Dear Erma,
All sauerkraut, being a fermented form of cabbage, is old. From wikipedia:
"Fully cured sauerkraut keeps for several months in an airtight container stored at or below 15 °C (60 °F). Neither refrigeration nor pasteurization is required, although these treatments prolong storage life."
So I recommend another delicious field roast link.
There must be something seriously wrong with you. You let it rot? EAT ALL THE SAUERKRAUT. Do it before it goes bad. Do it before it even goes into the Ziploc. NECK IT DOWN. Sauerkraut is pure awesome (and it's a "free food" in Weight Watchers, so I can eat as much of it as I can get down without using any points, praise be.
@1 - I have my leftover cranberry sauce, too, but in a tasteful glass container. It doesn't seem to go bad, but I might like that container for other things.
I love sauerkraut! You do know they make freezer bags, don't you? Put it in the freezer in serving sizes. But I've kept jars of kraut in the fridge for months and it doesn't go bad, so I don't know what your eating. I'm thinking you kept it with meat.
I once had a chocolate cake recipe that called for sauerkraut. It was pretty good, actually. The kraut adds moisture, and you don't really taste it. So make that cake January 2 next year.
Jesus. Sauerkraut is pickled. (and @1, cranberry sauce is highly acidic.) They both should keep forever in the fridge. Where the fuck are you storing them, in a sauna?
Canned sauerkraut? Gross. That's your first problem. Get Bubbie's next time. You can find it at any halfway decent grocery store; I know for a fact Madison Market has it. I'm sure it'll keep for quite a while in the fridge, although whenever I buy it, it gets consumed within a week (if not a few days).
Deeper confession to @5 and @11 - the homemade cranberry sauce was a well-meaning gift to the "lonely bachelor" that should have been returned immediately as I am not a real fan and actually seem to prefer that solid red gelatin stuff I had as a kid - the chunks skeeve me out. The delayed discovery was my excuse to toss it.
I just have to join the chorus here. Our predecessors invented pickling/fermenting in order to keep vegetables for a long time without refrigeration (think kim chee, kosher dills, all those weird Japanese pickly things, etc.). If your sauerkraut is not still good for next New Year, you are doing something wrong.
Anyway, to get rid of it, try this:
Brown a couple of thick pork chops in a skillet. When browned, smother with sauerkraut, cover and simmer for 40 minutes or so until done to your liking.
Remove meat to platter, add sour cream and caraway seeds to saurkraut and pan juices. Stir over heat to thicken, serve over porkchops. Delicious!
My dear chum, the late Mary Norris (City Light's last Home Economist) and her husband used to love to make sauerkraut. They'd put up huge batches of it, and she said that it never failed that on the days they'd do it, which made the house stink royally, somebody would stop over unexpectedly. They finally put in an outdoor shelter with an electric stove to keep the smell out of the house.
But she and Joe just loved their homemade sauerkraut.
Two points. Number one, this is my favorite post ever, maybe even my favorite thing ever stuck to the Internet. Number two, fuck me, Fnarf participates in Weight Watchers?!?!
I didn't think the implication was that the sauerkraut had gone bad, but simply that the smell which at first brought to mind a delicious snack had now come to seem terrible. Hence the offer at the end for a ziploc of the leftovers.
I have sauerkraut in my fridge that I made well over a year ago. Get yourself some real sauerkraut, and you can eat it until you've eaten it all, no time limit.
It also goes pretty well with ramen soup, as I recall.
All sauerkraut, being a fermented form of cabbage, is old. From wikipedia:
"Fully cured sauerkraut keeps for several months in an airtight container stored at or below 15 °C (60 °F). Neither refrigeration nor pasteurization is required, although these treatments prolong storage life."
So I recommend another delicious field roast link.
-Matt
I don't have the "likes sauerkraut" gene.
btw, doesn't O'Brien's wife sell sauerkraut? i'm surprised the stranger isn't gulping that shit down...
Anyway, to get rid of it, try this:
Brown a couple of thick pork chops in a skillet. When browned, smother with sauerkraut, cover and simmer for 40 minutes or so until done to your liking.
Remove meat to platter, add sour cream and caraway seeds to saurkraut and pan juices. Stir over heat to thicken, serve over porkchops. Delicious!
But she and Joe just loved their homemade sauerkraut.
I know that I know that cake from somewhere, and it was a pleasant experience. I shall have to ask Mother Vel-DuRay about it.
I don't know where that exact newspaper recipe I followed is now, but I just googled "sauerkraut chocolate cake" and found lots of stuff.
I've also made my own sauerkraut. Most recently with this recipe.
http://www.sfgate.com/food/recipes/detai…
(It came out perfect the first time, the second and third times it seemed too salty, so I'm trying to get back to the right proportion of salt.)