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The Miracle of Vinegar: 150 easy recipes and uses for home, health and beauty
The Miracle of Vinegar: 150 easy recipes and uses for home, health and beauty
The Miracle of Vinegar: 150 easy recipes and uses for home, health and beauty
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The Miracle of Vinegar: 150 easy recipes and uses for home, health and beauty

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150 simple ways to use this amazing, low cost ingredient. Cleaning, cooking and everything in between!

  • Make delicious dips and marinades
  • Soften your towels
  • Do away with dandruff
  • Descale your kettle
  • Discover sumptuous slow roasts
  • Tone greasy skin
  • Freshen your beauty brushes
  • Create the perfect pavlova

Brimming with tips, tricks and recipes for everything from ferments to fresheners, salad dressings to skincare. Let this book show you the true miracle of vinegar.

Whisked along with the no-nonsense, tongue-in-cheek voice of Aggie MacKenzie, of How Clean Is Your House? fame, you’ll soon discover the hundreds of uses for vinegar beyond being scrumptious sprinkled over your fish and chips!

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 10, 2019
ISBN9780008310585
The Miracle of Vinegar: 150 easy recipes and uses for home, health and beauty

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    Book preview

    The Miracle of Vinegar - Emma Marsden

    Copyright

    An imprint of HarperCollins Publishers Ltd

    1 London Bridge Street

    London SE1 9GF

    First published in Great Britain by HQ in 2019

    Copyright © Aggie MacKenzie and Emma Marsden 2019

    Aggie MacKenzie and Emma Marsden asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.

    A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

    This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.

    All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins.

    Ebook Edition © December 2018 ISBN: 9780008310585

    To my gorgeous sons Rory and Ewan for their enduring patience, boundless creativity and sharing their brilliant recipe ideas with me.

    — Aggie

    Thanks to my mum for my culinary drive, to Kev for always tasting everything I’ve made (no matter what time of day) and to the rest of my family for their support.

    — Emma

    CONTENTS

    Cover

    Title Page

    Copyright

    Dedication

    INTRODUCTION

    THE HISTORY OF VINEGAR

    TYPES OF VINEGAR

    Which Vinegar When?

    CLEANING TIPS

    Kitchen

    Bathroom

    Laundry

    Living Room

    Other Ingenious Uses

    HEALTH AND BEAUTY TIPS

    Silky Skin Solutions

    Treatments for Healthy-looking Hair

    Pamper Feet and Hands

    Tips and Tricks for Make-up Accessories

    Soothing Cold Treatments

    Ease Aches and Pains

    Nasty Infections

    Healthy From Inside Out

    Give Your Body a Boost

    And That’s Not All…

    RECIPES

    QUICK AND LIGHT MEALS

    Use Vinegar to Poach Eggs

    Rich Pickings From the Vegetable Drawer

    Spiced Chickpeas for Fish, Chicken, Salad, Yogurt or Hummus

    Hot Smoky Chicken for a Bun

    One-pan Peanut Butter Noodles

    Make the Most of Wizened Veg

    MAINS

    Friday Night Steak and Sides – Two Ways

    Special Slow-roasted Tomatoes

    Braised Lamb With Rosemary and Red Wine

    Five-hour Pulled Pork

    Pork Vindaloo

    Cheat’s Chicken Tikka

    Duck With Walnuts

    Three Ways With Raspberry Vinegar

    Red Pepper, Chickpea and Harissa Dressing for Pan-fried Hake

    Mullet Escabeche

    Stuffed Courgettes – Asian-style

    SALADS

    3 Classic (Ish) Salads and Their Dressings

    A Simple Couscous Salad

    Red Wine Vinegar Adds Zing to an Italian Salad

    Making the Most of Preserved Tuna

    DIPS AND SAUCES

    Quick Dill Sauce for Smoked Fish

    Homemade Hoisin-style Sauce

    A Softer-tasting Aioli for Pan-fried Fish

    One-minute Dips for Chips

    A Canny Tip to Stretch an Avocado to Feed a Few More…

    Dipping Sauce for Spring Rolls and Dumplings

    Classic Dressing for Oysters

    SNACKS AND NIBBLES

    Drinks Nibbles

    Hot Salt and Vinegar Crisps

    Cumin-spiced Nuts

    Chilli-spiced Olives

    The Beauty of Balsamic

    Mushroom Toast Topper

    Sherry Vinegar Mushrooms

    DESSERTS

    Sweet Raspberry Vinegar for Ice Cream and Drinks

    Bring Out the Sweetness in Strawberries

    Peaches With Verjus and Rosemary

    Chocolate Sharing Mousse With Blueberries and Pecans

    Golden Pavlova

    BREAD AND BAKING

    Chilli and Thyme Cornbread

    Courgette and Carrot Loaf

    Seeded Soda Bread

    PICKLES AND PRESERVES

    Red, White and Green Piccalilli

    Pickled Pears With Star Anise and Ginger

    Spiced Plums With Cinnamon, Juniper and Black Pepper

    Super-quick Bowl of Chutney

    About the Publisher

    INTRODUCTION

    Vinegar first came into my working life while I was at Good Housekeeping magazine in the early 1990s. I was director of the Institute and in this role I oversaw both the consumer testing and cookery departments. Each year, the January issue of the magazine carried a ‘Stains Special’… and vinegar always featured prominently.

    When, in 2002, I was asked to do a screen test for a new television programme about cleaning, I drew on my GH experience and rattled off a list of all the kooky remedies I had picked up over the years, and again vinegar enjoyed multiple name-checks.

    I passed the screen test, got the TV gig and co-presented How Clean is Your House? on Channel 4 from 2003 to 2009. My co-presenter and I generally used old-fashioned, inexpensive and homespun remedies for clean-ups – and very soon vinegar became the star of the show.

    I am currently, about once a month, the ‘Midnight Expert’ guest on the BBC Radio 5 Live Phil Williams show. People call in and text between midnight and 1am with their cleaning quandaries – it’s strange but true, there is never any shortage of queries, even at that late hour. So often have I named vinegar as the solution to removing a stain that Phil, a good while back, instigated ‘Aggie’s Vinegar Bingo’, in which a big shout-out goes to the caller who, during the on-air hour, nails the nearest time to the V-word first getting a mention. Who knew vinegar could create so much buzz?

    Vinegar is said to have been discovered by accident around 10,000 years ago, and it can be made from almost any fermentable item – such as wine, apples, pears, grapes, berries, beer and potatoes.

    For over 2000 years, vinegar has been used to flavour and preserve foods, heal wounds and fight infections – as well as clean surfaces. There is some evidence that vinegar added to one’s diet will reduce the glucose response to a carbohydrate load both in healthy adults and in sufferers of diabetes. It has also been suggested that drinking a little vinegar each day is useful as a dietary aid because it imparts a feeling of fullness. Since I began working on this book I have been drinking two tablespoons of organic cider vinegar with a tiny squeeze of honey every morning. Who knows whether it’s doing me any good, but I am sure it won’t be doing me much harm either.

    Both my sons are chefs in leading London restaurants and often use specialist vinegars for finishing dishes. Through them I have learned what a difference it can make and how to use it judiciously in my cooking.

    It seemed natural that I should put my head together with that of my friend and former cookery editor colleague at Good Housekeeping, Emma Marsden, to come up with a book that combines my cleaning-with-vinegar expertise and her extensive culinary knowledge. Here is our – we hope – useful collection of tips, plus recipes that are, without exception, exciting, innovative and, importantly, straightforward. We hope you’ll enjoy them, together with beauty remedies and health hints – all using this humble yet important liquid in its many and various forms.

    Aggie MacKenzie

    THE HISTORY OF VINEGAR

    The word vinegar comes from the French vin aigre, translated as sour wine, which accurately describes it. If you’ve ever left the dregs of an open bottle of wine for a few days and then attempted to drink the contents, only to be met with a sour taste, you’ve already started on the journey of vinegar-making. There are records of this magic ingredient being made as early as 5,000 BC in Babylon, and it’s thought that it was the result of a slipup while fermenting some wine. People cooking at that time experimented with this liquor, discovering that it could be used as both a condiment and ingredient.

    Today it is a popular ingredient, produced commercially by either fast or slow fermentation. In fast fermentation, the liquid is oxygenated and the bacteria culture added. Slow fermentation is generally used for the production of specialised vinegars used in cooking; the culture of acetic acid bacteria grows on the surface of the liquid and fermentation evolves gradually over weeks or months and allows for the formation of a harmless slime made up of yeast and acetic acid

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