Want a food that supports immunity, reduces inflammation, and helps your skin and brain age gracefully? Enter: fermented foods, the natural source of postbiotics.
Unlike probiotics (which may die before reaching your gut), postbiotics — like lactic acid, enzymes, and peptides — remain stable and bioactive even after fermentation [18].
🧂 DIY Raw Sauerkraut (Postbiotic Edition)
🧪 Recipe:
- 1 small green cabbage, shredded
- 1.5 tbsp sea salt (non-iodized)
- Optional: 1 clove garlic, 1 tsp caraway seeds
- Massage salt into cabbage until liquid forms (5–10 minutes).
- Pack tightly into a clean glass jar, pressing down so cabbage is submerged in its own brine.
- Weigh it down (use a small clean jar or weight).
- Cover with a cloth or loose lid.
- Ferment at room temp (20–24°C) for 5–10 days, tasting daily.
When tangy enough, seal and refrigerate. Eat a tablespoon a day!
🧬 Why it works:
- Produces lactic acid bacteria and postbiotic byproducts like short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), which reduce gut and skin inflammation [19]
- Naturally increases levels of vitamin K2, supporting vascular and bone health
- Postbiotics may enhance insulin sensitivity and mitochondrial efficiency [20]
📚 References:
[18] Aguilar-Toalá, J.E. et al. (2018). “Postbiotics: An evolving term.” Trends in Food Science & Technology
[19] Marco, M.L. et al. (2017). “Health benefits of fermented foods.” Current Opinion in Biotechnology
[20] Konieczna, P. et al. (2012). “Immunomodulatory effects of bacterial metabolites.” Frontiers in Immunology

