Every Wine Vinegar
Ingredients
Instructions
- Combine the cider vinegar and wine in a large glass container with a loose-fitting lid.
- Before replacing the lid, cover the opening with cheesecloth to allow for ample airflow so oxygen reaches the vinegar stock.
- Store the container in an undisturbed cool, dark place and leave it alone for 1 week.
- After a week, take the lid off and remove the cheesecloth.
- Smell.
- The ingredients have changed.
- The wine and the live vinegar have come together.
- The smell of wine is still prominent, but the smell of vinegar cuts through the wine.
- A harmony is being created.
- Taste the developing vinegar.
- You could use it now, but it will probably benefit from another week of storage.
- At this point you may add another 2 cups (480 grams) of wine.
- If the cheesecloth is clean, you can reuse it over the mouth of the jar; otherwise cut a fresh piece.
- Replace the lid and store for another week.
- After the second week, you should have something worth working with in your kitchen.
- Pour off a portion for your pantry (leaving the sediment behind) and feel free to add more wine to the base in your jar.
- The vinegar in your pantry will continue to develop on its own, while the jar with the mother will continue as a work in progress until aging is complete.
- We enjoy the flavor of the developing vinegar.
- Its bolder than the wine vinegars you can get in stores, and has more nuanced undertones.
Nutrition & Diet Analysis (per serving)
43
kcal
2% DV
* % Daily Values based on a 2,000 calorie diet (FDA 2020).