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| + | ====== Balsamic Vinegar ====== | ||
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| + | **Recommended** | ||
| + | - Bertoli Balsamic Vinegar of Modena | ||
| + | - Monari Federzoni Balsamic Vinegar of Modena | ||
| + | - Ortalli Balsamic Vinegar of Modena ($4.69/16.9 oz) | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Rec w/ | ||
| + | * Lucini Gran Riserva Balsamico | ||
| + | * Colavita | ||
| + | * Rienzi | ||
| + | * Progresso | ||
| + | * Alessi | ||
| + | * Modenaceti | ||
| + | |||
| + | **Not Recommended** | ||
| + | * Star Balsamic | ||
| + | * Cento | ||
| + | * Pompeian | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ----------------- | ||
| + | Few foods demonstrate such a wide range in price-you can spend $2 or $200 for one bottle—or quality. Our tasters decode the mysteries of balsamico. | ||
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| + | Tasting Balsamic Vinegars | ||
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| + | | ||
| + | Traditional aged balsamic vinegar, produced in the Emilia-Romagna region of Italy, can cost $200 per bottle, making | ||
| + | even fine French perfume look like a bargain. You can also walk into any supermarket in America and fork over $2 or | ||
| + | $3 for a big bottle of balsamic vinegar. What are you really buying in each case? And should you buy either product? | ||
| + | |||
| + | To find out, I purchased 13 balsamic vinegars ranging in price from $60 per ounce to just 18 cents per ounce. Before | ||
| + | going into the tasting room, I wanted to figure out why the same product can cost so much and so little. A crash | ||
| + | course in recent history helped. | ||
| + | |||
| + | Thirty years ago, almost no one in America had ever heard of (never mind tasted) balsamic vinegar. It was an | ||
| + | obscure product made in northern Italy and so highly valued that many families passed along barrels of aged vinegar | ||
| + | as part of a wedding dowry. Fast-forward a generation, and balsamic is now the best-selling vinegar in America, | ||
| + | accounting for 45 percent of all supermarket vinegar sales. Intoxicated by its big, sweet, caramel flavor, Americans | ||
| + | mix it in salad dressing; drizzle it on meat, fish, and vegetables; and add it to sauces, soups, and desserts. Of | ||
| + | course, none of this popularity would have been possible if balsamic vinegar had remained a $100-an-ounce | ||
| + | extravagance. | ||
| + | |||
| + | A Tale of Two Vinegars | ||
| + | It turns out there are two kinds of balsamic vinegar, and they' | ||
| + | technique takes a minimum of 12 years; the modern industrial method as little as a few hours. The centuries-old | ||
| + | traditional way begins with late-harvest grapes (usually white Trebbiano) grown in Emilia-Romagna. The sweet, raisiny | ||
| + | juice, skin, and seeds, called grape must, is boiled in open vats until reduced to about half its original volume. This | ||
| + | concentrated must is added to the largest of a battery of wooden barrels, which are kept in uninsulated attics in this | ||
| + | region where the summers are hot and the winters frosty. The battery comprises barrels of different woods-including | ||
| + | oak, cherry, juniper, and mulberry-and sizes. The barrels aren't sealed; they have cloth-covered openings on top to | ||
| + | allow evaporation. Each year, before the vinegar maker adds the new must to the largest barrel, he transfers some | ||
| + | of its ever-more concentrated contents to the next largest, and so on down the line, before finally removing a liter or | ||
| + | two of the oldest vinegar from the smallest barrel. This is traditional balsamic vinegar. | ||
| + | |||
| + | What's more, all this can only happen in two provinces of Emilia-Romagna: | ||
| + | designated as a government-protected denomination of origin, or DOP. Each province has its own consortium of | ||
| + | experts who approve the balsamic before sealing it in its official 3-ounce bottle (an inverted tulip shape for Reggio | ||
| + | Emilia; a ball with a neck for Modena). If you want a guarantee that you're getting true balsamic vinegar, look for the | ||
| + | word tradizionale and these distinctive bottles-and be prepared to pay dearly. | ||
| + | |||
| + | All those rules are thrown out the window when it comes to commercial balsamic vinegar. With no law defining | ||
| + | balsamic vinegar in the United States, manufacturers supply the huge demand any way they can, coloring and | ||
| + | sweetening wine vinegar and calling it " | ||
| + | one worth using until I hit the lottery? | ||
| + | |||
| + | I began by choosing 10 top-selling, | ||
| + | their prices ranged from $2.39 to $14 a bottle. I tasted them plain, reduced to a glaze for roasted asparagus, and | ||
| + | whipped into a vinaigrette. I also tasted a traditional balsamic vinegar for comparison (see In Search of the Ultimate Drizzling Vinegar). | ||
| + | |||
| + | Now here's the bad news: Tasted straight from the bottle, there was no contest between supermarket and traditional | ||
| + | balsamics. Even the best of the commercial bunch-while similarly sweet, brown, and viscous--couldn' | ||
| + | the complex, rich flavor of true balsamic vinegar. With notes of honey, fig, raisin, caramel, and wood; a smooth, | ||
| + | lingering taste; and an aroma like fine port, traditional balsamic is good enough to sip like liqueur. | ||
| + | |||
| + | But the news is not all bad. You don't need to take out a loan to keep balsamic vinegar in your pantry. The test | ||
| + | kitchen made vinaigrette with both a 25-year-old traditional balsamic from Reggio Emilia and the top supermarket | ||
| + | brand from our taste tests--and frankly, in dressing, the traditional stuff did not justify its price tag. In a pan sauce, | ||
| + | most of that fine aroma and depth of flavor was cooked away. The lesson was clear: Don't waste your money on | ||
| + | pricey traditional balsamic vinegar if you're going to toss it on salad or cook with it. The good stuff works best | ||
| + | uncooked, as a drizzle to finish a dish. In vinaigrette or cooked sauce, the sharpness of a supermarket balsamic | ||
| + | adds a pleasingly bright contrast to the vinegar' | ||
| + | |||
| + | The Best Supermarket Option | ||
| + | Among the 10 supermarket vinegars we tasted, some were quite good, others quite awful. Why? An independent lab | ||
| + | test supplied part of the answer. Our top choice contained the most sugar; vinegars with the lowest sugar content | ||
| + | occupied four of the bottom five spots on the list. This makes sense--the sweeter supermarket vinegars tasted more | ||
| + | like the traditional balsamic. It turns out that our tasters also wanted their supermarket balsamic vinegar to be | ||
| + | viscous, like traditional balsamics. Lab tests confirmed that higher viscosity tracked with higher rankings. | ||
| + | |||
| + | But sweetness and thickness alone were not enough to guarantee a spot high on our list. The second-sweetest | ||
| + | vinegar was also the second most viscous, and it broke the pattern by appearing near the bottom. We were puzzled, | ||
| + | until we tested pH levels. This vinegar was the least acidic one tested, and tasters thought it was excessively sweet. | ||
| + | So a good supermarket balsamic vinegar must be sweet and thick (like the real deal), but it should also offer a little | ||
| + | jolt of acidity. | ||
| + | |||
| + | In the end, we found one supermarket vinegar--Lucini Gran Riserva--that appealed across the board, working well | ||
| + | both plain and in the dishes we prepared. The manufacturer told us they use must that is aged in the artisanal way | ||
| + | for 10 years, mixed with the company' | ||
| + | vinegar offered "a nice compromise between sweet and tangy," | ||
| + | traditional balsamic. I'll admit that it's no 25-year-old consortium-approved marvel. (That bottle is making its way home | ||
| + | with me.) But Lucini Gran Riserva also didn't cost $60 per ounce. In fact, at about $2 per ounce, I'll use this | ||
| + | supermarket vinegar at home--when my boss isn't paying the bill. | ||
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| + | ---------------------------------- | ||
| + | When it comes to drizzling vinegar over berries or a piece of grilled fish, do you have to shell out hundreds of dollars for a traditional vinegar aged for at least 12 years? To find out, we conducted another tasting that included a traditional balsamic approved and bottled by the Reggio Emilia vinegar consortium; Lucini Gran Riserva (winner of | ||
| + | our supermarket tasting); and two high-priced commercial balsamics-the kind sold in gourmet stores. | ||
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| + | The not-so-surprising news? The 25-year-old Cavalli Gold Seal Extra Vecchio Aceto Balsamico Tradizionale di Reggio Emilia, at $180 for 3 ounces, topped nearly everyone' | ||
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| + | But the big surprise was the strong performance of the high-priced commercial vinegars I purchased at gourmet stores. They were nearly as good as the 25-year-old vinegar and cost just $3 to $4 per ounce. Tasters praised the Oliviers & Co. Premium Balsamic Vinegar of Modena ($27 for 8.5 ounces) as " | ||
| + | of "wood, smoke, flowers," | ||
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| + | {{tag> | ||
| + | |||
| + | /* Recipe Note Tags | ||
| + | BuyingGuides | ||
| + | Misc | ||
| + | Techniques | ||
| + | Tips | ||
| + | Wine | ||
| + | */ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ~~DISCUSSION~~ | ||
