Tuesday, September 26, 2023
Fermented sauerkraut with black seeds
Saturday, September 23, 2023
How to make Kefir Wey and how to use it.
Kefir is considered to be 99% lactose free. Lactose is the milk sugar and is what the living bacteria in the Kefir is eating. That's why you can't use lactose free milk, that will starve the Kefir grains (they turn brown and eventually dies). So when you drink Kefir, since the sugars is eaten, you don't get as many calories as if you'd drink the milk unfermented.
Kefir Wey contains a lot of vitamins, such as B- and C vitamins, and especially B2 wich is good for your eyes, and also helps your body to convert carbs into energy.
Kefir Wey helps to remove toxins and supports the white bloodcells, it stabilize colesterol levels.
It has very powerful anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial properties and has been even frequently been recommended to patients by Hippocrates to heal them from a variety of illnesses
-you know the guy that is supposedly have said:
Further on; Kefir Wey also contains a lot of potassium witch helps muscels to contract and supports normal blood pressure. Potassium also helps to maintain normal levels of fluid inside the cells and supports the kidneys.
So: why not a splash of Kefir Wey in your smoothie to enrich both the vitamin and probiotic content. Sealed in a glass bottle and stored in the fridge, your Kefir Wey will be fine at least a couple of weeks, I'd say up to a month, but it will have the most probiotics in it the very first days.
And lol, listen to this; Kefir Wey can even be used in a skin toner to remove any remnants of cleaning, dirt, excess oil or makeup, balance the skin's PH and moisturize. (Find recipe below)
So Here's how you make Kefir Wey:
Do your usual procedure of straining your grains. Then strain your Kefir through a coffee filter. You can let it drip in the fridge over night. The liquid is even called Liquid Gold due to it's high healing properties!
This "liquid gold" can be used as a starter when you ferment veggies. If you're used to supplement with probiotics in capsule or pill form, consider that Kefir contains 35-56 different strains of probiotics. The highest amount of different strains I have found in capsules is 25 different strains, and when I tried to sprinkle that over a batch of blueberries to be fermented - nothing happened, the berries didn't ferment at all! Another brand that I tried that with, with 14 strands of probiotics worked though, and the fermentation got going perfectly! Compare that with 35-56 different strands, and that isn't freeze dried (and might be killed by you stomach acid...), living bacteria is Much stronger! Adding Kefir Wey over your veggies (I'd use about 1-2 table spoons in the brine) to be fermented is of course to cultivating those strains in your batch. Use as fresh Kefir Wey as possible, preferably directly when you've filtered the Wey.
But of course you can drink your Liquid Gold directly out of the stored bottle too!
The Kefir "left-over" that you have in your coffee filter is called Kefir Cheese and can be use as such. Cut some nice fresh herbs, or add some salt and garlic, there's endless of options to blend in your Kefir Cheese! Use it as a spread or as a tasty (and very healthy) spice on your fish, chicken, meat or salad! I think my favourite Kefir Cheese must be with finely crushed fresh rosemary and some salt!
Best of Luck!!
Friday, July 14, 2023
Lingonberry jam - Fermentation style
As you may know, all plants have so called antinutrients in various grades.
Tuesday, May 16, 2023
Fermented veggies. How to make them + Tips
I got the idea that I could share some photos on my fermenting I'm doing today. Things has been quite intense in my life lately and I've been a bit lazy on making jars with fermented veggies. Fact is that I feel how my mood starts getting drained if I skip eating fermented vegetables just for a few days. So I need to have some jars stashed in my fridge or bubbling in my cupboard to keep myself in a good mood.
So; here's some sharing along side my catching up, making some fresh jars of ferments. Don't see it as a recipe, just a spontanious sharing.
I ferment so much, and most of the time I'm just throwing veggies together on pure insiration. I even like to work with colors in the jars, and this became a juicy green jar, with some nice shiny red spots 😍
I've found that it's just perfect to start with zucchini. If you grate it on a grater and sprinkle just a liittle salt, you can easily work up a perfect brine by squeeze and kned it like a dough.
The salt make the zucchini to exude its liquid. And you'll have a beautiful deep green liquid for your fermentation. Full of healthy living bacteria and fresh nutrients.
Further in the bowl I've added baby spinach, broccoli, aspargus, some black peppercorns, some juniper berries, a little bit of fresh chili and some granted lemon peel. And here's a good thing to think of; If you find an exciting recipe with chili, know that the common use in differnt areas of the world differ. A jar of fermented veggies take some time before you can taste it properly. I learned from the misstake that just a few flakes of chili in a recipe, that was supposed to be placed on top of the brine to prevent bad bacteria-growth, resulted in that the ferment became so hot that someone in my extended family just coudn't eat it. 😄
Another tip that I thought I'd share is that the small flowers/buds on the tops on the broccoli have a tendency to float. So split the tops with your fingers, and don't cut with knife or scissors (that will cut the flowers off of "the branches") and also; split the tops well, since tops have a tendency to hold on to air bubbles in the brine. Broccoli is So delicious to ferment!!
One of my favourites right now!!
I always use the broccoli-stem as well. The stem can be cut in a bit bigger pieces.
Here's some more photos from the making of the first jar of today:
Granted lemon- or orange peel gives a delicious touch to a fermentation! Just grant the colored outer peel though, the white right underneath is not as tasty. When I use a lemon- or orange-peel like this, I use to make a ferment of the whole lemon/orange too (they get bad easily with it's outer peel granted off). I cut it in small pieces with the white skin and all, and ferment the lemon/orange pieces in salt brine in other smaller jars. They really are tasty snacks as fermented! The white part of the orange and lemon peel is btw very healthy! Among loads of healthy stuff it contains pectin, which can prevent cancer, reduce elevated cholesterol and suppress appetite, so make it a habit to eat the Whole lemons and oranges!
Fruit together with vegetables is not what I'd recommend. The sugars in the fruits speed up the fermentation so much that the vegetables don't have time to "reap" properly in the fermentation. But a few raisins or dates cut in pieces is something i use sometimes to deepen the taste!
So; When you feel you're done with adding different tastes, it's time for the "kneading".
Lift the wet veggies from the bottom and place it on top of the others and knead. Push and squeeze. Pick up from the wet bottom again and repeat until they all have started to seep liquid.
Now you can push the veggies down into the jar. Press well and fill the bottom of the jar. Like I said, this is no recipe, so I'm just giving tips here; I use to make a salt brine on gray salt. Warm as much water you think you need in a saucepan, make it "finger-warm" as we call it where I live, about 37 degrees C, or 98,6 F, and melt as much salt in it so it taste like tears. I've stopped to weigh and measure to get the perfect procetnage, I've learned the taste and trust my toungue 😎. Salt is used to kill off bad bacteria, but this amount ("tear-tasting" brine) of salt won't kill the beneficial bacteria which actually is stronger than the bad ones (thank god for that, huh 😄) Too little salt won't kill off "the bad ones" and too much salt and all bacteria will die and no fermentation will happen - So be careful when you springle salt, like I mentioned in the beginning, to get that first zucchini-brine, because that salt will of course be added to the brine in the jar. Too much salt is hard to change, but it's easy to add salt if you can taste that it has too little salt in it.
Pour some lukewarm brine over the veggies. Too hot can damage the living bacteria, but some warmth will kickstart the growth by the "good ones" while the "bad ones" is decimated by the salt. That'll mae the "good ones" take over and outnumber (and kick out) the "bad ones". Are you starting to feel like a farmer now, farming microbiome? 😉
Fill the jar and squeez continuously to pack as much veggies in the jar as possible and in the same time push out air bubbles. Make sure to use all the liquid in the bottom of your bowl, and fill up if needed with salt brine-water. Taste the brine while filling to make sure it coninues to have the right taste of salt.
When conceiling the jar I use a plastic lid (from an honey jar I use to buy), to push down the veggies to be below surface of the brine. You can use a small tied together plastic bag filled with water, or cabbage leaves, distilled stones, glass, or ceramics too if you don't wan't the plastic in your jar. The trick is to prevent the veggies to reach above the surface. It's importent that everything in the jar is below the surface, within the brine. Air contains bad bacteria, spores etc. that can start to grow on stuff above the surface.
For now I'm usig that plastic lid, and heres my full jar. I use a teastrainer to scoop out things floating on the surface.
IT IS VERY IMPORTANT TO USE A JAR WITH AIR-RELEASING LID
There are many sorts on the market. I use a glass jar with metal brace. The rubber rings between the jar and lid, can be worn out, so after a while I use two rubber rings to prevent air from coming IN into the jar. Lids that are screwed on is not what I'd rekommend. The lid just get tighter and tighter the more preassure that is built up in the jar. Bacteria that is growing in a fermentation produce carbonation and this can be a such strong force that the glass jar can actually expload. But don't worry, it'll take much before it happens! But it actually did happen to me. I had forgotten a glassbottle with combucha with a screw cap in the cupboard for months, and it actually did expload! No one got hurt thankfully, but it created some terrible mess to clean up 😅.
Leave some space between the surface of the brine and the lid. My jars often leak when the "chaos" starts in the jar, it often bubbles through the rubber rings. But I've stopped to bother about it, I just place the jars i small bowls to collect the brine that comes out, to prevent a mess. And I'm feeling safe since it can't explode when the pressure obviously gets out!
I'm leaving the jar for 7 days in a dark cupboard. After that I'm placing the jar in the fridge. Mostly I start to eat it right away. But remeber that this is a preservation method, so don't worry so much about how long it will be ok in there in the fridge. If the jar is unopened, it can stay fresh for months. As long as it smells ok, tastes ok, isn't soft and slimy -it should be cruchy, you can likely eat it! I mean we didn't always have refrigeators during our human development here on earth, still we've got ourselves here, right?!
~ BEST OF LUCK ~
Wednesday, March 8, 2023
Depression Is An Allergic Reaction To Inflammation
A favorite article of mine, written already 2015!
(Posted with permission given by FEELguide)
~ ~ ~
New Research Discover That Depression Is An Allergic Reaction To Inflammation
By treating the inflammatory symptoms of depression — rather than the neurological ones — researchers and doctors are opening up an exciting new dimension in the fight against what has become a global epidemic. Caroline Williams of The Guardian writes: “The good news is that the few clinical trials done so far have found that adding anti-inflammatory medicines to antidepressants not only improves symptoms, it also increases the proportion of people who respond to treatment, although more trials will be needed to confirm this. There is also some evidence that omega 3 and curcumin, an extract of the spice turmeric, might have similar effects. Both are available over the counter and might be worth a try, although as an add-on to any prescribed treatment – there’s definitely not enough evidence to use them as a replacement.”
Eleanor Morgan of VICE adds: “Cytokines skyrocket during depressive episodes and, in those with bipolar disorder, halt in remission. The fact that ‘normal,’ healthy people can become temporarily anxious or depressed after receiving an inflammatory vaccine — like typhoid — lends further credence to the theory. There are even those who think we should re-brand depression altogether as an infectious disease … Carmine Pariante, a Kings College psychiatrist who is quoted in The Guardian report, says that we’re between five and ten years away from a blood test that can measure levels of inflammation in depressed people. If both Pariante’s estimate and the inflammation-depression theory are correct, we could potentially be just five years from an adequate ‘cure’ for depression.”
You can read much more by visiting The Guardian, VICE, and NOVA. And to learn much more about how food and mood are powerfully connected, be sure to read this fascinating article on Kripalu.org. (Image courtesy of the American Heart Association).
SHORT: https://youtube.com/clip/Ugkx1GmXq9ccwsGEFm_0HbhaSTjjSFA-ZWim