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Preserving (rec.food.preserving) Devoted to the discussion of recipes, equipment, and techniques of food preservation. Techniques that should be discussed in this forum include canning, freezing, dehydration, pickling, smoking, salting, and distilling. |
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Kathi Jones wrote:
> "cbx" > wrote in message > ... > >>My 2 cents worth. Acetobacter is the critter that is responsible for >>changing the alcohol to vinegar, and when making wine this is the >>critter you want to avoid at all costs. >> >>Surest way to make good vinegar is to buy a culture (mother) from >>reputable vendor (homebrew supply stores carry it) or borrow a few >>ounces from someone who has a culture going. The "Mother" is the most >>disgusting looking thing you would ever see in your life, and it looks >>obscene to say the least. There are different strains of >>"acetobacter" that produce various flavors. I like Malt vinegar so >>purchase a malt vinegar mother and use stale beer instead of wine. >> >>You can make your own "mother" by putting single layer of very coarse >>cheesecloth or screening over a jug of wine, and set it out on the >>porch. Fruitflies, flies, other flying critters will come to try to >>get into the bottle, but will be stopped by the screen. However, the >>little "acetobacter" fall into the wine and start growing, as they >>naturally populate the outside of the fruitfly and flies, and other >>bugs. >> >>The problem with this method is that although it works all the time, >>you never know exactly which strainof the little bacterium or whatever >>you are starting, although most always it will turn out OK. For a >>particular flavor get a "mother" from a company specializing in >>vinegars. >> >>Commercial vinegar is made from Crude Oil, I would NEVER NEVER NEVER >>drink vinegar made in a refinery (distilled white vinegar and most >>commercial vinegars, flavored with laboratory chemicals). >> >>Maybe someone from England can jump in here with more explicit >>instructions, as they have some excellent Malt vinegars over there and >>I have never been able to even come close to those with my >>store-bought mothers. (a "Mother" would make the basis of a good >>science fiction movie, as if you have ever seen one they are the stuff >>mightmares are made of). >> >>On a related subject,, I used to make sherry the way they do in >>Europe, in an Estuffa (heated cabinet), and the yeast for this stuff >>makes a "mother" also, and it makes a hard, crusty "mother" that is >>just as obscene looking. I can't find the yeast anymore since Wine >>Art went out of business many years ago (sherry flor yeast). The >>homemade sherry was better than anything you could buy, could be made >>out of just about anything (I used oranges), but it took some time to >>enjoy. >> >>Jim >> >> >> >> >>On Sat, 06 Jan 2007 01:45:58 -0800, Reg > wrote: >> >> >>>Peter Watson wrote: >>> >>> >>>>On 4/1/07 10:21 AM, in article , >>>>"Goomba38" > wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>>>Thank you for your reply. >>>>>Here is the recipe: Aceto di vino, from Giulliano Bugialli's "Foods of >>>>>Naples and Campania" >>>>> >>>>>2 slices white bread, crusts removed >>>>>4 cups dry red wine >>>>> >>>>>Put the bread in a glass jar, then pour the wine over it. Place a piece >>>>>of cheesecloth over the top of the jar and set the jar aside in a >>>>>cabinet or on a countertop away from direct sunlight. >>>>> >>>>>Let the jar rest for about 25 days. in this period of time the bread >>>>>will turn very dark in color and become almost gelatinous. This is the >>>>>so called mother of the wine vinegar. Carefully drain and filter the >>>>>wine that has become vinegar into a bowl., then pour into a bottle. The >>>>>vinegar is now ready to be used. >>>>> >>>>>You can add more wine to the jar containing the mother of the vinegar. >>>>>This time the process of changing the wine into vinegar will be much >>>>>faster, about 1 week. >>>> >>>>I think that you will need to use sour dough bread if it is available >>>>near >>>>you, but thr recipe sounds great and I am going to try it. >>> >>>You don't need to use sourdough, or bread made with >>>any specific yeast. There's no live cultures left in >>>bread (as there is in, for example, yoghurt). It all >>>dies off during baking. >> > > I bought a vinegar mother from a wine making shop, followed the directions > and tried to make vinegar out of my home brew wine....It never became > vinegar and I don't know why. There's a wine making newsgroup I used to > read, which is where I got the idea for trying it....rec.crafts.brewing? or > ...something winemaking? can't remember what the group was called...anyway, > check them out - there are brewing people there that could be of some help.. > > Kathi > > Plus, regardless of what Jim says, oil is too expensive to make vinegar out of it. Go to http://www.versatilevinegar.org/faqs.html to see how vinegar is made and the different types. George |
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