Baechu-kimchi: Cabbage Selection and Halving (baechu sonjil)
Korean peninsula, documented since the Three Kingdoms period for winter food preservation
The quality of a finished kimchi is set before a single grain of salt touches the leaf. Korean napa cabbage (Brassica rapa subsp. pekinensis) at its peak — harvested late autumn after the first cold snap — has dense, tightly packed leaves, a sweet core, and minimal moisture in the outer leaves. Cut the cabbage lengthways through the base only, then tear the top half apart by hand to preserve the cell walls. A knife-cut all the way through ruptures cells and accelerates water loss in unpredictable ways. Each half is then cut into quarters along the same principle. The core is kept intact throughout salting — it is the anchor that holds the leaves together.