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Home » Himalayan Pink Salt

Himalayan Pink Salt

How Much Salt do I use for Sauerkraut?

Aug 13, 2017 · 6 Comments

jar of sauerkraut next to a container of pink Himalayan salt

Sauerkraut – Using The Correct Amount of Salt

Making sauerkraut for the first time can be intimidating. I promise you it doesn’t have to be. There are just a few things you need to get right for a tasty, full flavored kraut.
The first (and most important) question I always ask myself is how much salt do I use for sauerkraut?

Expert sauerkraut makers agree on one thing. The amount of salt is critical to the quality and safety of your sauerkraut. The correct amount of salt for any recipe is 2% percent of the weight of your cabbage. This assumes your cabbage is fermenting in an 18C to 21C environment. As you keep reading, you’ll learn how to quickly calculate this for yourself.

In a nutshell, the method goes like this:

  1. Weigh your cabbage
  2. Do some math
  3. Weigh your salt

Seems fairly straight forward doesn’t it?

Step by Step Salt and Cabbage Measurements

jar of sauerkraut next to dish of Pink Himalayan Salt. Text reads 2000g cabbage times 2% salt by weight = 40g salt

Step 1 – Weigh your cabbage

First, weigh your cabbage using a digital kitchen scale.

By the way, I’m intentionally using the metric measurement of grams for this. It’s just easier to work with than the imperial system.

TIP:
Don’t weigh your cabbage in the condition you’ve purchased it from the market.
Instead, weigh it after you’ve torn off the outer leaves and removed the tough inner core.
The trick is to weigh the exact amount of cabbage that will end up in your sauerkraut.

For our example let’s say you’ve set your cabbage on a kitchen scale and it weighs exactly 2000g. (about two heads of cabbage)

Great, step one is done!

a digital kitchen scale with tablespoon of salt with a head of cabbage.

Step 2 – Do Some Easy Math

So from step one,  you discovered your cabbage weighs 2000g right? For step two, take that number (2000g) and multiply by .02. Notice how the number “2” is in .02? That’s how you end up with 2% salt.

Wait, before we continue, a lot of our readers don’t like math! So why not try our sauerkraut calculator directly below?

Sauerkraut Calculator

Type the number of grams of cabbage you have below:

For ??? of cabbage, you will need ??? of salt.

Note: This will give you a 2% salt to cabbage ratio. Which is exactly what you want!

After you multiply, you’ll end up with the number 40. That means 40g of salt is needed for 2000g of raw cabbage.

Let’s look at that again:
2000g of cabbage multiplied by .02 equals “the number of grams of salt you need”

OR

2000g x .02 = salt
2000g x .02 = 40g of salt

This also works for any amount of cabbage!

Let’s change the amount of cabbage and see what happens.

If you have 200g of cabbage, it would look like this…
200g x .02 = 4g salt

What about 654g of cabbage?
Let’s do it.

654g x .02 = 13.08g salt (we’ll just say 13g even)

And just to make it sink in, let’s have a little fun.
What about 40,000g of cabbage!
No problem.

40,000g x .02 = 800g salt

Fantastic, step two is done.

Step 3 – Weigh your salt

Now, simply weigh your salt with a kitchen scale to match the answer you got above. That’s how much salt you should use. There are no tablespoons to measure here.

Next, find out why tablespoons are inaccurate when measuring salt for sauerkraut.


Fermenting Sauerkraut bonus resources:

The University of Wisconsin-Madison has great information in PDF document format about fermenting vegetables, including sauerkraut:
You can find these at the links below. When you click on these links, a PDF will either open or download.

Recommendations for Safe Production of Fermented Vegetables
Fermented Vegetables
Fermented and Acidified Vegetables

And while you’re here…please do leave a comment. Ask a question. Let us know your experience or opinion. I’d love to hear it!

Happy Cooking!
Anton

Fermenting and Pickling, How To Cook Cabbage, Coarse Salt, Cooking Weights and Measurements, Fine Grain Salt, Himalayan Pink Salt, Kosher Salt, Salt, Sauerkraut

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