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

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


Скачать книгу
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

      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 word vinegar comes from the French


Скачать книгу