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European Recipes :French Recipes : Flavoured Vinegars
Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.01
Title: Flavoured Vinegars
Categories: French, Condiment, Ceideburg 2
Yield: 1 servings
MMMMM---------------------FLAVOURED VINEGAR--------------------------
MMMMM----------------FOR EACH 1 LITRE WINE BOTTLE---------------------
1 l (1 3/4 pints) plain wine
-vinegar
4 Or 5 shallots, peeled
and
-slightly
crushed, threaded
-on fine
string or
4 Cloves garlic, peeled
and
-slightly
crushed or
2 tb Mustard seed or
1 Long leafy branch
tarragon
-twice the
length of the
-bottle
Flavoured wine vinegar has been an important ingredient in French
cooking since medieval times when vinegar was essential in order to
keep meat edible in warm weather.
In the 13th century, street vendors were granted the right to cry
their wares in the thoroughfares of Paris. These cries soon
became
famous, and the vinegar sellers even rolled their casks through the
narrow streets crying 'Garlic and mustard vinegars, herb vinegar...
'
'Vinaigres, bons et biaux.'
They also sold verjus, the sieved juice of unripe grapes which
serves
to sharpen the flavour of many cooked dishes in the same way that
vinegar does. It is still used in some country places and
provides a
means of using up green grapes unfit for any other purpose.
All farm kitchens have an earthenware vinegar barrel. It
constitutes
another of the many country economies. After the grape
harvest, a
certain quantity of either red or white wine is reserved and poured
into the barrel over a liquid fungus or mere de vinaigre which
turns
it into vinegar. The quantity drawn off each day is replaced by
emptying the remains of the wine bottles into the barrel.
When herbs are most pungent, just before flowering, they are cut
and
used to aromatize some of the vinegar drawn off. It is then
bottled
and used for flavouring.
Owning a vinegar barrel is a privilege of which few English
kitchens
can boast but plain wine vinegar sold in the multiple chemists'
shops
can be used effectively with home-grown herbs to produce fine
vinegar
at much less cost than that prepared commercially.
FLAVOURED VINEGAR:
Collect the number of bottles necessary, with sound corks to fit.
Wash the bottles in hot soapy water, rinse first in very hot water
then in cold, drain, dry and heat in a slow oven. Scald the
corks in
boiling water.
Pour the vinegar into an enamel-lined or stainless steel pan and
over
a low temperature bring slowly to blood heat. It should be
quite
warm to the touch of a knuckle joint, no more. Add shallots,
garlic,
mustard seed or tarragon to the warm bottles. (If using
tarragon,
this should be bent double and pushed down the neck of the bottle.)
Fill up with warm vinegar, cork down tightly, and place on a sunny
window sill to mature for 6 weeks before use.
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