---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.02

     Title: Suitable Containers, Covers, and Weights for Fermenting Food
Categories: Canning, Pickles, Preserves
     Yield: 1 text


 A 1-gallon container is needed for each 5 pounds of fresh vegetables.
 Therefore, a 5-gallon stone crock is of ideal size for fermenting about
 25 pounds of fresh cabbage or cucumbers. Food-grade plastic and glass
 containers are excellent substitutes for stone crocks. Other 1- to
 3-gallon non-food-grade plastic containers may be used if lined inside
 with a clean food-grade plastic bag. Caution: Be certain that foods
 contact only food-grade plastics. Do not use garbage bags or trash
 liners. Fermenting sauerkraut in quart and half-gallon Mason jars is an
 acceptable practice, but may result in more spoilage losses.

 Cabbage and cucumbers must be kept 1 to 2 inches under brine while
 fermenting. After adding prepared vegetables and brine, insert a
 suitably sized dinner plate or glass pie plate inside the fermentation
 container. The plate must be slightly smaller than the container
 opening, yet large enough to cover most of the shredded cabbage or
 cucumbers. To keep the plate under the brine, weight it down with 2 to 3
 sealed quart jars filled with water. Covering the container opening with
 a clean, heavy bath towel helps to prevent contamination from insects
 and molds while the vegetables are fermenting. Fine quality fermented
 vegetables are also obtained when the plate is weighted down with a very
 large clean, plastic bag filled with 3 quarts of water containing 4-1/2
 tablespoons of salt. Be sure to seal the plastic bag. Freezer bags sold
 for packaging turkeys are suitable for use with 5-gallon containers.

 The fermentation container, plate, and jars must be washed in hot sudsy
 water, and rinsed well with very hot water before use.

 ===========================================================

 * USDA Agriculture Information Bulletin No. 539 (rev. 1994)
 * Meal-Master format courtesy of Karen Mintzias

-----