, ,

How To Make Fermented Salsa

Katie Wells Avatar

Reading Time: 4 minutes

This post contains affiliate links.

Read my affiliate policy.

Fermented_Salsa
Wellness Mama » Blog » Recipes » How To Make Fermented Salsa

Now that we’re on the verge of tomato and pepper season, I wanted to share this recipe for fermented salsa. Fermenting fresh salsa is an easy way to make it last longer without canning and it adds a probiotic boost. Try it on tacos or with some homemade tortilla chips!

We eat and drink a lot of fermented foods, from water kefir to sourdough, to sauerkraut. Fermented salsa is definitely one of the easiest ways to get the health benefits of fermented foods in your diet. The fermentation process creates good bacteria that help improve gut health and the immune system.

If done properly, fermented salsa will last months in the fridge or cold storage and get more probiotics with age. This spicy Mexican condiment is a staple in our house!

Salsa Ingredients and Substitutions

While I like a little kick to my salsa, you can make this as mild or spicy as you like. For a mild version (especially for kids who don’t like spicy) use bell peppers. I’ll often grab whatever is ripe in our garden. You can also add jalapeno peppers, habanero peppers, or a blend of whatever you like.

The fresh tomatoes are really what makes this recipe so good though. If you don’t have any growing in your garden then check out your local farmer’s market. Homegrown and local is so much better than what’s available at most grocery stores!

I also included different spices in the recipe, but I don’t use exact amounts. Feel free to use however much of which spices your family likes. Or keep it simple and omit them altogether.

Whey vs Salt Fermentation Method

I usually make this with the whey leftover from making homemade yogurt cheese. This lacto-fermented version features beneficial bacteria from the lactic acid in yogurt, but it’s optional. You’ll still get probiotic benefits from just using salt. Fermenting the salsa also extends the shelf life.

If you don’t have whey from strained yogurt, you can also use some whey starter instead. Cultures For Health is a great place to get some.

Tip For Fermenting Salsa

If this is your first time fermenting veggies, there are a few things to know before you get started. Be sure to use a completely clean jar, lid, and supplies when making this. You don’t want to introduce any competing bad bacteria into your salsa!

Once everything has been chopped and mixed it will sit on the counter at room temperature for about 2 days. If your home is warmer (hello summer!) this process won’t take as long. You want to watch for fizzy little bubbles which will tell you the salsa is ready.

You don’t need any fancy equipment, but I prefer to use a fermentation weight for this. It keeps the veggies under the liquid so they don’t start to mold. If your salsa gets really fizzy you may need to “burp” your mason jar. Simply remove the lid to let some of the excess gas escape and then put it back on. Some people prefer to use an airlock or fermentation lid for this (to prevent jar explosions!).

How to Use Fermented Salsa

You probably already have plenty of foods your family loves with salsa, but here are a few of my favorite ways to use it!

Fermented_Salsa

Fermented Salsa Recipe

Homemade salsa with a probiotic twist; naturally fermented to add extra nutrients and flavor.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Fermentation Time 2 days
Total Time 2 days 20 minutes
Calories 18kcal
Author Katie Wells

Servings

25 servings

Ingredients

  • 3 lbs fresh tomatoes (about 4 and 1/2 cups chopped)
  • 2 peppers (such as bell pepper, cayenne, or jalapeno peppers)
  • 1-2 onions (about 1 cup chopped)
  • 4 cloves garlic
  • ½ cup fresh cilantro
  • 1 lemon (juiced)
  • 1 lime (juiced)
  • 2 TBSP sea salt
  • spices to taste (such as oregano, black pepper, cumin, chili powder, and cayenne pepper)
  • ½ cup whey (optional)

Instructions

  • Chop tomatoes, onion, pepper, garlic, and cilantro and add to a large bowl.
  • Add lemon and lime juice juice, sea salt, and spices to taste.
  • Add whey (if using) and stir well.
  • Transfer the diced veggie mixture to a tall mason jar/fermentation jar. Pour in any juice from the bowl.
  • Press down to submerge veggies and place a weight on top to keep them submerged.
  • Seal the top of the jar and let ferment for about 2 days away from direct sunlight. It will get fizzy and start to get small bubbles.
  • After 2 days, remove the fermentation weight and enjoy or store it in the fridge.

Nutrition

Nutrition Facts
Fermented Salsa Recipe
Amount Per Serving (1 serving)
Calories 18 Calories from Fat 2
% Daily Value*
Fat 0.2g0%
Saturated Fat 0.03g0%
Polyunsaturated Fat 0.1g
Monounsaturated Fat 0.02g
Sodium 562mg24%
Potassium 171mg5%
Carbohydrates 4g1%
Fiber 1g4%
Sugar 2g2%
Protein 1g2%
Vitamin A 513IU10%
Vitamin C 19mg23%
Calcium 12mg1%
Iron 0.3mg2%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Notes

  • If you want a less chunky salsa then you may want to pulse it in a food processor before moving it into a mason jar/fermentation jar.
  • The exact fermentation time depends on how warm your home is. Fermented vegetables ferment faster in warmer weather.
  •  One serving size is about 1/4 cup.

Like this recipe? Check out my new cookbook, or get all my recipes (over 500!) in a personalized weekly meal planner here!

A Fast and Easy Tip

If you don’t have the time or ingredients to make your own salsa, you can get the benefits of fermented salsa by fermenting store-bought salsa as well. If possible, use the freshly made salsas in the refrigerated section, but you can ferment canned versions also.

More Fermented Food Recipes

Want to try your hand at more fermented foods? Here are some ideas to get you started!

Have you ever fermented veggies before? What’s your favorite way to use salsa? Leave a comment and let us know!

Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

87 responses to “How To Make Fermented Salsa”

  1. Jody C Avatar

    This sounds simple and delish. Could you ferment the salsa with just sea salt and leave it out on the counter a little longer as you would sauerkraut?

    1. Angie Poole Avatar
      Angie Poole

      Yes, I don’t add whey to my salsa. I move it to the fridge after 2 days still and then let it sit there for a while to ferment slowly, but my brother-in-law ferments his for a few weeks at room temp.

  2. paizley Avatar
    paizley

    My house always smells like “something’s going bad” but it’s the fermentation at work. Fermenting daikon is particularly stinky. LOL Yes, there are weird jars of things sitting on my counter and in the fridge. I like to ferment just tomatoes and hot peppers (Thai chilis are my favorite right now). When ready, if I want salsa, I add some fresh cilantro, scallions, fresh lime juice and serve. Otherwise I eat as is with a some squeezes of lime and some black pepper. Versatile. So healthy and DARN, my batch won’t be ready for 2 more days!!! Everyone enjoy!

  3. Kate Muker Avatar
    Kate Muker

    I made this and have a few questions… it tastes a bit sour is that normal with fermented salsa? I’ve never tried it before. The other question is that I used whey concentrate 1/2 a cup of powder is that the right quantity for the powdered concentrate.

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      A little sour is normal, but I”ve never used powdered, just the homemade whey drained from organic yogurt. Is it like a protein powder? If so, I don’t know if that will work, but I woudn’t think so…

  4. michelle Avatar
    michelle

    Are fermented foods safe to have during pregnancy? I am in the first trimester…

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      I’d always ask your doc, but I make it a point to consume a lot of fermented foods while pregnant since baby inherits gut bacteria from mom during delivery so good gut bacteria is important!

  5. Wellness Mama Avatar
    Wellness Mama

    You can purchase vegetable starter culture from a place like Cultures for Health and store that or make your own from yogurt…

  6. Lyman Duggan Avatar
    Lyman Duggan

    Sandor Katz eats savory vegetable sour dough pancakes almost every day, and he regularly makes sauerkraut, yogurt and kefir. He says eating and preparing fermented foods has become a staple of his life. “At certain times my kitchen looks like a mad scientist zone.”

    His new book The Art Of Fermentation is a massive tome that could seem overwhelming to a novice, but he stresses that the basic process of fermentation is really very simple.

    Many of his books available Amazon or at your library [url=http://indianapublicmedia.org/eartheats/fermentation-sandro-katz/] click[/url]

    See him on Youtube [url=https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=Sandor+Katz+&oq=Sandor+Katz+&gs_l=youtube.12..0l3.2902.2902.0.7012.1.1.0.0.0.0.61.61.1.1.0…0.0…1ac.2.c-0sKeT99-A]click[/url]

    1. Charzie Avatar

      Sandor is the master! Highly recommend his books! He has quite a few free videos on Youtube also. They are just beginning to realize how tremendously important our gut bacteria are to all facets of our health and are even calling it our second brain! Fermented foods are really a necessity and such a better option than spending our hard earned dollars on off the shelf probiotics! You even get a bigger and better variety doing it yourself, along with food value, the necessary pre-biotics, and for me, the satisfaction of having created it!

  7. Kristy Kelley Avatar
    Kristy Kelley

    Question for you: I plan on growing tomatoes this summer and making TONS of fermented salsa but for this winter I’d like to ferment the jarred salsa. I don’t have any whey around my kitchen. My question is….can I purchase whey at a health foods store to keep in the fridge to use for this purpose? Or do I need to buy store-bought yogurt and make my own? Sorry for my ignorance…new to this! 🙂

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      You can purchase vegetable started cultures from places like Cultures for Health or just strain yogurt to make your own…

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      Sometimes, I’d take the whole layer off and put in the fridge at that point…

  8. sarah Avatar

    What exactly makes something “fermented”? Is it just simply adding whey or is there more to it?

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      They whey actually causes a reaction, creating beneficial bacteria. It can also be done with just salt, though it takes longer.

      1. Lyman Duggan Avatar
        Lyman Duggan

        Actually the whey contains the bacteria you need to start of the fermentation.

        1. Angie Poole Avatar
          Angie Poole

          The vegetables have the bacteria required. Some would argue that adding whey actually creates an unnatural balance during fermentation. I just use salt, never add whey, and stuff ferments for me just fine.

  9. jackie Avatar

    can you just put everything in a blender? that’s usually how i make salsa. it’s more liquidy but it’s still yummy.

      1. Jodie Avatar

        Hello, I really enjoy your blog. I have a jar of just about empty Bubbie ‘ s saurkraut, can I use this liquid to ferment veggies, if so, how?

  10. Ali B. Avatar

    I really love this idea as I am currently making my own cream cheese and also tzatziki sauce so I’ll a lot of whey handy.  I am very new to this way of eating, so I have maybe a silly question.  If you don’t do grains – what do you dip in your salsa??  

      1. Larry Rondeau Avatar
        Larry Rondeau

        Help can I use last year’s fermented peppers in my new salsa batch?

  11. Hilda Avatar

    there r many tomatoes gng slightly over ripe or more in the markets..can I specially use them to make this fermented salsa?

  12. Dayna Avatar

    Good Morning, I have 3 orange trees bursting with fruit and I have been searching high and low for a natural, healthy, sugar free version of Orange Marmalade. Any suggestions???? Thanks

  13. Monica Avatar

    I don’t have access to whey, can water kefir be used instead? Also can I use parsely instead of cilantro? Looks like a good recipe!

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      I don’t think that water kefir would work… different bacteria. Do you have access to any kind of plain yogurt??

      1. Kristy Small Avatar
        Kristy Small

        I’ve actually been told that whey or kombucha would work to ferment because it produces the same lactic acid that ferments.  It’s not the beginning bacteria, but the end result.  I’m giving fermented salsa a shot with my water kefir.  It has worked in baking to replace whey or milk kefir, so I imagine it will work well!

      2. Liz Sabin Jaconelli Avatar
        Liz Sabin Jaconelli

        I’ve fermented pickles with water kefir and they were excellent! They turned out much more crisp.

  14. Hope Avatar

    excellent idea especially on the buying ready made store salsa and adding whey…
    i am trying to do my own kraut now…woooo, stinky! doing only sea salt and cabbage.

    1. Lyman Duggan Avatar
      Lyman Duggan

      The natural bacteria is already on the cabbage and other vegies if you don’t cook them. There will be many kinds of good bacteria. The sea salt is only there to keep any mold from growing and protects the good bacteria from being invaded by bad. There will be yeasts present too naturally. It will bubble away for a few weeks and create kind of a vinegar that helps preserve things even more. When it is as you like, good to bottle it and refrigerate and it will keep then a long time.

      We used to keep our brine pickled veggies and fruits in the basement (cellar) over winter as it was not heated. Everyone did that to keep fruits and veggies over the winter on Canadian farms and many now do it because they love it although using vinegar now is cheap and quicker but doesn’t taste the same. Strangely there are soil bacteria present in the ferment that also give benefit to the body. Keep some of the liquid always to use as a starter for the next batch. You can a bit of this to any ferment to increase the types of good bacteria. A good book on this by Sandor Katz

  15. Allison Avatar

    I have a sensitivity to dairy. Is there a substitute for whey? Thanks!

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      I haven’t tried it but supposedly you can just add an extra TBSP of sea salt.

    2. Lyman Duggan Avatar
      Lyman Duggan

      You can use liquid from fermented Sauerkraut to start it. or whey from soy yogurt. I make my own soy yogurt, so easy and fermented soy is really good for you. This whey has the bacteria that you need. It must be live sourkraut or kimchee and not pasturized.

    3. Blaze Avatar

      Do you know exactly what you are sensitive to in dairy? Is it the lactose, casein, or whey in cow’s milk?
      Unfortunately, if you have a casein sensitivity, it is hard (near impossible) to get whey without casein coming through.
      Most people who have sensitivties to cow’s milk can do goat’s milk. There is some conflicting info on goat milk whey proteins, although it isn’t clearly known why. So, you could make your own whey from goat’s milk and try that.
      I DO know that my functional medicine MD told me that after going off all dairy for a while (1 yr to 18mos.) that I could try whey and use it if I could tolerate it.
      But, if you are battling candida, you do not (yet) want to incorporate fermented foods. Again, going off fermented foods (1yr. to 18mos.) as well as carbs, sugars, etc.
      If you try the goat’s milk whey, I would love to know how it went for you.
      Otherwise, I would try the extra salt.

      1. Penny Avatar

        Actually fermented foods are beneficial for those battling candida. By adding fermented foods you are putting in good bacteria to crowd out the bad bacteria.

    4. Charzie Avatar

      Hi! Sure, you can just leave out the whey. In fact, my group just recently had a discussion about the pros and cons of adding whey to lacto ferments, and the majority seemed to favor not using it for a variety of reasons, but these are just opinions, and you know what they say about those! LOL! The upshot is the microbes responsible for fermentation are pretty much everywhere…on the food, and in the air, so though the various additives (natural or purchased cultures) may cause fermentation to begin quicker, it will still happen regardless. For me, that is the “magic”, yet another gift of nature. Good luck!

      And thank you Wellness Mama for the recipe, it was just what I needed!

    5. Toby Avatar

      Just open a capsule of any probiotic and mix in. But its going to ferment with or without whey.Toby

    6. Jeanie Avatar

      I use sauerkraut juice whenever I don’t have any whey handy. I’m hoping it would work fir salsa, that’s what I’m going to use Saturday when I make our’s.

    7. Jus Avatar

      4 stars
      You don’t need whey. You can do it with just salt. Whey is never needed for fermenting foods such as salsa.

  16. Veronica Avatar
    Veronica

    My husband used to call the forgotten leftovers in the fridge my “science experiments”.  He doesn’t know what to think now.  Water kefir on one side of the kitchen, kombucha on the other side….  Now I need to make some whey to try this recipe.  🙂 We live in Texas so salsa is consumed year round!!

  17. Emily Avatar

    I’m moving into a new place with a basement soon…might have to try this! Salsa is one of my favorite foods–it’s so versatile, and this looks like a great way to keep fresh salsa for Ohio winters!

  18. Swallick Avatar
    Swallick

    I walked into my kitchen yesterday and it smelled like apple cider vinegar (from the kombucha brewing on the counter) and sour milk (cheese cloth dangling from my cabinet with clabbered milk dripping whey into a bowl below). I had to light a candle because I’m still acquiring these smells.
    Looks like I have a new recipe to try with my newly made whey once my garden starts producing 🙂 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating