Sauerkraut cannot be cooked or frozen if you want the probiotics it offers
Since sauerkraut is fermented it contains probiotics to add to your beneficial gut bacteria (#microflora). I grew up eating the stuff, but never got that benefit because it was always cooked at high temps in an oven. That classic pork roast in sauerkraut is a typical New Year’s dish.
Cooked sauerkraut is prebiotic (with an E), which feeds the microflora.
So what I am tempted to conclude is that the pork roast should cook in some sauerkraut (for flavor and for the prebiotics. But before serving some cold or room temp uncooked sauerkraut should be mixed in to increase gut bacteria.
Do folks agree or disagree with this?
Unlike kimchi, sauerkraut is much better cooked because uncooked is strong and acidic. So I’m trying to get the best of both worlds. There must be a temp at which sauerkraut can brought to without compromising the microflora. What temp is it, though?
The first question is more about what kind of kraut you're using. If it's jarred or canned, there are no live cultures in it to begin with.
If you're using non-processed kraut directly from a live culture or refrigerated vessel, then you may have some benefit, though the actual measured efficacy of probiotics in food consumption is scant at best.
oh shit.. I never thought of the canning. I suppose the canning process kill it. Which I suppose also means buying kimchi in jars loses the probiotics for the same reason.
The fresher kraut in the grocery store seems to be in plastic bags in the refrigerated section, but I’m not sure I can trust that either.. those bags have to be sealed just as well. OTOH, I’ve bought food in the fridge section with plastic film over it which really balloons out when close to expiry, apparently due to gas emitted by the bacteria. So maybe they aren’t killing the bacteria in those cases.
Kimchi in jars is different because it's usually refrigerated from the start, and the fermentation is slower than kraut which usually starts at room temp, and finishes refrigerated. You can almost always tell if it's live by just tasting it. A live culture will have a bit of a carbonated kind of fizz in the bite.
If it's in the airlock bags or plastic vessels, it's assumed that it's live. Like Farmhouse Culture, Sinto, or Wildbrine.
Oh, for sure. It'll change your life. Look in the refrigerator section where they keep things like pickles if you're in the US. Unsure how it's sold in other parts of the world.
You need a cool area (around 10°C) to store the sauerkraut, so if you don't have that, putting it in the fridge is also a possibility. And 99% of the time the container is sealed with a water ring, or mold could start growing. Therefore the smell (what I think you mean is the problem with shared apartment) isn't there all the time, only when you cook it and open the container.... which are the same times as when you use bought sauerkraut.
Given that those bacteria have to survive your body temperature heating it up to / cooking it at 37°C should cause no issues for them. Sadly I can't provide any information beyond that.
Weißkohl (no idea what it is called in English, I can only find the generic "cabbage" term) is disgusting and so are all its produce like Sauerkraut or Krautsalat. That shit makes me gag and vomit. I don't know what it is about it but I absolutely despise it.
I'm sorry Sir, but I'm going to have to ask you to turn in your German passport.
Good luck in all your future endeavours, you will be escorted to the nearest border with France.