Tuesday, June 8, 2021

Homemade Fruit Vinegar

I was super bored a while back and I ran across a YouTube video of a guy who made his own vinegars. This was intriguing to me. I decided to give it whirl. I used dried fruit: mango, blueberries and regular ol' raisins.
You want to fill a very clean quart jar 1/4 of the way with dried fruit and top it off with bottled water (you want it to be purified). Top each jar with a coffee filter and secure with a rubber band. It will take a few weeks to see anything happening. This is where you are trying to capture some wild yeast.
Every single day, you want to stir your fruit. After about 2 weeks, it will start to turn into alcohol and you'll be able to smell it.
It will be foamy when you stir it. If you forget to stir, it can get a bit of mold on it. Just remove that with a spoon and carry one as normal.
Here are the raisin photos. It's the same process with any dried fruit.
The raisin one took a few more days to ferment than the mango one did. I still haven't gotten the blueberries to go. I'm going to just let them hang out and see what happens to them.
Yesterday, I strained the fruit out and discarded it. It did its job wonderfully. When I tasted the liquid, it tasted like vinegar. I put it into a clean jar and capped it. Vinegar ages well, just as wine does.
Finished mango vinegar. I'll use this in some Caribbean-inspired BBQ sauce.
Next, I strained out the raisins. I tasted this vinegar. This was surprisingly delicious. I'll be using this in place of rice wine vinegar in Asian recipes.
I have 2 new vinegars to experiment with now. Next on my list is some papaya and some currant vinegar. What will I do with those? I do not know, but the sky is the limit!

6 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. It's pretty tasty, too. I can't wait to incorporate this into some BBQ sauce. I'm having Bob pick up a habenero pepper today.

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  2. You know I do a lot of Asian cooking. I'm going to try the mango and raisin versions come payday. I use a LOT of Rice wine vinegar so I'm excited to try these.

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    1. I'm not sure how to incorporate the mango vinegar into Asian cooking, but I'm ready to throw down and try.
      I'm using it for Caribbean-flavored stuff.
      I had Alexa add a habanero pepper to my grocery list just for it.

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  3. I have rice wine vinegar and red wine vinegar of the store variety. I wish I was adventurous enough to experiment like you are!

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    1. Honestly, you don't have anything to lose except for a quarter of a jar of raisins and some bottled water...and maybe a coffee filter. Your nose will let you know which stage of fermentation it's in. There will be 2 of them. First, it turns to alcohol and then, second, it turns to vinegar.

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