Easy, Fast, Mak Kimchi Recipe from Foodie with Family (2024)

Easy, Fast, Mak Kimchi Recipe from Foodie with Family (1)

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If you’ve been with me for a while, you’re well aware of my undying love for kimchi. Yes, it is stinky and bubbly and more than a little wild, but WOWZA the taste and the texture are so worth it.

If you’re new to the Foodie with Family family and you aren’t familiar with kimchi, I can give you a super condensed description; it’s essentially spicy, aromatic Korean sauerkraut. Today, I’m bringing you a fool-proof Easy Fast Kimchi recipe {Mak Kimchi}.

What is Kimchi?

Kimchi comes in almost as many forms as there are vegetables because nearly any vegetable can be fermented. They range from super mild smell to mega funky and mellow to melt-your-face-off spicy and there is one for every possible point in between.

The kimchi recipe that I’m sharing today is my family’s favourite version. It’s chock full of fabulous pro-biotics (as most kimchi is) and the longer it ages (translation: ferments) the stronger it becomes in both flavour AND pro-biotic content.

It’s like yogurt on steroids, people. That’s how good it is for you!

Is Kimchi Good For You?

Health Magazine named kimchi one of it’s Top 5 World’s Healthiest Foods. It is is low in calories and fat and high in dietary fiber and wicked high in Vitamins A, B, and C.

Many (if not most) Koreans eat a little kimchi with each meal or at least once a day. Kimchi is credited with helping most Koreans avoid obesity by virtue of its ability to satisfy even while being low calorie and low fat.

Seoul National University conducted a study and claimed that chickens infected with the H5N1 virus, also called avian flu, recovered after eating food containing the same cultured bacteria found in kimchi. That’s good enough for me!

How to Make Kimchi

Let’s get cracking and make some kimchi, shall we? The variety we’re making today is an Easy, Fast Kimchi recipe or Mak Kimchi…

In other words, it’s already cut up and ready to shovel into your mouth. Unlike what is usually just called ‘kimchi’ which is whole heads of napa cabbage smeared with the kimchi paste and allowed to ferment all wrapped up.

This version is FAR easier to make and far faster to be ready. Bonus, it is way easier to eat straight from the jar with a pair of chopsticks or a fork.

Easy, Fast, Mak Kimchi Recipe from Foodie with Family (2)

Do I need special tools to make kimchi?

In short, no. All you really need is a knife, a cutting board, and a big bowl. You will need a couple of ingredients that you may not have purchased before, but never fear, they’re not hard to find these days and I’ve included links to them below.

To begin with, you’ll need a big old head or two of Napa cabbage. I had two heads like the one above weighing in at about 3 pounds each.

It yielded, when all was said and done, about 3 quarts of kimchi, so that was perfect for me. You can cut that back if you think you can’t consume that amount of our Easy, Fast Kimchi recipe or Mak kimchi.

But I find all sorts of places to tuck it in, so it’s not an issue here and it’s only my husband, myself, and two of our boys who eat it. We love our kimchi.

Kimchi Recipe

Easy, Fast, Mak Kimchi Recipe from Foodie with Family (3)

Lob your cabbages in half lengthwise. Use a paring knife to remove the gnarly core from them before cutting in half lengthwise again, leaving you with quarters.

Cut across the quarters to make bite-sized squares of cabbage. I usually shoot for 2-inch squares.

Easy, Fast, Mak Kimchi Recipe from Foodie with Family (4)

Add the cabbage to a monstrously huge bowl (or bowls), top with the julienned carrots, and sprinkle salt over the whole works. Toss the veggies and massage the mixture until the cabbage just starts to wilt.

Pour in enough cold water to over all the cabbage and carrots by a bit. It doesn’t have to be swimming in water, just covered.

Stir it up with your hands and let it rest at room temp for a couple of hours.

Easy, Fast, Mak Kimchi Recipe from Foodie with Family (6)
Easy, Fast, Mak Kimchi Recipe from Foodie with Family (7)

After a couple of hours, when the sturdier pieces of cabbage have become flexible, pour the whole lot into a strainer and let the brine water drain away.

Easy, Fast, Mak Kimchi Recipe from Foodie with Family (8)

Now you’re going to whizz up the good stuff. Garlic, ginger, the white parts of scallions, Korean Red Pepper Powder*, fish sauce, unsweetened pear or apple juice, miso paste, and whatnot go into the food processor or blender.

Obliterate and smash it all into a lovely, red, fabulous smelling paste. It’s worth noting that you shouldn’t just up and increase the garlic because it can make kimchi linger more on your breath than you’d like it to do.

It also tastes out of balance if you add a lot more. Be aware.

And by the same token, you shouldn’t increase the ginger willy-nilly because that can make the final product a little more bitter than you’d like it to be. Start with the mixture and proportions I’m giving you and then play with it in subsequent batches.

*It’s important to note that you cannot use American or Mexican Chili Powder in place of the Korean pepper powder here. They’re COMPLETELY different animals. It may end up tasty, but I haven’t tested it so I cannot speak to it.

Easy, Fast, Mak Kimchi Recipe from Foodie with Family (9)

Now you’ll CRAM this stuff into jars or food-safe plastic containers. When I say cram it, I mean shove it in there as firmly as you can without putting your fist through the bottom of the jar.

I do prefer glass canning jars, if you’re wondering, because they don’t retain odors like plastic does, and, well, this stuff is odiferous! You can use a dedicated plastic kimchi bucket if you’d prefer, though.

Gently place a lid and ring on the jar, but don’t screw it tightly into place because BOOM. It’ll pop. This is active stuff, mes amies!

Place the jar on a rimmed pan or baking dish. The rim is pretty crucial here, because as the kimchi ferments at room temperature (and more slowly but still actively in the refrigerator) it will bubble up and may release a little juice over the edge of the jars.

In other words, you could have a kimchi river a-flowin’ on your counter top unless you take precautions. It’s easiest to use the pan and not worry about your Easy, Fast Kimchi recipe or Mak Kimchi bubbling over onto your counters.

It’s going to spend a couple of days at room temperature getting bubbly and fragrant. Every day, you’ll insert a clean chopstick or butter knife into the jar to help release air bubbles and top the jar off with extra brine if needed to keep everything submerged.

When it’s almost carbonated looking (usually between 24-72 hours after packing the jars), it’s ready to refrigerate. I highly recommend refrigerating it on the tray you used to contain the Grand Kimchi River while it fermented.

There aren’t a lot of things quite as unnecessary as removing everything from a fridge and mopping kimchi juices off of it. Take my word for it.

How long can I keep homemade kimchi?

It’s ready to eat at that point! Of course, it gets stronger and more kimchi-y the longer it sits. I love cooking with the older stuff and eating the newer stuff ‘raw’.

One of my all-time best-loved ways to eat older kimchi is in pancake form. Not like Aunt Jemima pancakes or flapjacks, but savoury, crispy-edged, kimchi-studded, pan-fried, snack cakes that convert even die-hard kimchi skeptics.

It’s the only way my eldest likes kimchi, but OH how he loves it this way. And the smell of kimchi pancakes while they cook is irresistible.

Bonus: This stuff lasts just about forever when you make sure the veggies are submerged in the brine. It’s hard to go wrong.

What can I make with my kimchi recipe? How do I use kimchi?

-Bo Ssäm

-Kimchi Stew

-Kimchi Fried Rice AND another version of Kimchi Fried Rice (the second one has a fried egg on top. SWOON!)

-Korean Army Stew- Budae Jjigae

-Kimchijeon (Savoury Kimchi Pancake)

Kimchi Ingredients

-Korean chili powder

-fish sauce

-pear juice

-white miso paste

-chef knife

-cutting board

-canning jars

Kimchi

Cut the napa cabbage in half longways, then in half again longways. Cut the core out of the four quarters.

Cut the cabbage into squares (about 2-3 inches square), pop it in a bowl with the carrots. Sprinkle with the 1/2 cup kosher salt, massage so everything is coated in salt and starting to soften and wilt. Fill with cold, chlorine free water to cover it well and let it soak for at least 1 1/2 hours.

Pour the cabbage and carrots and liquid into a strainer. Let the brine drain away.

Lob off the white bits of the green onions and put them in a food processor with the garlic cloves, ginger, miso paste, and korean pepper powder. Zap it on high ’til it’s smooth-ish. Add in the fish sauce and a couple of slops of pear juice and zap it more until it’s about pancake batter consistency… maybe a bit thinner.

Put the brined cabbabe/carrots in a big, anti-reactive (glass, enamel, or stainless steel) bowl. Rough chop the green parts of the onions and add those to the cabbage/carrots. Pour the chili paste combo over the cabbage and wear gloves to massage it all over the cabbage/carrots green onions so everything is completely covered.

Pack super tight in canning jars. CRAM it in there.

Add a two-piece lid, but just set the ring in place to hold the lid down without screwing it in place. Place it on a rimmed baking dish to catch any spill-over.

Let it sit at room temperature for up to 72 hours, until it is bubbly and fragrant. Once every day, insert a clean chopstick or butter-knife to release air bubbles. If needed, pour in some additional brine to keep all the vegetables submerged.

Store on a rimmed sheet in the refrigerator for up to six months, being sure that the vegetables are submerged the whole time. The older it gets, the stronger it will become.

Notes

If you need extra brine to keep your vegetables submerged, please combine 1 quart of cool water with 4 teaspoons of kosher salt in a quart jar with a tight fitting lid and shake until the salt is dissolved. Use it to top off the vegetables as needed.

Easy, Fast, Mak Kimchi Recipe from Foodie with Family (10)

Easy, Fast Kimchi Recipe {Mak Kimchi}

Rate Recipe

Rebecca Lindamood

Prep Time 45 minutes mins

Total Time 3 days d

Fragrant, simple, authentic, healthy Mak Kimchi recipe can be made in any kitchen. This tutorial takes the mystery out of making it yourself!

Ingredients

  • 3-8 pounds napa cabbage
  • 2 bunches green onions trimmed of the root bits
  • 2-3 large carrots peeled, thinly julienned
  • 1/2 cup kosher salt
  • 1/2 cup korean chili powder
  • 15-20 cloves garlic overdoing garlic makes this stay on your breath more than usual., peeled
  • 4-6 inches ginger peeled, rough chopped
  • 1 tablespoon fish sauce
  • unsweetened pear juice or unsweetened apple juice
  • 4 tablespoons white miso paste

Instructions

  • Cut the napa cabbage in half longways, then in half again longways. Cut the core out of the four quarters. Cut the cabbage into squares (about 2-3 inches square), pop it in a bowl with the carrots. Sprinkle with the 1/2 cup kosher salt, massage so everything is coated in salt and starting to soften and wilt. Fill with cold, chlorine free water to cover it well and let it soak for at least 1 1/2 hours.

  • Pour the cabbage and carrots and liquid into a strainer. Let the brine drain away.

  • Lob off the white bits of the green onions and put them in a food processor with the garlic cloves, ginger, miso paste, and korean pepper powder. Zap it on high ’til it’s smooth-ish. Add in the fish sauce and a couple of slops of pear juice and zap it more until it’s about pancake batter consistency… maybe a bit thinner.

  • Put the brined cabbabe/carrots in a big, anti-reactive (glass, enamel, or stainless steel) bowl. Rough chop the green parts of the onions and add those to the cabbage/carrots. Pour the chili paste combo over the cabbage and wear gloves to massage it all over the cabbage/carrots green onions so everything is completely covered.

  • Pack super tight in canning jars. CRAM it in there. Add a two-piece lid, but just set the ring in place to hold the lid down without screwing it in place. Place it on a rimmed baking dish to catch any spill-over. Let it sit at room temperature for up to 72 hours, until it is bubbly and fragrant. Once every day, insert a clean chopstick or butterknife to release air bubbles. If needed, pour in some additional brine to keep all the vegetables submerged.

  • Store on a rimmed sheet in the refrigerator for up to six months, being sure that the vegetables are submerged the whole time. The older it gets, the stronger it will become.

Notes

If you need extra brine to keep your vegetables submerged, please combine 1 quart of cool water with 4 teaspoons of kosher salt in a quart jar with a tight fitting lid and shake until the salt is dissolved. Use it to top off the vegetables as needed.

Nutrition

Calories: 9kcalCarbohydrates: 1gSodium: 1894mgPotassium: 29mgVitamin A: 645IUVitamin C: 0.8mgCalcium: 7mgIron: 0.1mg

Nutritional information is an estimate and provided to you as a courtesy. You should calculate the nutritional information with the actual ingredients used in your recipe using your preferred nutrition calculator.

did you make this recipe?

Make sure to tag @foodiewithfam on Instagram and #hashtag it #foodiewithfamily so I can check it out!

Easy, Fast, Mak Kimchi Recipe from Foodie with Family (11)

This post was originally published on December 2, 2013 and was updated December 28, 2016, June 2018, and September 2021.

Easy, Fast, Mak Kimchi Recipe from Foodie with Family (2024)

FAQs

How do you ferment kimchi quickly? ›

Option 2: Place sealed container in a well-ventilated location (may become pungent), with a relatively constant room temperature, around 68° F is ideal. Ferment only 1 to 2 days at room temperature, tasting it daily until it reaches preferred tangy taste and desired texture. 6. Store and enjoy!

How many hours does it take to make kimchi? ›

How long does it take to make Kimchi? Allow 1 hour to prepare the kimchi and get it in the fermentation jar. Plus 4 hours waiting while the vegetables salt. It takes 5-10 days to ferment depending on room temperature.

Can you eat kimchi as soon as you make it? ›

They also have a recipe for traditional Napa cabbage kimchi that can be eaten immediately or left to ferment for a few days. Maangchi writes that kimchi will start fermenting after a day or two when kept at room temperature; However, the level of humidity in the room will also impact the fermentation process.

Can I use leftover kimchi juice to make more kimchi? ›

Yes please. Or if you were very desperate for your batch of kimchi to be ready you could add some kimchi juice to your pre-fermented vegetables and let those microbes do their magic.

What is the quickest thing to ferment? ›

Vegetables are possibly the easiest and quickest fermentation: cut the vegetables, place in glass jars and submerge completely in the brine for 1-2 days until fermented (you'll know it's ready once the ferment has developed a ˜tangy' taste).

How do you ferment faster? ›

You can also speed up fermentation with temperature, by allowing your dough or batter to rise in a warmer environment (near the pre-heating oven, for example); the closer the temperature is to 95° F, the more efficiently the yeast is feeding and producing carbon dioxide.

Can regular cabbage be used for kimchi? ›

Kimchi is traditionally made with napa cabbage, but there's nothing to stop you from using another cabbage! Napa cabbage, Chinese cabbage, green cabbage, savoy cabbage, white cabbage, red cabbage, and bok choy (we could go on and on) are all part of the very large cruciferous family (Brassicaceae).

Can I ferment kimchi in the fridge? ›

Since kimchi is stored in the refrigerator section of the grocery store, the fermentation process has been slowed down by the cold. Fermentation starts again when you let the jar sit out at room temperature, creating pressure in the jar.

Can you open kimchi while it's fermenting? ›

Tip: It's important not to open the jar during the fermentation process to prevent exposure to oxygen.

When should you not eat kimchi? ›

Kimchi spoilage and over-fermentation

It will continue to ferment at a cool temperature. If kimchi over-ferments, it will have a very vinegary odor and taste. It is not pleasant to eat raw, so it is often used for soups and stews. If any fermentation gets soft and slimy, then it is a sign of spoilage.

What happens when you start eating kimchi everyday? ›

People who regularly eat the fermented vegetable dish kimchi — up to three times daily — may lower their risk of obesity. That's according to a study published today in the journal BMJ Open.

What happens if you eat kimchi on an empty stomach? ›

In short: it depends. Generally speaking, if your gut is in good shape and your body typically responds well to fermented foods, eating them on an empty stomach should be completely fine. “Fermented foods are typically fine to eat on an empty stomach since they help to support digestion,” Greenfield says.

Can you ferment kimchi wrong? ›

If you skip brining, it's likely your kimchi will not ferment properly, and it could even mold or rot. If so, you could lose valuable time and product.

Does kimchi taste stronger after being fermented longer? ›

But if you're looking to whip up a dish with Kimchi, we recommend using fermented Kimchi because it has a stronger flavour. If you need your Kimchi to ferment faster you can leave it out of the fridge for a couple of hours.

What happens if you ferment kimchi for too long? ›

It continues to ferment as it ages, becoming sourer and softer — which may render it unappealing.

How long does kimchi ferment in the ground? ›

Kimchi fermentation time can take anywhere from a few days to several weeks. In any case, it will be safe to eat and delicious. After 5 days of fermentation, kimchi will be slightly tangy and firm. After several weeks, it will be more acidic and tender.

Does kimchi need to be submerged when fermenting? ›

When you put your vegetables in a jar, they must be submerged in liquid. This is what allows the fermentation to take place by preventing contact with air. In recipes such as sauerkraut or kimchi, it is the salt that soaks the vegetables.

Does opening kimchi stop fermentation? ›

Doing so will slow down fermentation, but will not stop it entirely. This means that even if you do not open the jar or take it out of the fridge, the Kimchi will continue to ferment regardless. As such, all JIN Kimchi's good to consume duration starts from when you receive the Kimchi and not when you open it.

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