Equipment and vessels for home fermentation
Ce dont vous avez vraiment besoin (un bocal mason avec un poids) vs. ce qui est agréable à avoir (un pot de fermentation polonais/allemand avec joint d'eau) vs. ce qui est spécialisé (onggi coréen, nukadoko-bako japonais, dame-jeannes pour les boissons fermentées, hydromètres, réfractomètres) — guide d'équipement qui évolue avec la pratique.
Le texte principal de cette page est disponible uniquement en anglais dans la v1. L'interface et les métadonnées sont traduites en français. La traduction éditoriale est prévue pour la v2.
À propos de ce guide
The most common question from beginners is what equipment to buy. The most common honest answer is: less than you think. A wide-mouth mason jar, a weight (a smaller jar of water, a ceramic disc, or a clean rock), and a coffee filter or cheesecloth covering will produce excellent sauerkraut, kimchi, hot sauce, salsa, and most lacto-fermented vegetables. The vessel matters less than the technique.
The tier 1 essentials — a wide-mouth quart or half-gallon mason jar, basic kitchen scale (for salt percentages), thermometer (for monitoring ambient temperature during fermentation), funnel, a few fermentation weights (glass weights, ceramic discs, or small jars). Total investment: $25-50. This setup handles 80% of home-fermentation practice across multiple categories — vegetables, hot sauces, condiments, basic sourdough starter maintenance.
Tier 2 — the nice-to-have additions include water-seal fermentation crocks (Polish-tradition kiszony crocks or German Gärtopf with the water-sealed lid channel; 2-10 liter sizes; $80-200 range). These vessels improve consistency for longer ferments by maintaining anaerobic conditions while letting CO2 escape. They particularly help with kraut and kimchi over 2+ weeks of aging, and with larger batches. Glass demijohn carboys (1-5 gallon sizes; $25-80) are essential for fermented beverages — kombucha at scale, water kefir continuous brews, mead, sake, cider. Airlocks ($3-10) fit on regular mason jars and produce most of the anaerobic-environment benefit at much lower cost than full crocks.
Tier 3 — traditional and specialized vessels. Korean onggi (옹기, hand-formed earthenware with breathable walls that allow oxygen exchange while maintaining anaerobic-enough conditions for traditional jang and kimchi) — typically 5-50 liter, $80-500+, increasingly available outside Korea. Japanese nukadoko-bako (wooden boxes for nukazuke rice-bran pickling; ceramic alternatives exist) — $30-200. Hatcho-miso tubs and koji-cultivating containers for advanced soy fermentation. African calabash gourds for sorghum and millet beer traditions. Chinese clay vessels for Sichuan doubanjiang sun-fermentation. The traditional vessels often have material properties (porosity, mineral content, thermal mass) that affect the fermentation in ways modern plastic and glass don't replicate.
Beverage-specific gear — hydrometers for measuring sugar content and tracking fermentation progress in mead, beer, cider, wine ($10-30); refractometers as more precise alternatives ($30-100); pH meters for safety-critical fermentations like lacto-fermented hot sauces ($25-150); bottling equipment (siphon, bottle filler, capper) for beer/cider/kombucha production at scale.
Avoid — copper, aluminum, and reactive metal vessels (acidic ferments leach metals). Plastic containers labeled non-food-safe (chemical leaching). Sealed metal lids on actively fermenting vessels (CO2 pressure buildup risk). Vintage glassware with unknown enamel composition (lead leaching). Use food-grade glass, stainless steel, ceramic, or food-grade plastic only.
The encyclopedia's working principle: start with tier 1 and confirm fermentation interests you before scaling up. The mason jar + weight + scale combination is perfectly adequate for everything in Lacto-fermented vegetables and Fermented condiments dimensions. Move to tier 2 (water-seal crocks, demijohns) when batch sizes exceed 1-2 jars at a time. Reach for tier 3 (traditional vessels) when specific traditions demand them — onggi for serious Korean jang practice, nukadoko-bako for sustained Japanese nukazuke practice, hatcho-miso tubs for long-aged Aichi-tradition miso.
Concepts clés
- Mason jar + weight + scale — adequate for 80% of home practice
- Water-seal fermentation crocks (Polish/German Gärtopf) — improve consistency for 2+ week ferments
- Korean onggi — breathable earthenware essential for traditional jang and aged kimchi
- Demijohn carboys — required for fermented beverages at scale
- Hydrometer/refractometer — sugar measurement for beverage fermentation
- Airlocks — anaerobic environment on standard jars at minimal cost
- Avoid reactive metals (copper, aluminum) with acidic ferments
- Food-grade glass, stainless steel, ceramic, or food-grade plastic only
Questions courantes
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Do I really need a fermentation crock?
No, not for starting out. A wide-mouth mason jar with a glass weight handles sauerkraut, kimchi, hot sauce, salsa, and most lacto-fermented vegetables excellently. Crocks become helpful for 2+ week aging, larger batches (>1L), and serious sustained practice. For year one of fermenting, mason jars are sufficient.
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What's the difference between mason jar fermentation and a crock?
Crocks have water-sealed lid channels that maintain anaerobic conditions while letting CO2 escape; mason jars need either an airlock add-on or daily 'burping' (briefly opening to release pressure). For ferments under 2 weeks, the difference is minor. For longer aging, crocks produce more consistent results with less hands-on attention.
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Can I use a plastic bucket?
Food-grade plastic (HDPE 2, PP 5, or LDPE 4 labeled food-safe) is acceptable for short-term ferments (under 4 weeks). Acidic ferments can degrade plastic over longer periods, leaching plasticizers. For long-aged ferments (miso, soy sauce, vinegar), use glass, ceramic, or stainless steel.
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Are Korean onggi worth the cost?
For occasional kimchi-making, no. For serious Korean traditional practice — long-aged doenjang, multi-year kimjang kimchi, traditional gochujang — yes. The breathable earthenware allows controlled gas exchange that glass/plastic don't replicate, and traditional Korean fermentation profiles depend on this material property. Most home practitioners don't need them.
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What's the cheapest viable setup?
Mason jar ($3-5) + ceramic fermentation weight or smaller jar of water ($5-15) + cheesecloth/coffee filter ($2) + kitchen scale ($15-25) + thermometer ($5-15). Total ~$30 covers basic competent home fermentation across multiple categories. The scale matters more than any single vessel — accurate salt percentages are the foundation of reliable lacto-fermentation.