I can never managed to put down david chang’s cookbook. It is almost like an addiction. Kimchi is probably the simplest recipes in his book. I always wanted to make kimchi but was daunted that it was much more complex task. I think hardest part of Momofuku recipes is actually locating the ingredients rather the recipe.

I first washed the chinese cabbage then salted it and added sugar. I left the kimchi overnight, the next day the amount completely shrinked to this size.

Here is the mixture of garlic, ginger, red pepper powder, fish sauce soy sauce, salted prawn and sugar. I actually decided the reduce the ginger, red pepper powder and sugar. I think 1/2 cup of sugar was a too much. Since I lacked the spice tolerance I also reduce the red pepper powder to 1/3 of a cup. Ginger was something I didn’t like eating directly (I enjoyed it as a flavouring but not when it was eating raw). It took me forever to minced the ginger and garlic by hand.. I was so into it that I lost track of time and realise it took me 30 minutes.. urm..

Then add the spring onions and carrots.
1 small to medium Chinese cabbage, discoloured or loose outer leaves discarded
2 tbs kosher or sea salt*
1/2 cup of white sugar plus 2 tbs extra
20 garlic cloves, minced
20 slices of peeled fresh ginger, minced
1/2 cup korean red pepper powder*
1/4 cup fish sauce
1/4 cup usukuchi light soy sauce*
2 tsp jarred salted prawns*
1/2 cup 1 inch pieces spring onions
1/2 cup julienned carrots
* I gave up hunting kosher salt, I just used normal salt and it turned out okay. Korean red pepper powder can be found at the most larger Asian supermarkets or korean grocery stores. Jarred salted prawn can be found at most Asian grocery stores in the cold section. Usukuchi may be very hard to hunt down, I think normal light soy sauce will do okay. Even if you do locate a bottle it isn’t cheap!
1.Cut the cabbage lengthwise in half, then cut the halves crosswise into 1-inch-wide pieces. Toss the cabbage with the salt and 2 tablespoons of the sugar in a bowl. Let sit overnight in the refrigerator.
2. Combine the garlic, ginger, red pepper powder, fish sauce, soy sauce, prawn, and remaining ½ cup sugar in a large bowl. If it is very thick, add water 1/3 cup at a time until the brine is just thicker than a creamy salad dressing but no longer a sludge. Stir in the spring onions and carrots.
3. Drain the cabbage and add it to the brine. Cover and refrigerate. Though the kimchi will be tasty after 24 hours, it will be better in a week and at its prime in 2 weeks. It will still be good for another couple weeks after that, though it will grow stronger and funkier.
* I did change the words a little so its a little more catered for the Australian kitchen rather then American.
Recipe from Momofuku by David Chang and Peter Meehan
The result:

I haven’t let it ferment yet but I did taste a piece omg fresh kimchi is awesome! Would i revisit this recipe? Certainly.. won’t go back to buying kimchi ever again.
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