The Eight Vinegars to Keep in Your Pantry



Ingredient expert Jack Bishop gives a primer on vinegars.

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40 Comments

  1. I usually find these interesting and helpful, and about paring down– "if you use just one. . ." But this is a bit over the top. The average kitchen doesn't have room for all of this, and it becomes a lot to deal with. I would say, cider vinegar, balsamic, and one of the Asian ones will get you through most recipes. It's not that the others aren't useful, it's just too much.

  2. I can only keep 3 out of the eight vinegars in my puny condo kitchen. My pantry is very small. White, balsamic and Chinese rice vinegar. I can't be bothered with any apple cyder or wine vinegars. Every pantry should have at least a giant 2 or 4 liter jug of distilled white vinegar on hand at all times. It's way more than a food conditioner and cooking ingredient, it is a versatile gentle yet powerful cleaner.

  3. I used to think I had a vinegar “problem” because I had nearly a dozen but this has vindicated me lol. For autumn salad dressing a pear vinegar is great (and I don’t enjoy pears alone) and my most recent snag is a passion fruit variety. Can’t wait to play with that one!

  4. I’m curious why they block out the names of the non taste test favorites. They don’t do it during the actual taste test and yet here they do. Plus, the bottles are still recognizable and they don’t block the names when the camera is zoomed out.

  5. 9 vinegars?!! Who needs that? Or so I thought, It turns out I have every one of those in my cupboard except the Chinese. I use them so regularly I never realized! 😂 The sherry is my favorite. I also have a second, larger bottle of the white for cleaning.😀

  6. White vinegar is good for cleaning the haze left inside your saucepan after cooking pasta or starchy foods like potatoes. Just pour a small amount straight from the bottle after washing, swish around with a rag, rewash to remove the vinegar smell and it shines like new.

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