A full-time RV dweller, living on Kelpie Kapers Farm, somewhere in the Cascade Foothills in Southwest Washington state.
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!
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The mango color is so cool!
ReplyDeleteIt'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.
DeleteYou 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.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure how to incorporate the mango vinegar into Asian cooking, but I'm ready to throw down and try.
DeleteI'm using it for Caribbean-flavored stuff.
I had Alexa add a habanero pepper to my grocery list just for it.
I have rice wine vinegar and red wine vinegar of the store variety. I wish I was adventurous enough to experiment like you are!
ReplyDeleteHonestly, 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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