Flavoured vinegars are expensive to buy but easy to make – at least,
they are easy to make if you start with plain vinegar and simply infuse your
chosen flavouring ingredient. Of course,
if you really get a buzz out of ‘doing it yourself’ in the kitchen, and you take
the phrase ‘from scratch’ very seriously, you can start by making your vinegar
plant. The principle is exactly the same as that of using a sourdough starter
for your bread. Here is one version:
Vinegar
made with a Vinegar Plant.
The vinegar plant itself may be made thus produced: - Take a
solution of quarter of a pound of sugar and half a pound of treacle in three
quarts of water, simmer it, then pour it into a jar, cover it up, and keep it
in a warm place for six weeks. The liquid will become vinegar, and on the top
will form a scum-like fungus, which is the vinegar plant. By adding a piece of
this to a similar solution, the process of conversion into vinegar will now
take place in much less time. During the process, the plant thickens by the
formation of a new layer on its under surface, and by peeling off this layer
and using it on a fresh operation, the plant may be propagated indefinitely.
The vinegar plant is a fungus somewhat resembling known by the name of mould. It
forms a flocculent mass or web, which is tough and crust-like, or leathery. It is
found on decaying bodies, and in fluids undergoing the acetouis fermentation,
which it greatly promotes, and which, indeed, it very readily occasions – a small
piece placed in sugar and water soon changing it into vinegar.
Cassell’s
Dictionary of Cookery (London, 1870s).
Here are a couple more methods, from Godey’s Magazine (Philadelphia, 1840)
Household Vinegars.- Vinegar is an
article perpetually wanted in a family, and to buy it is expensive. The good
housekeeper should prepare her own.
Sugar Vinegar. -To every gallon of
water put two pounds of coarse brown sugar. Boil and skim urn. Put it to cool
in a clean tub; when about lukewarm, add a slice of bread soaked in fresh
yeast. Barrel it in a week, and set it in the sun in summer or by the fire in
winter, for six months, without stopping the bung-hole; but cover it with thin
canvas or an inverted bottle to keep out the flies.
Cider Vinegar.- Put a pound of white
sugar to a gallon of cider, and, shaking them well together, let them ferment
for four months; a strong and well coloured vinegar will be the result.
Now you have your basic vinegar, you can flavour as you wish, and
increase the variety of your salads and pickles. Also from Godey’s Magazine, here are a few ideas to inspire you:
Flavoured Vinegars.- These are cheap
and agreeable additions to sauces, hashes, &c. Infuse a hundred red
chilies, fresh gathered, into a quart of good vinegar; let them stand ten days,
shaking the bottle every day. A half ounce of cayenne will answer the same
purpose. This is good in melted butter for fish sauce, &c.
Celery Vinegar. - Pound a half ounce
of celery seed, and steep it for ten days in a quart of vinegar; strain and
bottle it.
Horse-radish Vinegar.- Pour a quart
of strong vinegar, boiling hot, on three ounces of scraped horse-radish and a
teaspoonful of pounded black Pepper, and half the quantity of cayenne. Let it
stand four days, tightly covered, then strain, and put it in the cruet for use.
It is good on cold roast beef, and excellent in the gravy for chops, steaks,
&c.
Cucumber Vinegar.- Pare and slice
ten large cucumbers, and steep them in three pints of the best vinegar for a
few days. Strain and bottle it.
Previous Kitchen DIY posts:
Quotation for the Day.
Life is too short for self-hatred and celery sticks.
Marilyn Wann
3 comments:
Off topic, but another long-established English cooking tradition gone. Maybe of interest.
Interesting.
I have been having a dialogue about vinegar on this post, In The Face of a Deluge of Red Wine:
http://ladonnadelvino.com/2012/05/08/in-the-face-of-a-deluge-of-red-wine/#comment-1246
See comments,
Regards
Marisa
Thanks Lapinbizarre: another sad tale of a small business producing a traditional product destroyed in the name of progress.
Thanks Marisa - I am still thinking of the wonderful fig vinegar at your place!
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