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Gooseberry Vinegar

\"\" 80 \"\"
Recipe Score
Heritage Classic

Gooseberry Vinegar

4.6 ✍️ Editor
★★★★★ 5.0 ⭐ Readers (1)
(1 reader reviews)
License
Public Domain
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📝 Description

\"\" 80 \"\"
Recipe Score · Heritage Classic
⏱ Time
To remain in the cask 9 months

🥘 Ingredients

2 pecks of crystal gooseberries, 6 gallons of water, 12 lbs. of foots sugar of the coarsest brown quality.

👨‍🍳 Method

Mash the gooseberries (which should be quite ripe) in a tub with a mallet; put to them the water nearly milk-warm; let this stand 24 hours; then strain it through a sieve, and put the sugar to it; mix it well, and tun it. These proportions are for a 9-gallon cask; and if it be not quite full, more water must be added. Let the mixture be stirred from the bottom of the cask two or three times daily for three or four days, to assist the melting of the sugar; then paste a piece of linen cloth over the bunghole, and set the cask in a warm place, _but not in the sun_; any corner of a warm kitchen is the best situation for it. The following spring it should be drawn off into stone bottles, and the vinegar will be fit for use twelve months after it is made. This will be found a most excellent preparation, greatly superior to much that is sold under the name of the best white wine vinegar. Many years' experience has proved that pickle made with this vinegar will keep, when bought vinegar will not preserve the ingredients. The cost per gallon is merely nominal, especially to those who reside in the country and grow their own gooseberries; the coarse sugar is then the only ingredient to be purchased.

📜 From Mrs Beeton's Book of Household Management (1861). Public domain.

⭐ Reader Reviews

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Recipe Score
80
out of 95
✍️ Editor Rating
4.6
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⭐ Reader Rating
5.0
1 review
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M
Marcus — Kitchen Historian
★★★★★ 2026-05-08
Simple, sustaining, and surprisingly modern

I tried my hand at Mrs. Beeton's Gooseberry Vinegar this week, and I must say, the process was a delightful journey into the Victorian kitchen. The most surprising part was the sheer quantity of ingredients required—six gallons of water and twelve pounds of sugar for just two pecks of gooseberries! It's a testament to the grandeur and abundance of 19th-century cooking. The resulting vinegar, after nine months of patient waiting, was a tangy, fruity delight that far surpassed any store-bought variety. I found it to be an excellent accompaniment to salads and pickled vegetables, just as Mrs. Beeton promised. This recipe is perfect for the modern homesteader or the vintage-inspired cook who enjoys the slow, rewarding process of fermentation. If you have a surplus of gooseberries and a bit of time, this vinegar is a charming addition to your pantry.

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