Wildcrafted Lilac Vinegar

By capturing wild yeasts from blossoms and plants, you can harness the power of microbes to create lilac vinegar, including a vinegar starter, in your home kitchen.

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by Carmen Troesser

By capturing wild yeasts from blossoms and plants, you can harness the power of microbes to create lilac vinegar, including a vinegar starter, in your home kitchen.

To make vinegar, you can simply pour fresh juice into a wide-mouthed vessel, top it with a cloth, and let time and microbes happen. In my experience, though, this works perfectly about as often as it doesn’t work at all, most often because of harmless but undesirable surface yeasts or other unwelcome microbes. The microbes compete for the sugar and nutrients and cause the process to stall or not begin.

That’s why I add a vinegar starter to my recipes. Starter helps give the vinegar a good send-off — first by acidifying the liquid, which helps control surface yeasts, and then by seeding it with a good population that goes to work quickly.

  • Updated on Nov 13, 2021
  • Originally Published on Mar 15, 2021
Tagged with: fermentation, lilac, vinegar, yeast
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