VegetablesIntermediatepH 3.6–4.0

Lacto-Fermented Kale — Oxalate Reduction

Raw kale is high in oxalates — antinutrients that bind calcium and other minerals, reducing bioavailability. Lactic acid fermentation by Lactiplantibacillus plantarum significantly reduces the oxalate load. Fermented kale is more nutritionally available than raw kale. The massage method is identical to sauerkraut. Kale kraut.

Chad Waldman

Analytical Chemist · April 19, 2026

Fresh kale ready for fermentation using the dry-salt massage method

Prep

15 min

Ferment

5–7 days

pH Target

3.6–4.0

Salt

2% of kale weight

Difficulty

Intermediate

The wellness industry spent a decade telling you raw kale is the optimal delivery format. That is not supported by nutritional chemistry. Raw kale contains two categories of antinutrients that reduce the bioavailability of its nutrients: oxalates and glucosinolates. Oxalates bind calcium, iron, and other divalent cations in the gut, forming insoluble complexes that pass through without absorption. High raw kale intake can actually impair calcium status if your diet is already marginal.

Lactic acid fermentation — specifically the activity of Lactiplantibacillus plantarum— significantly reduces oxalate content through enzymatic degradation. The organic acids produced during fermentation also break down some glucosinolates into bioactive isothiocyanates. The result is a food that retains kale's dense micronutrient profile while removing the antinutrients that blocked mineral absorption.

The method is the dry-salt massage — identical to sauerkraut. No added water. Salt draws the leaf's own water out through osmosis, creating the brine. You massage until you have enough liquid to submerge the kale and seal the jar.

The oxalate problem — and how fermentation solves it

Oxalic acid is a dicarboxylic acid synthesized by plants as a secondary metabolite. In the gut, free oxalate anions bind calcium (Ca²⁺), magnesium (Mg²⁺), and iron (Fe²⁺/Fe³⁺) ions, forming insoluble calcium oxalate, magnesium oxalate, and iron oxalate complexes. These complexes cannot be absorbed. They pass through the gut and are excreted in the stool or, in high-oxalate diets with inadequate calcium, in the urine — where they can contribute to kidney stone formation.

Raw kale (particularly curly kale) is moderately high in oxalates — approximately 100–200 mg per 100g fresh weight, depending on variety and growing conditions. Lacinato (dinosaur) kale is generally lower than curly kale. Cooking reduces oxalate by leaching into the cooking water. Fermentation degrades it enzymatically.

Raw

Full oxalate content. Maximum mineral binding. Least bioavailable calcium.

Cooked

Oxalate leaches into cooking water. ~30–50% reduction if you discard the water.

Fermented

Enzymatic degradation by LAB. Up to 53% oxalate reduction documented in Brassica ferments.

The enzyme responsible is oxalate decarboxylase, produced by certain Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium strains. Lactiplantibacillus plantarum — the dominant organism in dry-salt vegetable ferments — has demonstrated oxalate-degrading capacity across multiple studies.

Ingredients

  • 500g kale leaves (ribs removed; lacinato or curly)
  • 10g non-iodized salt (2% of kale weight — weighed)
  • Optional 2–4 garlic cloves (minced)
  • Optional 1 tsp caraway seeds or red pepper flakes

Equipment: large mixing bowl, kitchen scale, wide-mouth quart jar, kraut pounder or fist, glass weight, pH meter. Use our Salt Calculator for exact gram amounts.

How to ferment kale

  1. Step 1: Strip, wash, and dry the kale
    1

    Strip, wash, and dry the kale

    Remove kale leaves from the center ribs — grab the stem with one hand and strip the leaf off with the other. Discard the woody center ribs or save them for stock. Wash the leaves thoroughly in cold water and dry them completely. Any excess water dilutes the salt and disrupts the dry-salt fermentation mechanism. A salad spinner followed by 10 minutes air-drying on a clean towel is sufficient. Rough-chop or tear into 2–3 inch pieces.

    Chemist's note

    The rib-to-leaf ratio matters. Kale ribs are mostly cellulose — very slow to ferment and slow to soften. Including them means uneven texture in the final product. Strip the leaves cleanly. Your hands are the best tool for this.

  2. Step 2: Weigh the kale and calculate 2% salt by weight
    2

    Weigh the kale and calculate 2% salt by weight

    Place the stripped, dried kale leaves in a large bowl and weigh them on a kitchen scale. Calculate 2% of that weight in grams — that is your salt quantity. Example: 500g kale requires 10g salt. This is the dry-salt method, like sauerkraut — no brine added. The salt draws moisture out of the kale and creates its own brine. 2% is slightly lower than cabbage sauerkraut (2–2.5%) because kale has a higher water content in the leaf tissue.

    Chemist's note

    Weigh the salt. Do not estimate it by volume. Kale leaf weight varies enormously by variety and moisture level. A bunch of lacinato kale and a bunch of curly kale are not interchangeable by volume. Weight is the only reliable measurement for dry-salt fermentation.

  3. Step 3: Massage the kale with salt until brine forms
    3

    Massage the kale with salt until brine forms

    Sprinkle the weighed salt over the kale and massage it firmly with both hands for 5–8 minutes. You are breaking down the cell walls through mechanical action, which accelerates the osmotic release of cell water. The kale will reduce dramatically in volume — from a large bowl to roughly 1/3 of its initial size. When done correctly, the kale will be sitting in a pool of its own brine. The leaves should be softened but not mushy, deep green, and significantly wilted.

    Chemist's note

    Kale requires more vigorous massaging than cabbage. The leaf structure is tougher, the waxy cuticle is thicker, and the cell walls are denser. Work the kale for a full 5–8 minutes. If you stop at 2 minutes because your hands are tired, you will not have enough brine and fermentation will struggle. Commit to the massage.

  4. Step 4: Pack tightly into a jar and submerge under brine
    4

    Pack tightly into a jar and submerge under brine

    Transfer the massaged kale into a wide-mouth quart jar in small handfuls, pressing each layer firmly down with your fist or a kraut pounder before adding the next. The goal is to eliminate air pockets and force the brine above the kale level. Pour any accumulated brine from the bowl over the top. If the kale is not fully submerged, press firmly again. Use a glass weight to keep the leaves below the brine. If you are short on brine, add a small amount of 2% salt water.

    Chemist's note

    Kale fermentation is anaerobic — zero oxygen. Lactobacillus doesn't need it; competing aerobic organisms do. The more aggressively you pack the jar and eliminate air pockets, the more you favor LAB over surface molds. Pack hard.

  5. Step 5: Ferment 5–7 days, press daily, then refrigerate
    5

    Ferment 5–7 days, press daily, then refrigerate

    Place the jar at room temperature (68–74°F) and check it daily. Press the kale down with a clean finger or kraut pounder each day to keep it submerged as CO2 bubbles loosen the pack. Taste starting at day 5. You want: pronounced sour tang, deep green color with slight yellow-green shift from chlorophyll degradation, softened but not mushy texture, and clean fermented flavor. pH should reach 3.6–4.0. Refrigerate when flavor is right. Keeps 4–6 weeks refrigerated.

    Chemist's note

    Fermented kale is excellent as a base for grain bowls, blended into dressings, or used as a bed for roasted vegetables. The sourness cuts through fatty or starchy dishes. It is functionally similar to kimchi in application but milder in flavor. The oxalate reduction makes it more calcium-bioavailable than raw kale.

Troubleshooting

Not enough brine after massaging

Your kale was too dry going in (over-dried before massaging) or your massage was not vigorous enough. Add a small amount of 2% salt water — dissolve 4g salt in 200g water and add a tablespoon at a time until the kale is just submerged. Do not dilute aggressively.

Kale turned yellow during fermentation

Chlorophyll degrades in acidic conditions. Yellow-green color at day 5–7 is normal and expected. It signals active fermentation. Flavor will be sour and complex regardless of color. Green color ≠ freshness in a ferment.

Bitter taste after 7 days

Kale contains glucosinolates that can produce bitter breakdown products during fermentation. Adding a small amount of garlic or a pinch of caraway seeds before fermentation helps balance this. Alternatively, increase fermentation time by 2–3 days — longer fermentation further transforms the bitter compounds.

Slimy texture

Fermented too warm (above 75°F) or not enough salt (under 1.5%). Check salt percentage by weight. If slimy, discard and restart with precisely weighed 2% salt and cooler conditions.

People eat raw kale in smoothies and salads because they were told it is healthy. The oxalate content makes that less true than it sounds. Ferment the kale — same vegetable, same micronutrient profile, 50%+ less oxalate, plus live lactobacillus. Two inputs: kale and salt. Five days. Objectively superior to raw.

I'm Chad. Your chemist.

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