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You are here: Home / RECIPES / Chive Vinegar

Chive Vinegar

March 10, 2016 //  by Annie Bernauer//  3 Comments

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As a kid, I remember helping my mom gather chive flowers from our herb garden to make homemade chive vinegar. For many years, I’ve had several chive plants growing in my own herb gardens and look forward to making a new batch of herb infused vinegar every spring. Since chives have a light onion flavor,  chive vinegar takes on the same flavor and is a wonderful flavor addition to homemade salad dressings. Making infused chive vinegar is quite easy. The hardest part is letting the jar sit on the counter for a few days to infuse before you can use it!

How to make chive vinegar | Montana Hometeader

This post may contain affiliate links. I receive a small commission when a product is purchased through these links, at no additional charge to you. Thank you for your support! 

How to make chive vinegar

This recipe does not use exact quantities since how many chive flowers you harvest will dictate how much infused vinegar you make.

1. Harvest chive flowers just after they open and before they start to die off and turn brown. There can be a small bit of green stem left on the flower and that is fine. It will add more flavor to the infusion!

DIY chive infused vinegar for homemade salad dressing | Montana Homesteader

2. Gently rinse the flower heads to remove any dirt or bugs. Strain the water off. They do not have to be completely dry since any water left on them will mix into the vinegar.

3. Place the chive flowers in a glass jar. Pour apple cider vinegar over the flowers until they are covered. I used about 3/4 cup chive flowers and about 1 1/2 cups apple cider vinegar. (Here’s how to make your own apple cider vinegar if you haven’t tried it yet!)

How to make DIY infused chive vinegar | Montana Homesteader

4. Put a lid on the jar and sit it out of direct sunlight for a few days to infuse (I’ve actually forgotten about my chive infused vinegar for a couple weeks before and it made no difference in the end result!)  If you think of it, you can give the jar a gentle shake every so often. Within a day, the vinegar will start to turn the lovely color of the chive flowers and take on a delicious onion scent.

5. Once the vinegar is done infusing, pour it through a cheesecloth lined fine mesh sieve to strain off the flowers. Feed the left over flowers to your chickens or compost them. Store the vinegar in a glass jar and use in your favorite homemade salad dressing recipes like this mason jar chive vinaigrette from Grow a Good Life.

Making homemade herb infused vinegar is quite easy. From my experience, the more herbs you add and the longer you let them sit the more flavor the vinegar will have. Now that you know how to make infused chive vinegar,  you can start experimenting with other herbs. This year I’m going to try making a garlic infused vinegar once we harvest the garlic growing in our garden later in the summer. Yum! 

Do you make herb infused vinegar? What kind do you make? 

 

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. MontanaHappy.com

    April 13, 2016 at 6:16 pm

    I never heard of this…I can’t wait to try it! 🙂

    Reply
  2. Judith Labbe

    December 6, 2016 at 2:17 pm

    This vinegar is so delicious for my summer salads. My only regret is that I didn’t make
    enough to last until the next crop of blossoms. Next year I will
    give them as gifts, that’s how special I find this.

    Reply
  3. Darci

    June 3, 2017 at 7:52 pm

    How does this vinegar store? I assume you refrigerate it, but I’m wondering about how long it stays good?

    Reply

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Hello I'm Annie and welcome to our blog!

I was raised in an old farmhouse in the country and taught by three generations of women in my family to cook from scratch, can and preserve food, nurture plants to grow, craft with my hands, and live a simple, meaningful life. Now I'm teaching my own children these skills on our little homestead in Montana. I'm sharing these vintage skills here so you too can live a simple, more connected homemade life- one canning jar at a time! Read more...

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