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Widely practiced across Korea; particularly common for large kimjang batches in autumn Techniques

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Widely practiced across Korea; particularly common for large kimjang batches in autumn
Baechu-kimchi: Brine Soaking Method (sogeum-mul jeol-igi)
Widely practiced across Korea; particularly common for large kimjang batches in autumn
The secondary method — soaking in brine rather than dry-salting — is used when time, uniformity, or volume demands it. A 10-15% salt brine (by weight) submerges the quartered cabbage for 8-12 hours at room temperature, or up to 16 hours in cooler conditions. This method produces more even salting throughout the leaf because the brine penetrates at a controlled rate. Commercial kimchi operations and many home kitchens making large autumn batches (kimjang) prefer brine soaking. The trade-off is that brine-soaked cabbage retains slightly more water, which can dilute the yangnyeom paste on application.
Korean — Fermentation & Kimchi