FERMENT · LÉGUMES LACTO-FERMENTÉS

Water kimchi (mul-kimchi)

물김치mul-kimchi

Kimchi coréen en bouillon (mul-kimchi) — pâle, rafraîchissant, bu autant que mangé, pendant estival du kimchi piquant

Durée de fermentation 1-3 days at room temperature, then 1-2 weeks aging cold
Plage de température 15-22°C (60-72°F) active; 0-4°C (32-39°F) aging
Sel / saumure 1.5-2% in the brine
Difficulté Facile
Importance Établi
Avis de traduction

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Profil

Mul-kimchi (물김치) — literally 'water kimchi' — is the brothy, lighter, less spicy Korean fermented vegetable preparation that exists alongside the more familiar napa kimchi tradition. The vegetables (typically Korean radish, cabbage hearts, sometimes Asian pear and apple slices) are submerged in a lightly seasoned brine — salt, garlic, ginger, scallion, sometimes a small amount of dried red pepper or pear-juice sweetening — and fermented for a few days. The result is consumed as both a brothy beverage and a fermented vegetable dish: the vegetables are eaten, and the broth is sipped or used to enhance other dishes.

Mul-kimchi serves a different culinary role from the more common spicy kimchi. It is traditionally a hot-weather food (the cool broth and mild flavor are refreshing in summer), a children's food (less spicy and easier to introduce), a digestive aid (drunk before or alongside heavy meals), and the canonical pairing for naengmyeon — Korean cold noodle dishes that often use mul-kimchi broth as part of the soup base.

The technical distinction from spicy napa kimchi is fundamental: mul-kimchi is a brine fermentation, where the brine is the primary medium and the vegetables are partially submerged in it. Spicy kimchi is a paste-coated fermentation where the yangnyeom paste is worked between the cabbage leaves. The microbiology is the same family (lactic acid bacteria native to the vegetables driving the ferment), but the structural approach produces materially different products.

Mul-kimchi has many regional and seasonal variations: dongchimi (동치미) is the winter-fermented mu radish water kimchi, traditionally fermented in onggi crocks buried in the ground; nabak-kimchi (나박김치) is a more vegetable-rich, slightly redder version often served at Korean banquets and ancestor-rite tables; yeolmu mul-kimchi uses young summer radishes. The category is broader and more flexible than the spicy kimchi category.

Techniques clés

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Erreurs courantes

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Références croisées