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Posted

The Washinton Times reports that mixing drinks with vinegar is all the rage:

That unmistakable tang and bright acidity is what draws bartenders to vin aigre (sour wine). Historically, white and apple cider vinegars were boiled into syrups for shrub fruit cocktails or added straight up to drinks for their purported medicinal qualities. These days, bartenders are using the tangy acids' aged cousins, balsamic and sherry, to achieve a new level of depth and complexity in cocktails.

But first you've got to choose the vinegar to feature from among the dozens lining store shelves. Vinegar is made by oxidizing the ethanol in wine (sherry, champagne, red wine vinegars), fruit juices (apple cider, raspberry, citrus -- although these are altogether different from white vinegar flavored with fruits), grape must (balsamic), rice, beer and a host of other ingredients. Basically, if you can ferment it, you can turn it into vinegar.

Trend stories always make me suspicious, but maybe vinegary cocktails will soon be more common than mojitos.

Anyone tried vinegar as ingredient? Any success with drinks less baroque than those given in the article?

This three-year-old topic touches on the same subject.

Todd A. Price aka "TAPrice"

Homepage and writings; A Frolic of My Own (personal blog)

Posted
The Washinton Times reports that mixing drinks with vinegar is all the rage:
That unmistakable tang and bright acidity is what draws bartenders to vin aigre (sour wine). Historically, white and apple cider vinegars were boiled into syrups for shrub fruit cocktails or added straight up to drinks for their purported medicinal qualities. These days, bartenders are using the tangy acids' aged cousins, balsamic and sherry, to achieve a new level of depth and complexity in cocktails.

But first you've got to choose the vinegar to feature from among the dozens lining store shelves. Vinegar is made by oxidizing the ethanol in wine (sherry, champagne, red wine vinegars), fruit juices (apple cider, raspberry, citrus -- although these are altogether different from white vinegar flavored with fruits), grape must (balsamic), rice, beer and a host of other ingredients. Basically, if you can ferment it, you can turn it into vinegar.

Trend stories always make me suspicious, but maybe vinegary cocktails will soon be more common than mojitos.

Anyone tried vinegar as ingredient? Any success with drinks less baroque than those given in the article?

This three-year-old topic touches on the same subject.

Robert Heugel covered this topic last year over at his blog, Drink Dogma. The new Food & Wine Cocktail Book book actually features his recipe for a Sidecar twist called, The Wreck.

Posted (edited)

All the drinks that call for Worcestershire sauce are already using vinegar as an ingredient. I've often wondered about the result of substituting Worcestershire sauce where Angostura bitters is called for. Never had the nerve to try it, though.

Edited by brinza (log)

Mike

"The mixing of whiskey, bitters, and sugar represents a turning point, as decisive for American drinking habits as the discovery of three-point perspective was for Renaissance painting." -- William Grimes

Posted
All the drinks that call for Worcestershire sauce are already using vinegar as an ingredient.  I've often wondered about the result of substituting Worcestershire sauce where Angostura bitters is called for.  Never had the nerve to try it, though.

Shouldn't take that much nerve...if it sucks, there is always the sink...

Posted (edited)

Using vinegar in drinks is not all that "new."

I have some drink recipes from the 18th century - for fruit "shrubs" that include vinegar, wine and various sprits, ranging from gin to brandy.

And then going back further, the Roman army routinely drank vinegar mixed with water because it was a way to avoid illness and they often cut wine with vinegar to extend their supplies.

I just found this site: Shrubs.

Also, a friend who spent several months in the area around Modena, a few years ago, told me that he was served "sweet" balsamic vinegar that was diluted with soda water (from a siphon). He said it was very refreshing. He particularly mentioned it to me because I am allergic to alcohol and he thought I might enjoy it. I tried it, using some fairly expensive stuff, and it was very good but not the thing for someone who needs to economize!

Edited by andiesenji (log)
  • Like 1

"There are, it has been said, two types of people in the world. There are those who say: this glass is half full. And then there are those who say: this glass is half empty. The world belongs, however, to those who can look at the glass and say: What's up with this glass? Excuse me? Excuse me? This is my glass? I don't think so. My glass was full! And it was a bigger glass!" Terry Pratchett

 

Posted

PDT had a shrub drink on a previous menu that used gin, Pernod, and concord grape vinegar.

I regularly mix with white balsamic and (more recently) with sugarcane vinegar. The latter seriously amps up the herbal "funk" in rhum agricole- or arrack-based drinks.

Mayur Subbarao, aka "Mayur"
Posted

I just put up this year's batch of Tequila Por Mi Amante, and when it's done I'd like to do some experiments with balsamic vinegar, since strawberries and balsamic are magical together.

"Martinis should always be stirred, not shaken, so that the molecules lie sensuously one on top of the other." - W. Somerset Maugham

Posted

Jamie Boudreau was serving some nice raspberry & blackberry shrub cocktails at Vessel in Seattle last fall. My favorite, which I'm proud to say bears my name :wub: (given my fondness for the ingredients), was the Clarke's Conundrum, made with the shrub, Rittenhouse rye and Pedro Ximenez. Good lord, those were nice.

Here's Jamie's writeup: Berry Shrub

Paul Clarke

Seattle

The Cocktail Chronicles

Posted

vineger is kind of cool but i always paired aged balsamic in my drinks with verjus...

and if the idea of either excites you saba from modena is quite impressive...(unfermented grape reduction) you can even make great and complex liqueurs from the vin cotto like the marasca cherry tasting gambrinus from the veneto...

supposedly the appalachian people were the kings of the vineger drinks and avante garde sugars and acids... they made their own saba from cooking down fresh pressed apple juice 40+ to 1... you concentrate all of the sugars and acids and retain quite alot of concentrated aroma... i think i just lined up a source for grapes to make enough saba for the restaurant for next year.

abstract expressionist beverage compounder

creator of acquired tastes

bostonapothecary.com

  • 3 months later...
Posted

Angel's Share in NYC had (or has) a cocktail built around Sherry Vinegar which was either very good (imo) or amazing (in my girlfriend's opinion).

Posted

What about making something with sushi vinegar? It's light and sweet and doesn't have as strong of a vinegar flavor as the other ones mentioned in the article.

Hmmmm....I'll have to come up with something. I mean, I use it in my scrambled eggs, so I'm sure I can find a drink to pour it in.

  • 7 years later...
Posted

I had an interesting drink a couple of days ago, with bourbon and balsamic vinegar. It actually tasted nice and balanced, with a touch of smoke and umami. The only minus is that the balsamic vinegar and heavy dose (1/2 oz) of Angostura bitters tended to hide the nuances of the bourbon.

 

Inkwell (Ryan Haile via Gaz Regan) with Kings County distillery bourbon, white grapefruit juice, balsamic vinegar, Angostura bitters.

 

24950324755_46d6613848_b.jpg

  • Like 1
  • 2 years later...
Posted

How aged are we talking on the balsamic? Not a lot of options for balsamic vinegar where I live but that drink sounds pretty tasty. 

It's kinda like wrestling a gorilla... you don't stop when you're tired, you stop when the gorilla is tired.

Posted

Where I live it's much easier to find a selection of balsamic vinegars than it is to find white grapefruit.  Wish I could grow my own!

Posted
1 hour ago, Fernwood said:

Where I live it's much easier to find a selection of balsamic vinegars than it is to find white grapefruit.  Wish I could grow my own!

 

Both are available mail order, at least when white grapefruit are in season.  My supplier has white grapefruit on pre-order for the next crop:

 

https://www.halegroves.com/grapefruit/c/ft_1001_12/sweet-white-grapefruit/p/sweetwhitegrapefruit/

 

Problem is they don't ship one grapefruit at a time.  I didn't even order white grapefruit this year because most of them rot in my bedroom before I can drink them up.  I know it's not the same but I've been putting red grapefruit in my zombies.  Please don't tell.  Maybe I should drink more zombies.

 

Balsamic I buy from parmashop:

https://www.parmashop.com/italiano/aceto-balsamico/aceto-balsamico-tradizionale-di-modena.html

 

 

Cooking is cool.  And kitchen gear is even cooler.  -- Chad Ward

Whatever you crave, there's a dumpling for you. -- Hsiao-Ching Chou

  • 5 weeks later...
Posted

Sherry vinegars have potential. I concocted a ginger cocktail a few months ago with a bit of pedro ximenez vinegar, and I think it worked pretty well. 

 

There are different kinds, with different complexities and balances of sweet/savory/dry/fruity, and with with hints of fruit that range from raisins to pears to peaches. 

Notes from the underbelly

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