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How To Make Homemade Vinegar

Clay Coyote Vinegar Crock in Yellow Salt

Clay Coyote Vinegar Crock in Yellow Salt

The Virtue of Homemade Vinegar

“All you need is red wine, water, patience and a good mother.”

This article originally appeared in October, 2006 Food and Wine Magazine.  www.foodandwine.com

By Paula Wolfert – Used by permission

As I write this, I have six earthenware crocks of red wine vinegar in various stages of evolution tucked away in the dark corners of my kitchen. “Why go to all that trouble?” my friends ask. “Aren’t there plenty of good red wine vinegars on the market?” The answer is no. If there are any as good as the kind you can make yourself, I’ve yet to find them.

I’m not talking about real balsamic vinegar, or top-shelf sherry or Banyuls vinegars; great bottles of these are readily available. But when it comes to simple red wine vinegar, commercial manufacturers make it much too quickly and on the cheap.

So why is homemade vinegar so special? Its taste. It’s crisper, more subtle and better balanced than the acidic one-note versions you can buy, with a sparkling quality that enhances food. Used in a sauce or simply for deglazing a sauté pan, it coaxes out layers of flavor. Furthermore, homemade red wine vinegar creates superior salad dressings: I often marinate finely chopped shallots in it for 15 minutes, then add extra-virgin olive oil and salt and pepper for a superb vinaigrette.

Making vinegar is surprisingly easy. The most important component is patience, because good vinegar takes about two and a half months to develop. To begin, you’ll need an earthenware crock with a high-quality plastic or wood spigot, red wine, water and a live starter, often referred to as a mother. The chemical reaction that takes place between the mother and the wine produces vinegar.

A vinegar mother is a fascinating thing to behold. It can be a smooth, gelatinous disk or a leathery veil that ends up sitting atop the liquid inside the crock undisturbed while it does its work. Eventually, the mother layer becomes quite heavy and sinks to the bottom, and another layer takes its place on top. After many batches, the bottom layers stack up, creating an expired blob of useless mothers that needs to be removed.

Basically, there are two ways to go about finding a good mother: get one from a friend who makes vinegar or purchase one from an outfit that sells wine- and beer-making supplies. I got my first mother from Abra Bennett, a professional cook and food writer from Bainbridge Island in Washington State whom I met on my favorite food Web site, eGullet. She sent me a mother with a 40-year pedigree. It came in a jar, a dark-red blob suspended in liquid. Abra also gave me lots of good advice. Her most important pointer was to use the same fruity red wine for my vinegar that I like to drink.

I also bought a mother from my vinegar guru, Mark Larrow, the owner of Beer and Winemaking Supplies in Northampton, Massachusetts (beer-winemaking.com). I was surprised by its look—clear vermillion-colored liquid in a jar. No blob in sight. I followed the instructions on the jar and the mother came to life, just like Abra’s.

As you can see from the method detailed below, once you get yourself set up with a crock and a mother, there is nothing complicated about making vinegar. You’ll be amply rewarded for your patience, whether you bottle the vinegar to give as gifts, use it simply in vinaigrettes or use it in more ambitious dishes, like my take on the earthy, luscious French classic poulet au vinaigre that follows.

This article originally appeared in October, 2006 Food and Wine Magazine.  www.foodandwine.com


Making & Using Red Wine VinegarVinegar Jar or crock

By Paula Wolfert (From Food and Wine Magazine October 2006)

1. Buy a 1-gallon earthenware crock with a top-quality wood or plastic spigot. Add water to the crock to check for leaks; drain the crock.

2. Buy an 8-ounce bottle of commercial mother from a wine- and beer-making supply shop (or get it from a friend).

(Coyote Note:  We recommend Mark Larrow at www.beer-winemaking.com or your neighborhood beer and wine making supply house)

3. Add 2 cups of good red wine and 1 cup of filtered water to the crock (or enough to at least cover the spigot), then add the mother. Cover the crock with a double layer of cheesecloth and fasten with a rubber band (or just use the lid with the hole in it).

4. Set the crock in a warm (70° to 90°), dark spot and let stand for 1 1/2 weeks.

5. Add red wine to the crock in three 2 1/2-cup installments over the next 1 1/2 weeks; the crock should then be two-thirds full. Once a thin veil has formed on the surface, add the wine through the tube of the bulb baster tucked under the edge of the veil. Let the crock stand for a total of 10 weeks. Check periodically: If your vinegar ever begins to smell like furniture polish, discard it, wash the crock and start over.

6. Bottle the vinegar when it smells sharp and crisp: Strain it into sterile bottles through a plastic funnel lines with a paper coffee filter. (If you plan to start the process over, leave 2 cups vinegar in the crock and just add wine and water.) The vinegar will mellow in the bottle and improve with age, but if you plan to keep it more than 4 months, pasteurize it: Heat the vinegar to 155° in a stainless steel saucepan and hold it there for 30 minutes. Store the vinegar in sterilized, well-sealed bottles in a cool, dry place. Use homemade vinegar for dressings and sauces and as a seasoning; never use it for pickling

YOUR CLAY COYOTE VINEGAR CROCK

By Tom Wirt, Clay Coyote Pottery

Thank you for buying a vinegar crock from Clay Coyote.  Paula Wolfert first put us on to the idea of home-brewed wine vinegars when she was preparing her article for the October 2006 Food and Wine Magazine issue.    The basic design of the crock shape has changed as we go, so your crock may differ from the web photos.  Mostly the changes are to make the crock work better or to keep the potter from getting bored.

The second lid, with the hole in the center, is to hold down a piece of cheesecloth.  Vinegar needs air for the mother to produce new vinegar.  6 to 8  thicknesses should help keep fruit flies at bay, yet allow air circulation.  It also allows easy removal of the cheesecloth to add wine.  As you add additional wine, pour it in gently on top of the mother that has formed.  You can use a spoon, turkey baster or bit of clear plastic tube to do this, to avoid disturbing the mother.  A new mother will form on top of the added wine.

The regular lid is so that, if for some reason or use (like lemonade) you need a more tightly fitting lid, you’ve got it.

At some point you should look on the web for articles on brewing home vinegar.  Just search for homemade vinegar.  one great one is www.vinegarman.com.

Some articles on Homemade Vinegar can be read at Sunset Magazine’s Site

TWO MID-WINTER IDEAS

Cassole_Cassoulet_YSSo far it’s been a cold and snowy winter here in ‘ da Nort ‘ …so what better time to warm things up with a fantastic dinner with your friends …and a non-intensive project that will pay dividends all year.The first is one we wrote about last January at length, a cassoulet based dinner, and the second, making your own homemade vinegar.

The cassoulet (the pot you make it in is called a cassole) can be as complicated or simple as you wish. This is a traditional French bean “stew” which would have been made, over a series of days, as ingredients were acquired as parts of other meals.
There is ongoing argument over what is the most authentic, and we won’t get into that one. See an article in “Departures Magazine” where Sylvie Bigar has done her best to walk the middle ground.
We have made Paula Wolfert’s recipe twice, once with simplifications, and then the full recipe including homemade sausage and duck confit. Doing it the full way made a big difference.
Paula swears the angle sided bowl that we make, also makes a big difference. Others use a pot more like our standard casserole. For other recipes. just Google “Cassoulet” and you’ll get a bunch. Once you get the basic idea, make up your own with what you have.
Then invite some friends over, open a bottle of wine, some french bread and maybe a bit of salad and you’ll have an evening to remember.
WINE VINEGAR

The second project is even easier, but takes some time and patience. Make your own wine vinegar. A pottery crock, like the Clay Coyote Vinegar Crock is perfect, but you can do it in other containers if you want. First check out this Sunset Magazine article that appeared last year.

/VINEGAR%20SUNSET%20ARTICLE.pdf
I’d suggest starting with at least one bottle and then topping it off later with more. You can get a mother from Beer-Wine.com. Once you have one, that’s all you’ll need as you can keep a bit in a jar for your next batch. We’ve experimented with freezing it and that appears to work, just as it does for sourdough.
It’ll take about 10 weeks for your first batch of red wine vinegar and 16 to 20 for a white wine batch. You’ll never find a commercial product that comes close. Use it in making sauces, a bit in almost anything to enhance flavors. Pasturize it and you can store it forever and make herbal vinegars, too.

Your Clay Coyote crock comes with instructions and there are websites all over the ‘net if you search for “homemade vinegar”.

Make your own Vinegar

It is all the rage! Crafting your own vinegar from leftover wine will provide you with the finest vinegars you can use. Paula Wolfert approached us recently about making crocks for the home brewing of vinegar and wrote an article about it for ‘Food & Wine’ magazine. She found homemade vinegars made a huge difference in cooking, from subtle amounts that bring flavors alive, to dressings where the vinegar is the key player.

The Clay Coyote vinegar crock is designed to Paula’s specifications, holding about a gallon, with the spigot a few inches above the bottom. Ultimately this space is for the residual ‘mother’ that forms. Of course, the crock could also be used for other liquids.

Our crocks hold about a gallon (don’t have to fill it to start out) and feature a wood spigot. The initial startup will take some 2-1/2 months, but from then on it can be used at any time. You’ll need a starter (we recommend Mark Larrow’s at http://www.beer-winemaking.com/) although others are available on the internet or your local beer/wine home-brewing store may carry them.

For a great article on brewing your own vinegar, see this article (copyrighted) from Sunset Magazine, October 2008. /SunsetMagazine_Vinegar.pdf Also see their vinegar blog at Sunset Magazine Team Vinegar.