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Re: Pickling in vinegar

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Jo-

>Is there any nutritional and/or health benefit to eating foods pickled

>in vinegar? I prefer vinegar pickles to lacto-fermented, and DH won't

>touch lacto-fermented foods at all.

Nope. Unfortunately they're just a cheap imitation of the original.

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Jo-

>Is there any nutritional and/or health benefit to eating foods pickled

>in vinegar? I prefer vinegar pickles to lacto-fermented, and DH won't

>touch lacto-fermented foods at all.

One thought, though: I guess you could try pickling something in an

unpasteurized vinegar. Then you might get some of the benefits of a

probiotic ferment.

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--- In , Idol <Idol@c...>

wrote:

> One thought, though: I guess you could try pickling something in an

> unpasteurized vinegar. Then you might get some of the benefits of a

> probiotic ferment.

Like unfiltered apple cider vinegar? I have some of that - not sure if

it's the right stuff though.

Jo

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Jo,

I'm coming into this a little late and hoping I'm responding to the right

question. I throw fresh sliced cukes into a mason jar, toss in a tablespoon

of pickling spices, few cloves of garlic, some fresh dill, cover it with

Bragg's ACV and let it sit at room temp for the day - I can remember my

great-grandmother making what she called " window sill pickles " in the same

way. We have them for dinner and the kids rave. Granted, it's not

fermented, but it is a nice change and a way to satisfy the pickle cravings

the kids get. HTH. When my daughter has heartburn, she munches down a few

of these pickles and voila, heartburn gone.

-Sharon, NH

Deut 11:14 He will put grass in the fields for your cattle, and you will

have plenty to eat.

Re: Pickling in vinegar

--- In , Idol <Idol@c...>

wrote:

> One thought, though: I guess you could try pickling something in an

> unpasteurized vinegar. Then you might get some of the benefits of a

> probiotic ferment.

Like unfiltered apple cider vinegar? I have some of that - not sure if

it's the right stuff though.

Jo

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> Like unfiltered apple cider vinegar? I have some of that - not sure if

> it's the right stuff though.

Jo,

Look at the bottle and make sure it says " unpasteurized " somewhere.

B.

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>Like unfiltered apple cider vinegar? I have some of that - not sure if

>it's the right stuff though.

>

>Jo

I've used some of my homemade vinegar to pickle stuff ... it is GREAT.

Also kimchi juice or kraut juice. It's basically a quick shortcut. You can

plop chunks of meat in the " sour juice " and they pickle quickly and don't

get the sulfur smell that I've gotten sometimes with meat/fish ferments.

Balsamic vinegar makes an outstanding " fish pickle " , esp. with some fresh

ginger and green onion in it.

You can make a quick and dirty homemade vinegar by following the recipe

for any " kefir beer " and just letting it sit out (minus the grains) until it

gets sour. It's better if there is plenty of air circulation (use a cloth

over the top maybe).

However, I don't pour " hot boiling " vinegar over the food like the old

cookbooks tell you to. THAT I think would ruin it!

Heidi Jean

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Jo-

>Like unfiltered apple cider vinegar? I have some of that - not sure if

>it's the right stuff though.

Unfiltered might be pasteurized but unfiltered. Make sure it says " raw " or

" unpasteurized " .

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> Jo,

> Look at the bottle and make sure it says " unpasteurized " somewhere.

> B.

Hi

Unfortunately in the UK, the only product that is ever labelled

pasteurised or unpasteurised is dairy. Vinegar wouldn't state either

way. I thought though that " unfiltered " ACV would be unpasteurised?

Jo

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> Unfortunately in the UK, the only product that is ever labelled

> pasteurised or unpasteurised is dairy. Vinegar wouldn't state either

> way. I thought though that " unfiltered " ACV would be unpasteurised?

Jo,

Huh. That's too bad. Perhaps you could move here?

You know, labeling is so tricky, unfiltered doesn't mean uncooked.

Does it have strands or bits of culture floating about in it? As

opposed to merely cloudy? What is the brand, anyway?

B.

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> Jo,

> Huh. That's too bad. Perhaps you could move here?

> You know, labeling is so tricky, unfiltered doesn't mean uncooked.

> Does it have strands or bits of culture floating about in it? As

> opposed to merely cloudy? What is the brand, anyway?

> B.

Hi

I don't think it's got strands of culture in it, it's just cloudy

There is no brand - I bought it direct from the farm - he sends out a

gallon container in the post to you, not in a box or anything! Very

rustic - it's good!

Jo

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> Hi

> I don't think it's got strands of culture in it, it's just cloudy

>

> There is no brand - I bought it direct from the farm - he sends out a

> gallon container in the post to you, not in a box or anything! Very

> rustic - it's good!

Jo,

Well that sounds promising! I guess do whatever sounds better:

poor some in with some juice/sugar water and see if it cultures or

make some pickles with it. Or, can you contact the farmer and ask him?

B.

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