with clean hands until well combined.
  • Transfer the sauced cabbage to a clean 1/2-gallon jar, using your hands to gently pack it down. (A few air gaps are fine; they'll fill with liquid over time.) This amount of cabbage should leave about an inch of room at the top of the jar. Top the jar with any remaining sauce left behind in the bowl. Loosely close with a lid (see Tip). Wash your hands and rinse off the outside of the jar at this stage.
  • Let the jar of kimchi begin fermenting on the kitchen counter at room temperature for 2 to 3 days, "burping" it every 12 hours or so, which just means opening the lid to let out any excess build-up of gas. After this, the cabbage should have released even more of its liquid; it's OK if the liquid doesn't completely cover the cabbage at this point, though it may. Refrigerate the kimchi to finish fermenting until it's sour, 2 to 3 weeks and up to 6 months, at which point it will be very, very sour and should be eaten or turned into jjigae. Check (and taste!) the kimchi every 2 to 3 days both to familiarize yourself with the fermentation process but also to allow gas to escape.

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