how to blue purple food coloring colouring savoury red cabbage

how to blue purple food coloring colouring savoury red cabbage

Note: The food colouring is diluted with water in this picture.

In this tutorial, you can learn how to make natural blue and purple food colouring that can be used to dye savoury dishes. It’s quite simple – all the ingredients you need are red cabbage, vinegar and baking soda. Red cabbage is a vegetable with an interesting property: it serves as an ph indicator. Wikipedia quote: “Red Cabbage juice is pink in acidic solutions, purple in solutions of ~pH7, and turns blue in basic solutions, and green in very basic solutions.” Amazing, isn’t it? We can obviously use that to our advantage.

Oh and you can learn how to make use of the homemade colouring. There are instructions for making a blue radish rose at the bottom.

Homemade Blue & Purple Food Colouring

Cooking Soundtrack: Elvis Presley – Blue Suede Shoes

  • red cabbage
  • acidic ingredient, for example regular vinegar
  • alkaline ingredient, for example baking soda
  1. Wash the cabbage and cut out the stem.
  2. Chop into small pieces.
  3. Put it into a cooking pot and add water until the cabbage is covered.
  4. Simmer for 10 minutes, then drain.
  5. You now have a purple solution that still has cabbage aroma to it. Add vinegar for a more pinkish purple and baking soda for blue. Start with small amounts and gradually increase until you reach the desired colour. Keep in mind that vinegar and baking soda affect the taste of the food colouring, so don’t overdose it. Plus I guess eating too much baking soda may bear a health risk.
  6. You can substitute vinegar with other acidic solutions, for example white wine or lemon juice. Baking soda can be substituted with spinach juice, green tea and other alkaline food.
  7. You can dye a variety of food with this colouring. White food items are most prone to absorb the colour. Examples: cauliflower, couscous, pasta, egg whites,  mashed potatoes, steamed bread, white radish etc.
  8. Be aware of pH values when mixing your food colouring with other ingredients. It’s impossible to dye a vinegar based salad dressing blue for example. Making blue yogurt probably requires an extra pinch of baking soda, and so on.
  9. The colour of red cabbage juice in itself isn’t susceptible to heating but telling from my experience that isn’t the case when you add baking soda. Heating the food colouring AFTER you’ve added baking soda turns the mixture greenish. So I suggest you either add the baking soda after the cooking process of the dish has finished, or, if that’s not possible, like in the case of steamed bread,  you simply reduce the amount added and experiment a bit.

How to make a Blue Radish Rose

  • white radish
  • salt
  • blue food colouring
  • sugar
  1. Peel and slice the radish with a mandoline. I made 1mm slices.
  2. Sprinkle a bit of salt on the bottom of a container, then place the slices inside and sprinkle with salt again. Let it stand for 15 minutes.
  3. Wash the salt away and add food colouring mixed with a tsp of sugar  to the container so the slices are covered well. Let the radish absorb the colour for a few hours.
  4. When the desired nuance is obtained, layer 6 slices like shown in the picture.
  5. Roll them. Cut the roll in the middle and pull the “petals” of the roses apart. If that’s hard to do, cut a bit of the bottom part away.
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16 Responses to “Blue & Purple Food Colouring for Savoury Dishes”

  • Stunning tutorial. My kids would LOVE it!

  • sarah says:

    oh, cool! i am going to share this on my blog tomorrow! i also did a recent post on natural food coloring:

    http://simplyfunstuff.blogspot.com/2010/02/natural-food-coloring.html

  • Gala says:

    Thanks so much for sharing this! I wish natural food coloring would be as common as the chemical stuff.

  • Mo says:

    This is great! I’ve been looking for ways to naturally color food. How do you keep the coloring, and how long does it last? =) Also, could this type of food coloring be used in, say, icing?

    • Jojo Krang says:

      Thank you Mo! I use the colouring straight away or keep it in the refrigerator for about a week. If you plan on using the colouring regularly, I suggest you prepare a big batch, pour it in an ice cube tray and freeze it. That way you can keep it for a long time and you have nice little portions at hand.
      I wouldn’t recommend using it in icing, since it has cabbage flavour! But who knows, maybe it doesn’t taste as bad as it sounds. If you are going to try it, keep in mind that the pH value of the other ingredients influence the colour outcome. Mixing the colouring with acidic diary products results in a redish nuance. Almond and soy milk are alkaline as far as I know, so I guess you should use them if you’re aiming for blue. If you want purple icing, berry juice is the best option I think.
      Let me know how it turned out!

  • Jeff C says:

    Hello. I tried to use the recipe with marzipan. The flavour of the cabbage is very dominant. Is there a way to get rid of that flavour or make it less dominant?

    Thank you

    • Jojo Krang says:

      The flavour of the cabbage is indeed a problem when making sweet dishes. You could try only soaking the shredded cabbage in cold water rather than cooking it. This would probably lessen the flavour but unfortunately the colour as well. If you’re still not happy with the result, you can try dried cornflower petals instead of cabbage. I made blue chocolate with it: http://eyecandy.nanakaze.net/?p=385

      • Jeff C says:

        I will try this. Thank you!

      • Shari says:

        Great blog! I was going to try the cabbage for blue vienna cream frosting in the morning on banana cake.. now I’m worried about the flavour. Would making cream cheese frosting help disguise? Or would that just make it weird.. How would turmeric or saffron be for yellow instead, or green tea for green? Is green tea appropriate for kids? Its for a childs bithday cake (a garbage truck…help!)

        Thanks!

  • Obesrtminga says:

    It is not a mandoline- that is a musical instrument like a small guitar.
    It is a slicer.
    Who, aside from Hendrix rest his soul, would use a guitar to cut veggies?

    • Amber says:

      Lol, that would be the best salad ever.
      But, actually, it is a mandoline. The instrument is a mandolin.

  • cathy says:

    formidable et pr le portrait on met le chocolat noir on dessine ls traits du visage et on recrouvre de chocolat blanc

  • HILKE says:

    You show some incredible works!!
    And the tutorials are really good to understand.
    I will try some of your stuff…. the easier ones!

    Thanks

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