GreenSmoothieGirl Logo
Lose 10 Pounds in 10 Minutes. Add 10 Years to your life.
Our beautiful template for infinite variety of greens and superfoods in your smoothies—print this and eliminate the need for recipes! Get it now for free!

Fermenting foods: it’s freaking me out!


Robyn Openshaw - Sep 20, 2011 - This Post May Contain Affiliate Links


Dear GreenSmoothieGirl: I really like the idea of adding the Rejuvelac as my green smoothie base, but I’m honestly totally freaked out to leave something perishable on my countertop in an unsealed container for several days. What are the chances that “bad bacteria” get in there and make me sick? I really appreciate any feedback you have. It sounds like a great opportunity to make green smoothies do even more for me, but I can’t get over the initial concept. –Grace

Answer: Grace, I think it might help if I explain the concept a bit more. Fermented foods are part of your diet already, if you eat yogurt or sauerkraut, or even beer. The manufacturer had to let it sit at room temperature for a time, to grow the cultures.

Also, before refrigeration, human beings had a stronger inner terrain and microbes rarely harmed them. Of course, now we have antibiotics that have seriously damaged most people’s balance of beneficial microorganisms colonizing the digestive tract. We also have refined foods weakening us, and few, if any, cultured foods strengthening us. We now seem to believe that killing a couple million of the billions of microscopic critters around us will somehow do the trick.

It’s a weird modern concept that everything we eat has to be sterilized—ancient peoples lived amongst billions of organisms very peacefully for thousands of years. So maybe our food is sterilized, fumigated, pasteurized, irradiated…..but there are billions of organisms everywhere ELSE (which makes the antibiotic wipes a pointless waste of money).

So, it feels unnatural to you but only because of our strange modern traditions, and the fact that we’ve gotten away from eating foods that nurture our gut’s need for healthy colonization. Just ONE course of antibiotics can change the gut’s internal terrain forever.

Every culture of the world eats cultured foods. Some chew up a food and spit it, with their saliva, into an earthen pot, and drink it a week later. (I won’t be teaching you those methods, don’t worry.) There are literally hundreds of types of cultured foods, in traditional / indigenous peoples, and in people who have not completely adopted processed diets.

The most complete and well known work on this concept is Sally Fallon’s Nourishing Traditions, which has some good info but advocates for lots of meat and dairy and a very rich diet. My 12 Steps to Whole Foods program deals with it in a condensed way in Ch. 8 and uses what I feel are a do-able, moderate amount of probiotic foods that do not require us to purchase $10/lb. animal parts. My work focuses on culturing vegetables, optionally some raw, antibiotic- and hormone-free milk, or coconut liquid. (I now culture my coconut liquid before using it in Hot Pink Breakfast Smoothie).

My blog on 9/15 talks about learning vicariously through others—the examples I gave were learning from others’ health disasters. But you can learn from my health victories, too. Does it help you to know that I have had a quart or a half gallon of raw kefir, or yogurt, or coconut kefir, or sprouts, or Rejuvelac, or sauerkraut, on my counter, pretty much every day of my life for the past 17 years? We have had zero instances of problems, illness, food poisoning.

It also helps if you understand the process of how food has historically been preserved. You can preserve foods a few ways. One, drying it to dramatically slow oxidation, which often involves lots of salt. Two, can it by killing all its lifeforce (enzymes and vitamins) so that there’s very little to oxidize, and then sealing it against air and bacteria. Third, utilizing lactobacillus and other beneficial organisms and lactic acid to break down the proteins and preserve the food (fermenting).

The way I make sauerkraut (see Ch. 8 of 12 Steps) is that the unrefined salt preserves it for a few days while the (slower) lactic acid begins to take over. I have two-year old raw sauerkraut (that I preserved with whey from my yogurt/kefir) that has been unsealed (but covered tightly with a lid) that we are still eating. It’s too soft, and it’s better, texture-wise, at six months old. But it’s preserved, and the healthy bacteria help my family stay healthy.

It might help to address the semantics. The word “fermented” has a negative connotation. (Although beer drinkers who wouldn’t be caught dead eating fermented vegetables drink PLENTY of fermentation.) When you think of fermented, do you think of ROTTEN? We aren’t eating any rotten foods at my house. We could mentally replace that word with a much nicer one: cultured!

So, don’t eat fermented foods. Eat cultured ones!

If “bad” bacteria gets into your cultured foods and makes them “go bad,” you will know. They will taste bad and/or mold. I have almost never had this happen. Once it happened with a bottle of sauerkraut. Never with kefir or Rejuvelac.

My Rejuvelac ferments in a day. At CHI, they told me 3-5 days, but mine tastes plenty tart 24 hours after I blend the sprouts and water, and put it on the counter to grow (aka ferment, aka culture).

Here’s my new video showing this easy, inexpensive habit that has the potential to see you through the winter without viruses or infections!

Posted in: 12 Steps To Whole Food, Videos, Whole Food

21 thoughts on “Fermenting foods: it’s freaking me out!”

Leave a Comment
  1. Anonymous says:

    Hi Robyn,
    thanks! I am going to try it out with the quinoa. Do you know if you use wheat to ferment if the drink will contain gluten?
    I also have a question about the live granola recipe in your book. Is it supposed to come out like crackers? I may have done something wrong, not sure!
    By the way, I love your book. I look at it every night and pick some things to make for the week. Even though I have not followed the twelve steps I do make a green smoothie every day and I use a lot of the recipes. I practically sleep with the book! Thank you for all you do,
    warmly,
    Nancy

  2. Anonymous says:

    Robyn, your videos help me. Please continue them. More importantly, I have benefited greatly by your green smoothie. I am 62 years old, married with 6 children (gave birth to all). All that to say, I had lead a pretty sedantary lifestyle in my 50’s and my eating habits were not good. In March I was introduced to your smoothie by a friend. She made it for me and then allowed me to borrow her Blendtec, to make it for my family. Everyone was sold on this smoothie so I ultimately made the investment to purchase the Blendtec and commited to drinking this smoothie at least 5 times a week. At that same time I began working out 3 – 4 times weekly, weight-bearing and cardio. In March I weighed 120 lbs (I’m 5’1″) and my cholesterol was 202. Today I weighed in at 114 lbs and my cholesterol was 174. My doctor has asked for the green smoothie diet. Thank you for helping me and my family and the thousands of others who benefit from your 12 Steps to Whole Foods diet.

    1. Robyn Openshaw says:

      Jo, GREAT work! You can change lifestyle and improve health at ANY age, thanks for your story!

  3. Anonymous says:

    I don’t understand the use of Alkaline water. When we digest we need acid in our stomach. Alkaline water negates that process. From everything I researched in the use of Alkaline water it it said to drink it independently of food. Once you eat or add food to it it is no longer useful. So wash you veggies in it, but drink it alone.

    1. Robyn Openshaw says:

      Gina, water passes straight through your stomach. Your stomach produces hydrochloric acid in response to the stimulus of food. Don’t drink ANY water with a meal, but definitely alkalize and hydrate with alkaline water well before or after a meal.

      1. Robyn Openshaw says:

        And Gina: eating alkaline foods is very positive for your health, so adding alkalinity with water is a good thing, and stomach acids are needed for digestion but it’s not going to be a bad thing to eat a MORE alkaline meal just because we need certain acids for digestion.

  4. Anonymous says:

    Does it matter how warm or cool your kitchen is? In the summer we keep ours at 75 but the spring and fall it varies and the winter we keep it at 68.
    Thanks, love all of your programs and videos. Ever want to come to Lincoln NE you have a place to stay. 🙂

    1. Robyn Openshaw says:

      Arliss, I grew up in Bellevue, NE, through 9th grade, thanks for the offer. 🙂 YES, if your kitchen is warmer, ferment only 12-24 hours—you can see from the experience of a few on this blog entry that some people are finding theirs went crazy in their warm kitchens and they had to start over!

  5. Anonymous says:

    robin, how long does a rejuvelac keep in frig……..tammy

  6. Anonymous says:

    I definitely want to try this. My husband loves green smoothies. I don’t drink them as often. But this sounds great. I have never sprouted before but have bought the plastic mesh lid a few months ago -nothing like procrastinating. ha

  7. Anonymous says:

    I love the idea of Rejuvelac and can’t wait to try it! You mentioned wheat and quinoa, what else can we use to make this? Do you have the instruction in print anywhere that I may have missed?
    I sure hope tomake it through this coming cold and flu season unscathed with the help of our smoothies. Thanks for all your hard work!

  8. Anonymous says:

    I’ve used Rejuvelac for years and years and years and years. . (Bless you Anne Wigmore, wherever you are!!!)

  9. Anonymous says:

    Hi Robyn : )

    I love this idea and will definitely be implementing it. Thanks for all you do.

    Debbie

  10. Hey Robin,

    Thanks for this… a great “hands-on” video and just what I’ve been needing to get re-inspired on the Green Smoothie front! I’m going to go to the co-op today and buy my wheat berries & Quinoa 🙂

    One thing I noticed you did (but didn’t mention), was that you filled each of your 1/2 gallon jars (1/2 or 3/4 full?) with water, before adding the blended Quinoa sprouts. Can you please clarify that this is correct? … and is it 1/2 or 3/4 water?

    Thank u!

  11. Anonymous says:

    I was surprised to see you blend the quinao before fermenting it. Do you blend the wheat too? I’m wondering if you feel there is some added benefit because you don’t need to blend it in order to make rejuvalac. At least that is not how Ann Wigmore taught to do it.

  12. PS… (you can add this part to my previous comment, if u want!) … Oh, AND I’m reeeeallllly psyched about seeing you up here in Portland this Saturday!!!

  13. Anonymous says:

    I have made rejuvelac from quinoa but I didn’t blend it, I just soaked the sprouts and kept the water from the soaking. Is it necessary to blend? When I keep the water from the soaking I then add more water and ferment again. I do this up to three times. What do you think, Robyn?

    1. Robyn Openshaw says:

      Karen, that’s how I learned it many years ago reading Ann Wigmore’s book and others’. I think blending the sprouts into the water just gives you more nutrition, and you don’t have to throw away all the sprouted grains. But sure, you could do that.

  14. Anonymous says:

    Hello
    Just a note to let you know that here I am 66 years and just now trying some good habits.
    Thank you for the videos, they are very helpful to me. I am going to try rejuvelac and I
    would not normally have done so without the video.

  15. Totally going to try this. My digestive system has been terrible my whole life and this seems totally doable. Would you use kefir and rejuvelac in your smoothie? Is it good to have both in your diet? I mean I’m sure it is so maybe that’s a dumb question.

    1. Robyn Openshaw says:

      Kristi, both is good! That’s a bigger variety of beneficial microorganisms that help you with digestion!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

JOIN THE 26-DAY DETOX


Skip to content