more fermentation recipes which include cheese, hot sauce & kimchi - ruclips.net/video/K7subHR6yPI/видео.html also a note on salt percentages - based on my experiences using 3% salt based on the weight of just the water offers a consistent salinity that is enough for safe fermentation, leading to a less salty final product that also preserves the flavours of the ingredient you're fermenting. Alternatively often people will do 3% salt based on the combined weight of both the ingredients, but for me it can result in a saltier less palatable outcome, but you will have more of precise microbial control (less chance of your ferment failing - although mine never fail). Using 3% of just the water's weight especially for non dense foods like rhubarb, cabbage, fruits, wild garlic, tomato, even the thinly slice carrot (seen in the video) is generally sufficient, for me it's the perfect environment for beneficial bacteria to thrive without overly salting the food. Happy Fermenting!
Thank you for that explanation, it was the first thing I wanted to question as I have had plenty of success except with cucumbers which needed the 3% and have stayed very bland and no more than salt water slightly remnant of the sae
I have noticed for months, when I started watching your channel, that your wardrobe is excellent. Always beautiful textures, fabrics, colors and it fits you really well. Do yo have someone, like a tailor, to help you choose your clothes, or is that just another one of your many talents ? Everything about you and your channel is artistic and beautiful.
@@gazoakleychef aah, I foresee you having a love affair with nettles, speaking of clothes. Do see the film "the nettle dress". I have been carrying a desire for land and for some of that, which would protect gardens too, being devoted to nettles.
In Poland we do this with small cucumbers and the longer they stay in the brine the more acidic they get, but for me the best are like 1-2 days in when they are still green and have that crunch to them! We also add garlic cloves, dill and horseradish stalks, sometimes blackberry/cherry leaves for that extra flavour. I am excited to try this with different veggies now :):):)
@@horhor440 We grow GRAPE VINES which have GRAPE LEAVES; rinse off the leaf in NON-chlorinated water. (see link for leaves you may have access to...) I make fermented cucumbers for better nutritional. Here's a great teacher about things that affect your your cucumbers. ruclips.net/video/eCO5OnUnkKc/видео.html
Gaz, you should experiement with fresh lime juice. I make a cabbage lacto, where i massage pink salt with a bit of vinegar into the cabbage leaves. After the cabbage has soften, I add it to a brine made with fresh lime juic and some water, and you can add more pink salt to taste , but washing the cabbage with vinegar adds a little bit of tang to the brine, without over powering it. It’s delicious and stays fresh for along time.
We cut off the rhubarb leaves and put them back under the plant as a mulch or weed barrier, grandparents always did. Can’t wait to try fermented rhubarb!
I was visiting some friends up North and we're vegan/vegetarian. They make all sorts of yummy artisan stuff - but they served a 2 years old rhubarb wine they made with dinner last night!!! omg...that's all I'm saying! It was amazing!
@@Olhamo I was well impressed with their allotment as well - it's massive and it's filled with every veggie and tons of fruit trees and bushes as well. I am very determined to start growing again. 🌱💚🙂
Amazing content! Humanity needs more people like you with your audience that share knowledge on homemade food and a more sustainable life style. Hope we can all transition to there and regain control of our lives.
Gaz, I just want to thank you for making such beautiful and educational videos. I have been watching (and re-watching!) your videos for years and was just replaying this video as I am planning on lacto-fermenting some of my home grown beetroot tomorrow. Your passion for using traditional techniques to celebrate fresh produce is so inspiring. Please never stop!!
Eating your rhubarb with your fingers reminds me of when, as a child in the summer, my friends and I used to stop for a snack of pickles or sometimes rhubarb dipped in sugar and sit on the front porch together and eat it.
This is my first time fermenting Sourkraut. I live in the Pacific Northwest, and we are a little chilly. Mine has been going for almost 4 weeks and looks light pink but no dark or mold. It looks pinkish and clear. I do, however, also have some red cabbage and carrots in the mix.
I've just gotten into fermenting with honey. I've been brewing mead for several years, but fermenting garlic, jalapenos, even pinecones is a new interest. Now I can try another way of fermenting...thanks!
Guerilla Vegan Gaz! Thanks so much for bringing such wholesome recipes to me and my family. My three year old is reaping the benefits of your fantastic recipe book and video tutorials.
This year I tried this with windfall green plums, far too hard and sour to eat. I made several cuts in each one down to the stone and fermented them in brine. After three weeks they were delicious, an ideal companion to tomatoes.
Youve inspired me to have another go at fermenting. I followed a recipe for red cabbage which used salt massaged into the cabbage. It was too salty for me.I remember from school science lessons that 1ml water weighs 1g, so for example 500 ml ml water weighs 500g. Knowing that you could skip weighing the water and just measure the volume. I usecmy grandmother's old kitchen scales with brass weights, so it's difficult to set them to zero.😊
I love a good fermentation video. Looks delish 👌 munching on a pickle straight from the jar is the best snack 😌 Love the idea of using the brine for salad dressing mixtures 🤔
I haven't tried this method yet. I've got some other sauerkraut on the go, but I'm excited to try this method out. It's so simple and flexible! Thank you.
Hello Gaz from our family farm in Central ⛵⛵ Lakes Region New Hampshire. We are big on rhubarb here. Strawberry rhubarb pie especially. I make a rhubarb custard, but will give it a try fermented. I am on a post surgical diet that is geared to be kind to my liver and pancreas, after an inflamed gallbladder tried to take those two organs out last October. My hospital dietitian diet encourages ferments. I do eat sauerkraut, but want to try more options. I'm on a modified semi-vegetarian Mediterranean diet that is very strict that is agreeing with me. No red meat allowed, but I can have fish and seafood, white chicken & turkey. Prefer the seafood and plant proteins. Yes Tofu is on my list. I am following you to make use of those recipes that use soy products. This channel is very well done and I am checking out your cook books. All the best! ~ Diane
ive just started growing rhubarb so i have to wait ages for it to grow but when its ready to be harvested im defo making this fermented rhubarb thanks for sharing
Gaz, you're amazing and so inspiring for me ❤ Try recipes from Eastern Europe in terms of vegetables fermentation. Oh and so much more, from our way of cooking nettles to preparing fermented elderflower drink (you'll love it) and list can go on in terms of vegan recipes from our culture. Cheers from Romania 🩷
Haven't tried fermented rhubarb. Love doing curried fermented cauliflower and cabbage. Rhubarb wine 🍷 next!?! Hat looks great with your dark features. Handsome gent. Love the mesh sweater shirt.
I find fermentation so interesting, but am so intimidated by it that ive never tried it. Ive seen so many videos of successful recipes posted on social media, but ive noticed also lots of failures too, with mold and other things that can go wrong. Its given me the impression that it can be very finicky to do. 🤷🏻♀️ Ive never purchased any recipe books cuz there are too many out there to choose from, for a beginner like me. Do you have any recommendations as far as books that a person could begin with? Your channel came up on my feed, so ill be checking it out. Thank you for this video. Have a blessed day. 👩🏻🌾
@@gazoakleychefProbably because a lot of people still know you as Avant Garde Vegan, I mean that's what you called yourself for years. Any particular reason why you don't want to identify as a vegan anymore? You're not going to be the latest in the line of former vegan RUclipsrs are you?
@@gazoakleychef I never quite thought of you as vegan. More like Chez Gaz. It always seemed you were making these luscious things that held within in them a certain craving for their meat versions. I don't want to call myself anything but an intuitarian, if pressed. which might explain why I can go from only wanting flowers and fruits to loving with a capital L some peppered mackerel. I am also totally open to a "vegan" version of that because I love vegetables. And recently, I discovered a fermented 'butter' product after really craving some grass-fed butter, and yet, every time I thought of it as being from the milk cows make, to feed their young, I was just put off. The product though, has literally everything I was desiring in butter, and more. It makes me want to make some of my own.
@@gazoakleychef I get how you feel, ill never turn my back on my quest for health and sustainability, but I am tired of the labels and the stigma that comes with it. Having a bit of an identity crisis lately and not sure why I should have to label myself as anything.
@@gazoakleychef That answer makes me very sad. No, you don't have to be vegan. You were. A proud one too. Apparently no more. That's sad. I can't think of any good reason why you wouldn't be.
It'd be awesome to see some recipes with these fermented foods in so we can get an idea of what to eat them with. Definitely looks like an interesting addition and I totally agree about all dishes needing some sort of acid in them. :)
well, that was heavenly to see, in the midst of a pre-solar-return fast! Rhubarb!! I've been doing ferments for some years now, and lately was eyeing the rhubarb, but not inspired to do the sweet stewing, and kind of craving it raw-- and yet not quite getting the revelation--so thankyou so much!
Great video. I love the simplicity. I’ve made sauerkraut several times. I haven’t tried other veggies yet… on my list. I pickled quail eggs with vinegar… would this brine work for hard boiled eggs too?
Love your videos and generosity of information. Love your clothing style too. Beautiful textures and colours that suit you, your personality and lifestyle. Love the beret with your longer hair too. Makes me want to make the lifestyle change long long overdue, to a big garden with more room to grow food. Love your kitchen too and your treasures within it. Achieved as always after a LOT of work. You should feel proud. Wonderful.
I've been fermenting at home for years, but have always struggled with how to use them in dishes. I usually just throw them on salads or eat them on the side, but I'd be interested in how you incorporate them into other dishes.
Garlic is on my list for a while … I made fermented onions and they were just phenomenal! Do you add anything other than salt & water to your garlic? How long did you ferment them. Also, did you know that you can ferment garlic just in honey? (If you’re not vegan of course) it’s amazing and it is a fabulous immune booster! 🎉
@keinohrtini for vegan I ferment garlic in maple syrup, works the same as honey 😀 Around 6 weeks for fermentation of garlic but longer if uou like. Its so addictive just to snack on
Okay, thats it. This was the push I needed. I've had a hand written recipe from my friend's Rumanian mother in law for sbout 2 years and just never made it. Gonna get rhubarb at the market later this week and finally make it!
Love that Kitchen! Is it my computer, your camera or the system. I seem to see shots of "fire" popping off the open jar. Perhaps it is the power of Fermentation. 🤗
Try it with creamy humus or/and muhammara 🙃 I'll give this a try. Can we do it with all vegetables? Aubergines, cucumbers, courgettes, beetroots... etc?
Tjank you for that video. I would also like to see other fermentation recipes like tempeh or fermented plums. Japanese recipes include a lot of fermented food...
Hey Gaz - I love your videos - a good advice to add for people who eat a lot of fermented veggies and drink kombucha is to be extra sure you brush your teeth squeaky clean at last twice a day. These products contain high amounts of acid that breaks down your teeth like a worm knife through butter 👍
I would recommend just rinsing with water after. You don't want to brush the enamel off your teeth right after softening it with acid. Wait a few hours.
@@k.h.6991 Never brush your teeth right after a meal- what ever it is! If ever one needs a deeper rinse, just add salt to water and rinse with it. They'll even feel clean. :)
Please Always plant rhubarb far away from animalpens. My friend horse died after eating the highly toxic leaves. But once planted at the right spot it just thrives and will come back each year ;-)Enjoy the pink delight
Thanks so much for making this video. I’ve been wanting to make sauerkraut but scared to try it incase I make myself ill 😅 but you’ve made it seem very easy to do.
Enquiry please: 3'50" In what world is a strong waft of garlic a 'downside'? More seriously, does lacto fermentation take care of the oxalic acid in raw rhubarb? I use the it in smoothies(plus chilli, ginger, beetroot, carrot & OJ).... and just hope blitzing in the processor takes care of any problem.
You really don’t need to burp those jars, the hinge gives enough to let gases out without burping. Burping risks letting in air and mould spores. But sit them in a dish as they may well overflow. And Gu jars are perfect to keep everything under the brine, no need to buy glass weights.
OMG, this is such a beautiful rhubarb. I love rhubarb so much and I am a little bit jealous right now. Unfortunately, I do not process fermented dishes because of the histamine. Btw. rhubarb ist not a fruit but a vegetable, too.
Hello Gaz , will you open your farm to the public for visits , my wife and I would love to visit Your farm . We have so many questions and just want to be immersed in the Vegan inspiration
@@gazoakleychef understood 🙏 peace and blessings we appreciate the reply. How about Nona’s ? Will you do a pop up or reopen the restaurant any time soon ?
Hi gaz love the channe!. First time fermenter here, ive done some carrots with garlic ans dill and i have a question.....i just opened up to burp it and a load of gas fizzed up and bubbled, is this normal? Probably a daft question but it seemed a lot, it was like fizzy pop lol
I’d love to try this! We unfortunately do not have any rhubarb out where we reside, but it sure does sound delightful! Definitely something on my to do list. Also wonder how a rhubarb fermented hot sauce would turn out? 🤔
If you make Rhubarb gin, once the gin is made, make a crumble with the infused rhubarb, very nice, hot or cold ... caution, DO NOT drive or operate machinary afterwards ;)
@@carolineowen7846 Oh my word! That sounds like such a lovely idea! (Minus operating any machinery after of course!) I enjoy making my own spirit infusions and syrups, so your suggestion truly flipped an idea switch 💡
I am very confused. I loved the video but have a question. I will shortly have lots of apricots and figs that I would like to keep until next year. Do you think I should use your fermentation method that looks easy, or do I need to look at canning? Thank you.
more fermentation recipes which include cheese, hot sauce & kimchi - ruclips.net/video/K7subHR6yPI/видео.html also a note on salt percentages - based on my experiences using 3% salt based on the weight of just the water offers a consistent salinity that is enough for safe fermentation, leading to a less salty final product that also preserves the flavours of the ingredient you're fermenting. Alternatively often people will do 3% salt based on the combined weight of both the ingredients, but for me it can result in a saltier less palatable outcome, but you will have more of precise microbial control (less chance of your ferment failing - although mine never fail). Using 3% of just the water's weight especially for non dense foods like rhubarb, cabbage, fruits, wild garlic, tomato, even the thinly slice carrot (seen in the video) is generally sufficient, for me it's the perfect environment for beneficial bacteria to thrive without overly salting the food. Happy Fermenting!
Thank you for that explanation, it was the first thing I wanted to question as I have had plenty of success except with cucumbers which needed the 3% and have stayed very bland and no more than salt water slightly remnant of the sae
;-) Hi, Che. I'm glad to see that you're alive and vegan. 😀
I have noticed for months, when I started watching your channel, that your wardrobe is excellent. Always beautiful textures, fabrics, colors and it fits you really well. Do yo have someone, like a tailor, to help you choose your clothes, or is that just another one of your many talents ? Everything about you and your channel is artistic and beautiful.
Thanks so much! Just another creative outlet I enjoy ❤️
I have rhubarb envy.
officially the Che Guevara of cooking✌
@@gazoakleychef aah, I foresee you having a love affair with nettles, speaking of clothes. Do see the film "the nettle dress". I have been carrying a desire for land and for some of that, which would protect gardens too, being devoted to nettles.
@@solofedericoThat’s not a compliment. Che was a racist butcher. Seriously, check your history before embarrassing yourself.
In Poland we do this with small cucumbers and the longer they stay in the brine the more acidic they get, but for me the best are like 1-2 days in when they are still green and have that crunch to them! We also add garlic cloves, dill and horseradish stalks, sometimes blackberry/cherry leaves for that extra flavour. I am excited to try this with different veggies now :):):)
So you Just Pick the leaves Form the tree dorectly or usw Other leaves?
Also grape leaves have tannins to help with long term crispness
@@lrfolkins6692 Do you mean it helps other ingridients stay crispier like cucumber for example?
@@horhor440 We grow GRAPE VINES which have GRAPE LEAVES; rinse off the leaf in NON-chlorinated water. (see link for leaves you may have access to...)
I make fermented cucumbers for better nutritional.
Here's a great teacher about things that affect your your cucumbers.
ruclips.net/video/eCO5OnUnkKc/видео.html
@@julianspiegler8252 yes
Gaz, you should experiement with fresh lime juice. I make a cabbage lacto, where i massage pink salt with a bit of vinegar into the cabbage leaves. After the cabbage has soften, I add it to a brine made with fresh lime juic and some water, and you can add more pink salt to taste , but washing the cabbage with vinegar adds a little bit of tang to the brine, without over powering it. It’s delicious and stays fresh for along time.
Your garden, your kitchen, your veggies, your outfits, everything looks beautiful, classy and delicious!!!
I will definitely give the fermented rhubarb a try! I use 2 TBSP salt per quart of water… no measuring or weighing, etc - works out well every time!
That’s an easier way to remember things, thanks 👍
Not all salt weighs the same. It's better to go by weight and not by volume.
I did white asparagus with garlic, black pepper and tarragon spice! It came amazing
We cut off the rhubarb leaves and put them back under the plant as a mulch or weed barrier, grandparents always did. Can’t wait to try fermented rhubarb!
I was visiting some friends up North and we're vegan/vegetarian. They make all sorts of yummy artisan stuff - but they served a 2 years old rhubarb wine they made with dinner last night!!! omg...that's all I'm saying! It was amazing!
was it a cordial type of wine, or more of a dryish rose?
@@Olhamo dry with a lovely clear lemony hue. ❤️
@@darcyroyce sounds wonderful
@@Olhamo I was well impressed with their allotment as well - it's massive and it's filled with every veggie and tons of fruit trees and bushes as well. I am very determined to start growing again. 🌱💚🙂
oh thank you ill try that :D
Amazing content! Humanity needs more people like you with your audience that share knowledge on homemade food and a more sustainable life style. Hope we can all transition to there and regain control of our lives.
Thanks so much ❤️
i have been lacto fermeting for years. I have at least 2-3 jars of different ferments going on everyday because I eat it daily.
8:25 its called kahm yeast. It looks like a white fuzzy layer.
Gaz, I just want to thank you for making such beautiful and educational videos. I have been watching (and re-watching!) your videos for years and was just replaying this video as I am planning on lacto-fermenting some of my home grown beetroot tomorrow. Your passion for using traditional techniques to celebrate fresh produce is so inspiring. Please never stop!!
Eating your rhubarb with your fingers reminds me of when, as a child in the summer, my friends and I used to stop for a snack of pickles or sometimes rhubarb dipped in sugar and sit on the front porch together and eat it.
This two ingredient recipe has indeed changed my life. Thanks Gaz!
Dear Gaz!
You are the most beautiful inspiration for me. Thank you for being so special❤
Wow, thank you
This video is very inspiring, you manage to put across your delight in this type of food, thank you for sharing.
Today, thanks to you and your channel, I have start my first ever fermentation of Rhubarb. I'm so excited to see how it turns out. 🤞🏻🤞🏻
This is my first time fermenting Sourkraut. I live in the Pacific Northwest, and we are a little chilly. Mine has been going for almost 4 weeks and looks light pink but no dark or mold. It looks pinkish and clear. I do, however, also have some red cabbage and carrots in the mix.
I've just gotten into fermenting with honey. I've been brewing mead for several years, but fermenting garlic, jalapenos, even pinecones is a new interest. Now I can try another way of fermenting...thanks!
Guerilla Vegan Gaz! Thanks so much for bringing such wholesome recipes to me and my family. My three year old is reaping the benefits of your fantastic recipe book and video tutorials.
its awesome i have a che shirt and the resemblance is uncanny
This year I tried this with windfall green plums, far too hard and sour to eat. I made several cuts in each one down to the stone and fermented them in brine. After three weeks they were delicious, an ideal companion to tomatoes.
Youve inspired me to have another go at fermenting. I followed a recipe for red cabbage which used salt massaged into the cabbage. It was too salty for me.I remember from school science lessons that 1ml water weighs 1g, so for example 500 ml ml water weighs 500g. Knowing that you could skip weighing the water and just measure the volume. I usecmy grandmother's old kitchen scales with brass weights, so it's difficult to set them to zero.😊
I hope your next cookbook will feature many fermented foods!!
Best time of the week when a new gaz video is uploaded!
This is amazing! Please do your hibiscus kombucha next! I want to make it so badly!! 🫶
hibiscus and rhubarb sounds like a lovely combo.
We do this with cucumbers in the summer. Some will add horseradish, peppercorn, and to help fermentation pieces of bread...
I love a good fermentation video. Looks delish 👌 munching on a pickle straight from the jar is the best snack 😌
Love the idea of using the brine for salad dressing mixtures 🤔
Ohhhhhhhh I was hoping you'd do this subject. I'm Scandinavian so pickled and fermented were necessary for the climate, but I adore eating them.
I LOVE everything about your kitchen! (Sorry to interrupt, I just had to get that out. Back to the video now)
I’ll harvest some of my rhubarb and give this a try. Thank you for the detailed description of the flavors as well as the process.
Really enjoy your videos! One of the best channels on youtube
You gotta try lactofermented salsa, so good
This sounds amazing!
I haven't tried this method yet. I've got some other sauerkraut on the go, but I'm excited to try this method out. It's so simple and flexible! Thank you.
You should try this with cauliflower 👌 I come from Bulgaria and this is a very typical winter side dish
Hello Gaz from our family farm in Central ⛵⛵ Lakes Region New Hampshire. We are big on rhubarb here. Strawberry rhubarb pie especially. I make a rhubarb custard, but will give it a try fermented. I am on a post surgical diet that is geared to be kind to my liver and pancreas, after an inflamed gallbladder tried to take those two organs out last October. My hospital dietitian diet encourages ferments. I do eat sauerkraut, but want to try more options. I'm on a modified semi-vegetarian Mediterranean diet that is very strict that is agreeing with me. No red meat allowed, but I can have fish and seafood, white chicken & turkey. Prefer the seafood and plant proteins. Yes Tofu is on my list. I am following you to make use of those recipes that use soy products. This channel is very well done and I am checking out your cook books. All the best! ~ Diane
I love the lambs out on the field. I dream of moving away from the city to a place as beautiful as this!
ive just started growing rhubarb so i have to wait ages for it to grow but when its ready to be harvested im defo making this fermented rhubarb thanks for sharing
I am making this , this weekend! A friend has rhubarb in her garden and she is giving me some to make this! Can’t wait !
I scrumped some apples from the neighbours tree and fermented them with cinnamon sticks …. Amazing flavour …. Lactose fermentation is the way forward
Gaz, you're amazing and so inspiring for me ❤
Try recipes from Eastern Europe in terms of vegetables fermentation. Oh and so much more, from our way of cooking nettles to preparing fermented elderflower drink (you'll love it) and list can go on in terms of vegan recipes from our culture.
Cheers from Romania 🩷
Haven't tried fermented rhubarb. Love doing curried fermented cauliflower and cabbage. Rhubarb wine 🍷 next!?! Hat looks great with your dark features. Handsome gent. Love the mesh sweater shirt.
Yes, curried fermented cauliflower is my very favourite of all ferments! 😊
You're coming into your own as you connect to the land. Will have to try rhubarb. Thank you.
Great informative video Gaz. I will certainly give this a go. Thank you ❤
I find fermentation so interesting, but am so intimidated by it that ive never tried it. Ive seen so many videos of successful recipes posted on social media, but ive noticed also lots of failures too, with mold and other things that can go wrong. Its given me the impression that it can be very finicky to do. 🤷🏻♀️
Ive never purchased any recipe books cuz there are too many out there to choose from, for a beginner like me.
Do you have any recommendations as far as books that a person could begin with?
Your channel came up on my feed, so ill be checking it out. Thank you for this video.
Have a blessed day. 👩🏻🌾
Your video is right on time Gaz! I was unsure of how much salt to put just yesterday. Your instructions are very clear! Thank you!
It's so good to see vegan closer to nature. I really enjoy your evolution.
Can I just be Gaz why do I have to be a vegan
@@gazoakleychefProbably because a lot of people still know you as Avant Garde Vegan, I mean that's what you called yourself for years. Any particular reason why you don't want to identify as a vegan anymore? You're not going to be the latest in the line of former vegan RUclipsrs are you?
@@gazoakleychef I never quite thought of you as vegan. More like Chez Gaz. It always seemed you were making these luscious things that held within in them a certain craving for their meat versions. I don't want to call myself anything but an intuitarian, if pressed. which might explain why I can go from only wanting flowers and fruits to loving with a capital L some peppered mackerel. I am also totally open to a "vegan" version of that because I love vegetables. And recently, I discovered a fermented 'butter' product after really craving some grass-fed butter, and yet, every time I thought of it as being from the milk cows make, to feed their young, I was just put off. The product though, has literally everything I was desiring in butter, and more. It makes me want to make some of my own.
@@gazoakleychef I get how you feel, ill never turn my back on my quest for health and sustainability, but I am tired of the labels and the stigma that comes with it. Having a bit of an identity crisis lately and not sure why I should have to label myself as anything.
@@gazoakleychef That answer makes me very sad. No, you don't have to be vegan. You were. A proud one too. Apparently no more. That's sad. I can't think of any good reason why you wouldn't be.
It'd be awesome to see some recipes with these fermented foods in so we can get an idea of what to eat them with. Definitely looks like an interesting addition and I totally agree about all dishes needing some sort of acid in them. :)
Juat serve it with every meal. Like a side. Like how people eat ginger with sushi. Like a pickle spear....anything.
Great video! Would it last on the side or does it have to be in the fridge to keep long term as I thought the brine would preserve it? Thanks
I’m so happy I saw this!!! Now I know what I’ll do with all my rhubarb. ❤ nice work gas
And , you can save your brine to use as a dressing and to flavor cooked foods !! Amazing !! ❤
So excited! I started fermenting my veg last week and it is so delicious! I'm about to start fermenting some fresh beets this week
I love how the Kurdish music starts playing at 13:00. Amazing!
That doesn't look that difficult at all! Also sounds delicious. I might try this with leftover fruits and vegetables.
well, that was heavenly to see, in the midst of a pre-solar-return fast! Rhubarb!! I've been doing ferments for some years now, and lately was eyeing the rhubarb, but not inspired to do the sweet stewing, and kind of craving it raw-- and yet not quite getting the revelation--so thankyou so much!
Great video. I love the simplicity. I’ve made sauerkraut several times. I haven’t tried other veggies yet… on my list. I pickled quail eggs with vinegar… would this brine work for hard boiled eggs too?
Love you channel - thanks for sharing your skills in such a visually inspired way :)
Love your videos and generosity of information.
Love your clothing style too. Beautiful textures and colours that suit you, your personality and lifestyle. Love the beret with your longer hair too.
Makes me want to make the lifestyle change long long overdue, to a big garden with more room to grow food.
Love your kitchen too and your treasures within it.
Achieved as always after a LOT of work. You should feel proud.
Wonderful.
Thank you so much!
I'm liking his change of style with his fashion, apart from his videos and style of cooking as well
Im really loving kimchi and sauerkraut, this looks so delicious Gaz. Another helpful video im learning so much from your channel. Thanks so much ❤
Thanks so much
I've been fermenting at home for years, but have always struggled with how to use them in dishes. I usually just throw them on salads or eat them on the side, but I'd be interested in how you incorporate them into other dishes.
Gaz you would love Roasted Eggplant and Pepper Spread (Zacusca)-it’s absolutely the best thing ever ,eaten on fresh bread
Gaz, have you lacto-fermented garlic cloves yet? Its absolutely stunning. Takes the heat out of it but makes the flavours amazingly
Garlic is on my list for a while … I made fermented onions and they were just phenomenal! Do you add anything other than salt & water to your garlic? How long did you ferment them. Also, did you know that you can ferment garlic just in honey? (If you’re not vegan of course) it’s amazing and it is a fabulous immune booster! 🎉
@keinohrtini for vegan I ferment garlic in maple syrup, works the same as honey 😀 Around 6 weeks for fermentation of garlic but longer if uou like. Its so addictive just to snack on
Ive made a fermented garlic-ginger paste before that was absolutely amazing in anything I added it to. Especially curries and the like.
Wow you have wild garlic to last a few generationswell done
Thanks for this! I am definitely going to try it this summer!
Hope you like it!
It would be interesting to see your new style of eating.. like "what i eat in a day/week" kinda video..
Inspiring. I live in Yorkshire and have a lot of rhubarb
I'm gonna try the lacto fermented rhubarb !! it's fantastic !! thanks for this video:)
Enjoy ❤️
@@gazoakleychef i will! I lacto fermented yesterday some kohlrabi cabbage for the first time, I can't wait to try it!
So good! Any spices you suggest adding? I might try adding bay leaf, juniper berries, ginger, coriander seed....
Okay, thats it. This was the push I needed. I've had a hand written recipe from my friend's Rumanian mother in law for sbout 2 years and just never made it. Gonna get rhubarb at the market later this week and finally make it!
I didn’t know Che Guevara was plant based!
Che Guevara was not a vegetarian. Perhaps, had he lived, he would have come to see animal rights as a serious social issue.
Haha , yes the Che "Gaz" Guevara ! Awesome
I was thinking the exact same thing🎉
Literally
Love that Kitchen! Is it my computer, your camera or the system. I seem to see shots of "fire" popping off the open jar. Perhaps it is the power of Fermentation. 🤗
Describing th taste got Me salivating
Try it with creamy humus or/and muhammara 🙃
I'll give this a try. Can we do it with all vegetables? Aubergines, cucumbers, courgettes, beetroots... etc?
Tjank you for that video. I would also like to see other fermentation recipes like tempeh or fermented plums. Japanese recipes include a lot of fermented food...
Hey Gaz - I love your videos - a good advice to add for people who eat a lot of fermented veggies and drink kombucha is to be extra sure you brush your teeth squeaky clean at last twice a day. These products contain high amounts of acid that breaks down your teeth like a worm knife through butter 👍
I would recommend just rinsing with water after. You don't want to brush the enamel off your teeth right after softening it with acid. Wait a few hours.
@@k.h.6991 very good point! 👍
@@k.h.6991 Never brush your teeth right after a meal- what ever it is! If ever one needs a deeper rinse, just add salt to water and rinse with it. They'll even feel clean. :)
Please Always plant rhubarb far away from animalpens. My friend horse died after eating the highly toxic leaves.
But once planted at the right spot it just thrives and will come back each year ;-)Enjoy the pink delight
Thanks so much for making this video. I’ve been wanting to make sauerkraut but scared to try it incase I make myself ill 😅 but you’ve made it seem very easy to do.
Yes! This is what I will do with all my leeks, fantastic!
Enquiry please: 3'50" In what world is a strong waft of garlic a 'downside'?
More seriously, does lacto fermentation take care of the oxalic acid in raw rhubarb? I use the it in smoothies(plus chilli, ginger, beetroot, carrot & OJ).... and just hope blitzing in the processor takes care of any problem.
Great video, is it bad to get small white furry spots in the water as it ferments or does that mean it’s gone bad already? Thanks
You really don’t need to burp those jars, the hinge gives enough to let gases out without burping. Burping risks letting in air and mould spores. But sit them in a dish as they may well overflow. And Gu jars are perfect to keep everything under the brine, no need to buy glass weights.
What are Gu jars? I tried googling, is it a shallow jar??
@@manehbag732they are small shallow glass jars containing delicious desserts which you can buy in supermarkets in the UK
We love you Gaz
A recipe or proportions for a dressing would be much appreciated. I have some rhubarb fermenting...i even put some raw on my salad, it was great.
OMG, this is such a beautiful rhubarb. I love rhubarb so much and I am a little bit jealous right now. Unfortunately, I do not process fermented dishes because of the histamine. Btw. rhubarb ist not a fruit but a vegetable, too.
Love the Che Guevera hat 😊 would love to see you make a video of flavoured kombucha recipies! Am really curious to start making my own
Bruh. You are the Boss man- the Che Guevara of fermented veg! You’re my hero 👏🏼👏🏼👌🏼
that rhubarb would be great chopped up and served on top of a dip or something, yum! top tier content as always Gaz 😊
Gaz I have two separate rhubarb plants, Thanks, I would of never thought to ferment my rhubarb.
You’ll love
@@gazoakleychef I need many more jars ( :
@@gazoakleychefI made one jar and I hope I wasn't supposed to peel the rhubarb
What is the color/brand of the plaster walls ?? It's what I love , thank you ❤
Hello Gaz , will you open your farm to the public for visits , my wife and I would love to visit Your farm . We have so many questions and just want to be immersed in the Vegan inspiration
Not my personal home but one day I’ll create an experience that everyone can join ❤️🔥
@@gazoakleychef understood 🙏 peace and blessings we appreciate the reply.
How about Nona’s ? Will you do a pop up or reopen the restaurant any time soon ?
Hi gaz love the channe!. First time fermenter here, ive done some carrots with garlic ans dill and i have a question.....i just opened up to burp it and a load of gas fizzed up and bubbled, is this normal? Probably a daft question but it seemed a lot, it was like fizzy pop lol
I love fermenting!
Me too!
Glad to see you. I've missed yr videos
Gaz, three cheers, i love your headgear👍
Hola desde España 🇪🇦, una pregunta en donde vivo el clima es caluroso y húmedo, puedo conservarlos bien? , muy gracias ❤
I love brine! I know it sounds crazy, but I love sweet/sour "bread and butter" pickle juice since I was a kid!
What about vinegar?
You do not need vinegar for lacto fermentation
I’d love to try this! We unfortunately do not have any rhubarb out where we reside, but it sure does sound delightful! Definitely something on my to do list. Also wonder how a rhubarb fermented hot sauce would turn out? 🤔
If you make Rhubarb gin, once the gin is made, make a crumble with the infused rhubarb, very nice, hot or cold ... caution, DO NOT drive or operate machinary afterwards ;)
@@carolineowen7846 Oh my word! That sounds like such a lovely idea! (Minus operating any machinery after of course!)
I enjoy making my own spirit infusions and syrups, so your suggestion truly flipped an idea switch 💡
Could you do a video on rhubarb ketchup? Please and thank you 😉
I am very confused. I loved the video but have a question. I will shortly have lots of apricots and figs that I would like to keep until next year. Do you think I should use your fermentation method that looks easy, or do I need to look at canning? Thank you.
Lacto both sounds great, experiment!