Fennel Sauerkraut Recipe - How to Make Fennel Sauerkraut (2024)

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5 from 8 votes

By Hank Shaw

March 30, 2015 | Updated June 06, 2022

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Fennel Sauerkraut Recipe - How to Make Fennel Sauerkraut (2)

When life gives you fennel, you make fennel sauerkraut. Or at least I do. Here in NorCal, fennel is a perennial vegetable, giving you lovely, fat bulbs year after year after year. I had one patch that gave me bulbs for 8 years before I finally dug it up.

All you do is slice the bulbs off at the base. I typically get two cuttings a year: One in late summer, the next in early spring.

Well, this spring was a bumper crop. I cut maybe 25 gigantic fennel bulbs, completely inundating my kitchen with anise-y goodness… and earwigs, which view the gaps in each fennel bulb the way you would an aromatic apartment complex.

Cleaned and trimmed (I save the fronds and stalks for making broth and stock), I still had a ton of fennel. What to do?

Kraut. I honestly had never heard of fennel sauerkraut before, but the idea just came to me. I looked it up on the InterWebz and quickly discovered that fennel kraut is a thing. So I look at a bunch of recipes and finally decided to just use my own standard kraut recipe, subbing in 50 percent shaved fennel for the shredded cabbage.

Fennel Sauerkraut Recipe - How to Make Fennel Sauerkraut (3)

My kraut is more or less standard, but I add a healthy dose of seeds to it, almost all from the Apiaceae family, which happens to include fennel.

This is a Truth: Vegetables in the same botanical family tend to work well together in the kitchen, like carrots and parsley, onions and garlic, tomatoes and peppers. My kraut seed mix is caraway, celery seeds, fennel seed, wild carrot seed and one outside the Apiaceae clan: juniper berries. If you don’t happen to have any wild carrot seed lying around, which 99 percent of you won’t, just skip it.

Fennel Sauerkraut Recipe - How to Make Fennel Sauerkraut (4)

I like to ferment my kraut for three weeks, which is a nice balance of sour and salty, and the vegetables stay really crunchy. You can ferment less time or longer if you’d like. And remember, the kraut will continue to be alive in the fridge, changing and mellowing as time progresses.

Serve this kraut wherever you would any other kraut, although this version tastes a little brighter a lighter than most other kraut recipes. Try it with your favorite sausage, or as a bed for Northern Italian canederli dumplings (knödel), which are basically the same thing as Bavarian dumplings, only a bit lighter. There’s also a great recipe for sauerkraut fritters in Chef Jeremy Nolen’s book New German Cooking: Recipes for Classics Revisited.

I have a few other really nice fennel recipes, such aspickled fennel,salmon patties with a fennel-watercress salad, and chicken orpheasant salad with fennel.

5 from 8 votes

Fennel Sauerkraut

The crunchiness of this kraut really shines with the fennel, but if you don't have that much fennel lying around, you can certainly use this recipe to make a standard cabbage kraut with these seasonings. You can also use wild fennel, which doesn't set much of a bulb, but does have a sort of thick part at its base in spring that you can use if you slice it thinly.

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Course: Condiment

Cuisine: German

Servings: 24

Prep Time: 25 minutes minutes

Total Time: 25 minutes minutes

Ingredients

  • 2 1/2 pounds fennel bulbs, sliced thin
  • 2 1/2 pounds shredded cabbage
  • 1.6 ounces kosher salt (45 grams)
  • 1 tablespoon crushed juniper berries
  • 1 tablespoon caraway seeds
  • 1 teaspoon celery seed
  • 2 teaspoons fennel seeds
  • 2 teaspoons wild carrot seeds (optional)

Instructions

  • Mix the shredded fennel and cabbage well in a very large bowl. Put down a layer of the vegetables about an inch thick in a 3-gallon crock. Sprinkle with salt and some of the seeds. Repeat until you have everything in the crock. If you can, mix it one more time. Place a plate or somesuch on the kraut and weigh it down with a large jar of water. Put the crock in a cool, dark place.

  • The next day, check to see if the vegetables have given up enough brine to completely cover themselves. If not, make some brine and add it. You want the brine to be 2 percent by weight, so 19 grams (or 0.7 ounces) of salt per quart of water. Let the sauerkraut ferment at between 60°F and 73°F for at least a week, and up to a month.

  • To finish, remove the weight and plate and move the finished kraut to quart-sized canning jars. If there is not enough brine to completely submerge the fennel kraut in the jars, make more brine as you did in Step 2. Cover the jar with their lids and store in the refrigerator for basically ever. I've had batches of sauerkraut last 2 years in the fridge.

Nutrition

Calories: 30kcal | Carbohydrates: 7g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 1g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Sodium: 766mg | Potassium: 282mg | Fiber: 3g | Sugar: 2g | Vitamin A: 110IU | Vitamin C: 23mg | Calcium: 48mg | Iron: 1mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Tried this recipe? Tag me today!Mention @huntgathercook or tag #hankshaw!

Categorized as:
Featured, German, Preservation Recipes, Recipe

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About Hank Shaw

Hey there. Welcome to Hunter Angler Gardener Cook, the internet’s largest source of recipes and know-how for wild foods. I am a chef, author, and yes, hunter, angler, gardener, forager and cook. Follow me on Instagram and on Facebook.

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Fennel Sauerkraut Recipe - How to Make Fennel Sauerkraut (2024)

FAQs

Can I put fennel seeds in sauerkraut? ›

Put the finely shredded cabbage into a large glass or ceramic bowl, add the salt and fennel seeds and massage it all together with your hands, coating well. Now pound the cabbage – a good thing to use for this is the pestle from a pestle and mortar or the round end of a rolling pin.

Can you lacto ferment fennel? ›

Fermented foods are very high in healthy probiotic bacteria and provide a huge range of benefits including; aiding digestion, improving overall gut health and gut flora and helping to boost immunity.

How long does sauerkraut take to ferment? ›

Store the container at 70°–75°F (21°–23°C) while fermenting. At these temperatures, sauerkraut will be fully fermented in about three to four weeks; at 60°–65°F (15°–18°C), fermentation may take six weeks. Below 60°F (15°C), sauerkraut may not ferment. Above 80°F (26°C), sauerkraut may become soft and spoil.

Who should not use fennel seeds? ›

Hormone-sensitive condition such as breast cancer, uterine cancer, ovarian cancer, endometriosis, or uterine fibroids: Fennel might act like estrogen. If you have any condition that might be made worse by estrogen, do not use fennel.

Should you crush fennel seeds? ›

How to prepare fennel seeds. You'll get more flavour out of fennel seeds by grinding or toasting them. To grind, either crush in a pestle and mortar, put in a sealed food bag and bash with a rolling pin, or whizz to a powder in a clean coffee grinder.

Do you use vinegar when making sauerkraut? ›

These are the simple ingredients you'll need to make this homemade sauerkraut recipe:
  1. Water and vinegar: This sauerkraut recipe starts with water and distilled white vinegar.
  2. Vegetables: You'll need a half of an onion and a head of cabbage.
Jan 9, 2024

Does sauerkraut need brine? ›

It's brine! Rather than bore you with science (and because I am not a scientist) we will get down the basics. The veggies you ferment at home must be submerged in a salty environment to become delicious and prevent pathogens. For best results that environment should be around 3.5% salt.

Is it cheaper to make your own sauerkraut? ›

Why make your own sauerkraut/kimchi? There are so many reasons! COST: making your own fermented veggies is WAY cheaper than buying them at the store! FLEXIBLE FLAVORS AND SALT LEVEL: making your own fermented veggies allows you to put whatever ingredients, flavors, level of salt or hot pepper that you want.

What does fermented fennel taste like? ›

It's delightfully crisp and tangy as any good ferment should be – keep tasting during the fermentation process and place in the fridge once it reaches the level of sourness that you like.

What can be done with fennel seeds? ›

Whether you use fennel seeds for pickling vegetables, seasoning sausage or making a crust for fish or beef, you'll soon realize that these aromatic seeds can elevate the most basic recipes. Fennel seeds also offer vitamins, minerals and fiber, so you can feel good about working them into your weekly meal plan.

How do I know when my sauerkraut is ready? ›

The rule of thumb when it comes to sauerkraut is to just keep tasting the sauerkraut until the taste is to your liking. The sauerkraut itself should be safe to eat at every stage of the process, so there is no real 'fermentation time'.

What is the best salt for making sauerkraut? ›

However, do check your salt doesn't contain chemical anti-caking agents which might affect the fermentation. Try fine sea salt, or Diamond Crystal Kosher salt. The Spices - spices are used for flavour, and they can also help to slow mould growth.

What is the best container for making sauerkraut? ›

Choose the right container to ferment the cabbage

Old-fashioned earthenware crocks are traditional and are still a good choice as long as they are not cracked or chipped. Food-grade plastic pails that are sturdy and rigid make excellent containers.

What spices can you add to sauerkraut? ›

Mustard, Coriander, and Poppy Seeds add bold flavor and texture to this fun and easy-to-make fermented cabbage.

What dishes do you use fennel seed in? ›

Whether you use fennel seeds for pickling vegetables, seasoning sausage or making a crust for fish or beef, you'll soon realize that these aromatic seeds can elevate the most basic recipes. Fennel seeds also offer vitamins, minerals and fiber, so you can feel good about working them into your weekly meal plan.

What can I use instead of caraway seeds in sauerkraut? ›

In sauerkraut, the best substitute for caraway is fennel seeds, however dill or anise will also work, but are more pungent than fennel, so should be used more sparingly.

What kills the probiotics in sauerkraut? ›

Although heat does kill the good bacteria living in your sauerkraut, it only happens at 46°C (115°F). So if you're cooking at a very, very low temperature, you should still retain a large amount of these probiotics. Another solution could be to add your sauerkraut or kimchi to a cooked meal near the end.

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