Salt percentage and brining basics
Les pourcentages de sel en poids sont le fondement d'une lacto-fermentation fiable — 2-3% pour la plupart des légumes (râpés), 3-5% pour les légumes entiers/coupés en saumure, 5-8% pour les préparations longue durée de poisson/viande. Le sel au poids (pas au volume) est la seule mesure fiable ; le sel iodé inhibe la fermentation ; le sel de mer et le sel casher sont les références par défaut.
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
Salt is the single most important variable in lacto-fermentation — more important than temperature, vessel choice, or technique. Get the salt percentage right and most ferments work reliably across a wide range of other conditions. Get it wrong, and even excellent technique fails to compensate.
Why salt matters in fermentation. Salt does several things simultaneously: (1) creates osmotic pressure that pulls water out of vegetables, producing brine; (2) inhibits most spoilage organisms while allowing Lactobacillus species to compete and dominate; (3) maintains vegetable cell structure and texture (crisp rather than mushy); (4) provides the salty flavor that becomes integrated into the finished product. The 2-3% percentage range is the sweet spot where Lactobacillus thrives but spoilage organisms are inhibited.
Salt-by-weight is the only reliable measurement. Different salts have dramatically different densities. Diamond Crystal kosher salt weighs about 60% as much per volume as Morton table salt; both weigh about 80% as much as Maldon flake salt. A 'tablespoon of salt' can mean a 14g, 17g, or 22g actual amount depending on the salt. For reliable lacto-fermentation, use a kitchen scale (any $10-25 model is sufficient) and measure salt as a percentage of the total weight of substrate + water (or just substrate, depending on method).
Two methods — dry-salting and brine-salting.
Dry-salting (sauerkraut, kimchi, most shredded vegetable preparations): salt is mixed directly with shredded vegetables at 2-3% of vegetable weight. The salt draws water from the vegetables to form brine in-situ. For 1 kg of shredded cabbage, use 20-30g of salt. Massage or pound the salted vegetables until brine develops, then pack tightly into vessel — the brine should rise above the vegetables once weighted.
Brine-salting (whole cucumbers, halved peppers, whole vegetables): a salt-water brine is prepared at 3-5% (typically) and poured over vegetables in the vessel. Higher percentage compensates for the fact that brine-salt has to diffuse into intact vegetables rather than being already-distributed within shredded ones. For 1 liter of brine, use 30-50g of salt dissolved in water.
Percentage ranges by application:
2.0-2.5% — light/fresh ferments: young sauerkraut, fresh-eating kimchi (eat within 1-2 weeks), salsa, mild vegetable pickles. Produces brighter, less-salty flavor; less stable for long aging.
2.5-3.0% — standard ferments: most sauerkraut, baechu kimchi, kkakdugi, typical brine pickles. The reliable default for vegetable lacto-fermentation. Stable for weeks to months under refrigeration.
3.0-3.5% — longer-aged ferments: aged sauerkraut intended for months of development, traditional Korean kimjang kimchi, brine pickles. Slower fermentation, more stable, more salt-forward flavor.
5.0-8.0% — long-aged or protein-rich ferments: fish sauce, Roman garum, fermented anchovies, salt-cured meats (gravlax brining stage), some misos. Heavy salt suppresses both spoilage and fermentation rate; products develop over months to years.
8.0%+ — preservation-primary salt cures: salt cod, salt-fermented vegetables intended for very long storage, certain Asian salt pickles. Functions primarily as preservation; fermentation slow and limited.
Salt selection. Non-iodized salt is essential — iodine and anti-caking agents in commercial table salt can inhibit Lactobacillus activity. Use:
Kosher salt (Diamond Crystal or Morton brands) — clean flavor, dissolves easily, widely available, reliable. The encyclopedia's working default.
Sea salt (any non-iodized variety) — mineral content adds subtle flavor complexity; trace minerals may be beneficial; widely available.
Pickling/canning salt — pure NaCl with no additives; ideal for brining though sometimes harder to find.
Himalayan pink salt — popular but no functional advantage; the trace minerals (claimed health benefits) are not present in meaningful amounts.
Avoid: iodized table salt, salt with anti-caking agents (sodium ferrocyanide), flavored salts (smoked, herb-infused — they introduce variables).
Salt + sugar interactions for fermented hot sauces, lacto-fermented salsas, fruit ferments: sugar accelerates the initial fermentation phase by feeding yeasts and LAB. Standard salt percentages still apply (2-3%); sugar is added as a flavor/fermentation-acceleration ingredient, not a replacement for salt.
Low-sodium considerations. Some practitioners pursue reduced-sodium fermentation for health reasons. Below 1.5% salt, ferments become unreliable — spoilage organisms compete more successfully and quality suffers. Better approaches: ferment at standard percentages, then rinse briefly before eating; or use ferments as condiments (small portions) rather than primary ingredients; or eat fewer fermented foods. Don't compromise the salt percentage in production.
Concepts clés
- 2-3% salt by weight for most shredded vegetables (dry-salting)
- 3-5% brine for whole vegetables (brine-salting)
- 5-8% for protein-rich and long-aged ferments
- Salt-by-weight only — kitchen scale required
- Non-iodized salt — iodine inhibits Lactobacillus
- Kosher salt and sea salt as working defaults
- Salt creates osmotic brine + inhibits spoilage + maintains texture
- Below 1.5% salt — ferments become unreliable
Questions courantes
-
Can I use less salt for health reasons?
Below 1.5%, lacto-ferments become unreliable — spoilage organisms compete more successfully. Better approach: ferment at standard 2-3% percentages, then briefly rinse the finished ferment before eating (removes 30-50% of surface salt) or eat smaller portions. Don't compromise production-stage salt.
-
Why does my recipe call for 'kosher salt' rather than just 'salt'?
Kosher salt has a clean flavor (no iodine, no anti-caking agents) and dissolves easily, making it reliable for fermentation. Brand matters: Diamond Crystal kosher is about 60% as dense by volume as Morton kosher. For reliable results, weigh the salt rather than measuring by volume.
-
Is iodized salt actually a problem?
Yes, for reliable fermentation. Iodine at the levels in iodized table salt (~70mg/kg) is sufficient to suppress Lactobacillus activity, producing slow or failed ferments. The encyclopedia's recommendation: don't use iodized salt for fermentation. If iodized is all you have, results will be inconsistent.
-
How do I weigh salt accurately?
Any kitchen scale that reads to 1g accuracy is sufficient ($10-25). Place vessel on scale, tare to zero, add ingredients/salt, read weight. For percentage calculations: multiply substrate weight by 0.02 (for 2%) or 0.025 (for 2.5%) etc. For example, 1000g cabbage × 0.025 = 25g salt.
-
What about salt-free fermentation?
Possible but unreliable for vegetables — the salt is doing essential work (osmotic brine formation, spoilage inhibition, texture maintenance). Salt-free options exist for some products (water kefir, kombucha, sourdough — these don't need salt for fermentation safety) but vegetables really do need salt at 2-3% for reliable results.