A vinegar mother will make your future vinegar production a heck of a lot easier. These things are unusual beasts – an amalgamation of cellulose and acetic acid bacteria that forms into a jelly at the bottom of fermenting alcoholic liquids, like wine or cider. It looks like something that might be served up as molecular cuisine in a Michelin-starred restaurant, but we wouldn’t recommend having a taste.
And vinegar continues to be useful even once the cooking’s finished. An equal-part white vinegar–water mix is effective for mopping floors, cleaning grease off your stove, and scrubbing limescale off the kitchen sink. The same mix is also good for cleaning stained plastics, like chopping boards, and can be run through a coffee machine or boiled in a kettle to help shift hardened-on limescale.
Cooking the vinegar–water mix in stainless steel or enamel pots and pans can help them regain their sheen and, similarly, a dab of vinegar can help revive cloudy glasses. Alternatively, you can also mix equal parts white vinegar and baking soda to clean gunky baking trays and oven shelves as well.
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