Beginner Guide

Fermentation for Beginners

The $30 starter kit. Your first jar. Zero experience required.

Chad Waldman

Analytical Chemist · April 19, 2026

I’m an analytical chemist. My first ferment was a jar of garlic that I eyeballed the salt on. It grew mold in 4 days. Don’t be me. Here’s how to do it right.

Lacto-fermentation is one of the oldest food preservation methods on earth and one of the safest when done correctly. The lactic acid bacteria (LAB) naturally present on vegetables produce lactic acid that drops the pH below 4.6 — the threshold at which most pathogens, including Listeria and E. coli, cannot survive. Based on articles retrieved from PubMed, a 2025 review in the International Journal of Cell Biology (PMID 40778392) confirmed that LAB preserve vegetables through multiple parallel mechanisms: acid production, bacteriocin secretion, nutrient competition, and exopolysaccharide formation. The system is robust by design. But you still need to get your salt ratio right.

You do not need special equipment, a dedicated space, or a starter culture. You need a jar, a scale, and salt. Everything else is optional.

The $30 Starter Kit

Everything you actually need. Nothing you don’t.

Wide-mouth quart mason jar

Ball or Kerr. Wide mouth only — you need room to pack vegetables.

~$3

Kitchen scale (digital)

This is non-negotiable. Salt by weight, not volume. A teaspoon of fine salt ≠ a teaspoon of coarse salt.

~$15

Fermentation weight

Glass weights keep vegetables submerged. A small zip-lock bag filled with brine works too.

~$5

Fine sea salt (non-iodized)

Iodized salt inhibits LAB. Use sea salt, kosher salt, or pickling salt.

~$4

pH strips (4.0–7.0 range)

Optional but satisfying. Target: pH below 3.6 before refrigerating.

~$3

Total

~$30

That’s it. The scale is the most important thing on this list. Salt percentage by weight is how professional fermenters control safety and flavor. I use 2% for most vegetables — that’s 20g of salt per 1,000g of vegetables. Ready to go deeper? Full equipment guide here.

Equipment Essentials

Organized by where you are. Start at Beginner. Graduate when you’re ready.

BeginnerStart here
Wide-mouth mason jar (quart)
$2–4
Digital kitchen scale
$12–20
Fermentation weight (glass disc)
$4–8
IntermediateAfter your first 10 ferments
Airlock lids (reusable)
$12–20 for 6-pack
Digital pH meter
$20–40
Fermentation crock (1–2L)
$30–80
Fermentation weights (crock-fit)
$10–20
AdvancedWhen you’re fermenting at volume
Fermentation chamber (temp-controlled)
$150–400
Large fermentation tank (5–10L)
$60–200
Black garlic fermenter / black garlic maker
$60–250
DIY fermentation chamber (chest freezer + inkbird)
$80–120

Your First Ferment — Garlic Sauerkraut

Sauerkraut is the perfect first ferment. Two ingredients. Impossible to contaminate if you get the salt right. Here’s the condensed version — full recipe with step-by-step photos here.

01

Shred and weigh

Slice one head of cabbage thin. Weigh the shredded cabbage in grams.

02

Calculate your salt

Multiply weight by 0.02. That's your salt in grams. For 900g cabbage: 18g salt.

03

Massage for 10 minutes

Salt + massage breaks cell walls. The cabbage releases its own brine. Do not add water.

04

Pack tight, weigh down

Press into a mason jar. Add a fermentation weight. Brine must cover everything.

05

Wait and taste

65–75°F for 2–4 weeks. Taste at day 14. Done when tangy and under pH 3.6.

The 5-Jar Challenge

Start 5 ferments in your first month. By the end, you’ll have built intuition that no article can teach.

What Can Go Wrong

Fermentation is robust. Most “problems” are surface-level. Here’s a quick map — full guides at troubleshooting and is my ferment safe.

Usually fine

White film on the surface

Kahm yeast — harmless. Looks scary, smells yeasty. Skim it off and continue.

Discard

Fuzzy mold (green, black, pink)

Any fuzzy mold means oxygen got in and the wrong organisms won. Start over.

Fix immediately

Vegetables above the brine

Push them under. LAB are anaerobic. Anything exposed to air will mold.

Depends

Smells like garbage, not tangy

Early fermentation (days 1–3) can smell sulfurous. If it improves by day 5, you’re fine. If it gets worse, discard.

Probably fine

No bubbles

At temperatures below 65°F, fermentation is very slow. Bubbles may be minimal. Taste and pH test at day 14.

FAQ

Is fermentation safe?

Yes, when the salt ratio is correct and vegetables stay submerged. The lactic acid produced by LAB drops pH below 4.6, which is the threshold at which pathogens including Listeria and E. coli cannot survive. Based on articles retrieved from PubMed, this multi-mechanism protection — including bacteriocin production and nutrient competition — makes lacto-fermentation one of the safest traditional preservation methods (Amenu et al., PMID 40778392).

How much does it cost to start?

About $30 for the full kit. The scale is the one thing you shouldn't skip. A jar and some salt and you're technically ready to make sauerkraut. The pH strips are optional but satisfying.

What's the easiest ferment?

Sauerkraut. Two ingredients (cabbage, salt), no brine to make, forgiving temperature range, and a 2-week timeline that teaches you everything you need to know about dry-brine fermentation.

Do I need special equipment?

No. A wide-mouth mason jar, a kitchen scale, and non-iodized salt is all you need to start. Airlock lids, pH meters, and fermentation crocks are upgrades, not requirements.

How long does fermented food last?

In the refrigerator, most lacto-fermented vegetables last 6–12 months. Fermentation slows nearly to zero below 38°F. The lactic acid that made it safe also preserves it. Based on articles retrieved from PubMed, fermented vegetable products consistently maintain live LAB counts of 10^7–10^8 per gram even after months of cold storage (Rezac et al., PMID 30197628).

Research Citations

Safety FoundationInternational Journal of Cell Biology · 2025;2025:5833236

Preservative Effectiveness of Lactic Acid Bacteria on Fruits and Vegetables.

Amenu D, Nugusa A, Tafesse T.

LAB EcologyFoods · 2023;12(20):3789

Advancing Insights into Probiotics during Vegetable Fermentation.

Yuan Y, Yang Y, Xiao L, et al.

Live Culture CountsFrontiers in Microbiology · 2018;9:1785

Fermented Foods as a Dietary Source of Live Organisms.

Rezac S, Kok CR, Heermann M, Hutkins R.

Where to Go Next