Dear Student,
Humble vinegar is an oft-overlooked and undervalued treasure. It’s got nearly unlimited uses and is an integral part of most self-sufficiency endeavors.
From miraculous-seeming health and cosmetic benefits to a myriad of cleaning possibilities, plus food preservation through pickling… you should make vinegar your new best friend and put all its potential to work for you in your new self-sufficient life.
For today’s lesson, we’ll begin with the basics of vinegar and then get into how to use it to preserve food…
As I said, vinegar is a highly useful player to have in your self-sufficiency game, so I want to focus on the MVP before I digress into some details on pickling and other vinegar uses…
There are a few different vinegar sources commonly used today:
Regardless of the source, though, vinegar is always essentially the same thing. It’s produced by allowing aerobic (oxygen-loving) acetobacter bacteria to convert the alcohol in a liquid into acetic acid, the active ingredient in vinegar.
Traditionally, vinegar has been used for cleaning and disinfecting, as you likely noticed in our lesson on homemade cleaning products. Vinegar has a wealth of cleansing properties… Acetic acid can kill harmful bacteria and/or prevent them from multiplying, making it an effective antibacterial agent (though, importantly, it doesn’t kill staphylococcus, so it can’t replace stronger chemicals in all cases—at least not by itself).
It’s also a strong antifungal. For anyone living in the tropics, note that vinegar is your best friend in the constant battle against mold. It’s the most efficient way I’ve found to get rid of black mold once it’s taken hold. Save your arms the scrubbing and just let some vinegar sit on the mold to kill it and make it easy to remove (maybe add some baking soda for a real one-two punch).
It’s also a wonderful deodorant, either by itself or mixed into a solution with some pleasant-smelling additive. Use it in the microwave, dishwasher, car, on smelly feet, or anything else than you can shake the funk off of!
Medicinally, vinegar has countless uses thanks to its anti-inflammatory properties. It’s been used for centuries (or more) in home remedies to treat nail fungus, lice, warts, ear infections, sore throat, dandruff, bruises, bug bites, to soothe skin irritations, to relieve sunburn, and much more.
And cosmetically, it’s a godsend. Any good grandmother will tell you that her grandmother told her to use it on practically everything. Rinse your hair in apple cider vinegar for extra shine, use it as a facial toner to get rid of redness, add some to a tub to ease whole-body inflammation or in a foot bath to quiet your barking dogs, or apply it to razor burn or bumps to help them heal faster.
Even More Uses For Vinegar…
If a liquid has sugars or alcohol in it, you can probably make vinegar out of it… Use non-sulfite alcohol only, though, as sulfides kill the bacteria.
Acetobacter bacteria is found in the air, so leaving a loosely covered container of non-distilled alcohol at room temperature, or one covered with a thin cloth top can do the trick.
But more certainty can be achieved by using the “mother of vinegar” (a piece of a successful acetobacter colony from a previous vinegar-making effort). If you have any friends or family who enjoy pickling, they’ll likely have a vinegar mother you can avail of. If not, you can buy starter sachets online (similar to the yeast packets you buy for wine) to make your own.
Making A Vinegar Mother Using A Starter Packet:
Making A Vinegar Mother Without A Starter Packet:
This method isn’t labor-intensive, but it’s a little less reliable than the long-form production.
Instead of throwing away the peels and cores of apples, you can make apple cider vinegar at home. For example, if you’re making a tarts or sauces from apples, you can put all your scraps to use.
Making apple cider vinegar in this way is super economic, with a gallon costing about 10 cents when all’s done.
Equipment:
Ingredients:
Process:
Aside from all the uses vinegar has on its own, if add some food to it then you’re really reaping its full benefits.
Pickling is easy, fun, and tasty. There are a great array of vegetables and other foodstuffs that have typically been preserved in times gone past, and many are still pickled today all around the world.
While the origin of pickling comes from extending the shelf-life of various foods and making them easier to travel with, pickled foods are a delicacy unto themselves. The flavor of pickled foods is often quite distinct from the flavor of the raw food, and they make perfect pairings for certain foods.
And for some dishes, pickled foods are de rigueur—have you ever been served a deli sandwich without a gherkin on the site? Tapas or French cheese plate without cornichons? A martini without a cocktail onion? A traditional slider without a slice of pickle? Or sushi without pickled ginger? There’s no substituting cucumber slices on a burger, a slice of raw onion in a cocktails, or raw ginger on a sushi roll… but the pickled version? Ah, now there’s a pairing made in heaven!
The art is currently undergoing a renaissance, with craft pickling the a new hip and trendy pastime among young folks who are just discovering the beauty and fun of pickling for themselves.
Pickling involves the use of vinegar and sometimes brine and anaerobic fermentation to preserve foodstuffs and to enhance the flavor and nutrition. In Asia, people pickle using a vinaigrette (oil and vinegar).
Most things can be pickled (meat isn’t usually pickled, but it’s possible).
Some of the best fruits to pickle include…
And vegetables…
Ingredients:
1 cup vinegar, such as white, apple cider, or rice
1 cup water
1 tablespoon kosher salt or 2 teaspoons pickling salt
1 tablespoon granulated sugar (optional)
1 teaspoon dried herbs or ground spices (optional)
2 cloves garlic, crushed or sliced (optional)
Equipment:
Process: