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Multi-use saffron vinegar which provides a zhuzh

what to do with saffron vinegar

“Merriam-Webster has added a bumper crop of 690 new words and terms to its dictionary this year, including “zhuzh” (a “small improvement” that completes the overall taste or look of something). If done right, the “zhuzh” might even warrant that well-known gesture of “satisfaction or approval” which has also made its way into this year’s edition: “chef’s kiss”.

The Knowledge, October 2023

It will come as no surprise to Saucy readers to know that the ideas and information on this blog come from sources many and varied. It could be that inspiration strikes in a restaurant, or ideas come during a cookery lesson, or from a book; and, of course, all too often facts, I hope accurate ones, appear on a screen.

However, a very special luxury treat where information seeps into the brain comfortably is in bed; with a cup of coffee; and the beautiful and glossy Food and Travel Magazine. It’s title comprises my two favourite things, food and travel, and all the latest ideas and trends within are wrapped in stunning photography, seasoned with the odd dream of a weekend away, and peppered with recipes to try.

I’m not normally a sucker for fancy, expensive ingredients but Food & Travel always softens me up and makes me susceptible. And as a result my most recent indulgence is saffron vinegar.

It’s all thanks to Ben Orpwood, executive chef at 20 Berkeley who was waxing lyrical in an interview in F&T about blueberries. He was reporting that pickled blueberries were very underrated, and he made his in a pickling liquor which included saffron vinegar.

And I’ve discovered that saffron vinegar isn’t just a fad – in fact it’s given me an opportunity to use this wonderful new word, ‘zhuzh’

The zhuzhs (small improvements) you can achieve with saffron vinegar which may even result in a chef’s kiss (ecstatic approval)

Make it into a dipping sauce.

How is saffron vinegar made?

Since saffron is so expensive it will come as no surprise that it’s only really worth making if all the other ingredients are also top quality.

It’s usually, but not always, made from either white wine, or cider vinegar. The saffron vinegar supplied by The Vinegar Shed, for example, comes from the south-west coast of France, near the border with Spain. It’s made from fortified red Banyuls dessert wine. The vinegar is aged for eight months in big glass flagons which are left outside. It’s then decanted into smaller bottles with the saffron added.

Where can I buy saffron vinegar

In the UK you can do as Ben Orpwood does and source from The Vinegar Shed.

In Canada you can buy it from Pur Safran

In Austria you can buy it from Gegenbauer

How to make home-made saffron vinegar

Saffron vinegar supplied by The Vinegar Shed
This post is dedicated to Antoinette Raffael, without whom I would never have found out that zhuzh is pronounced to rhyme with ‘rouge’.
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