Thanks for posting that information - I will have to try out one or more of those vinegars. However, I wish you had mailed me that Braggs instead of tossing it. I still think it is good stuff and I am quite acclimated to the taste. I would never call Braggs a scam, but I am open to the idea that something else might be better.
There website shows they are not: https://www.vomfassusa.com/commerce/description.jsp?catId=35
Aceto Balsamico di Modena
Acidity and sweetness, spice and wood - together in harmony. Shimmering like black pearls, the rich end bright essence of balsamic vinegar brings excitement to salads, meats, and vegetables. Aceto Balsamico is a quintessential flavoring concentrate, even in the smallest quantity. Among experts, the Balsamico from Modena is known as the most valuable and best balsamic vinegar.
More than 900 years ago the aristocracy already knew this precious liquid as a tonic, remedy, and condiment. The original Aceto Balsamico di Modena is based on the juices ofthe Trebbiano and Lambrusco grapes, which are cultivated on the mountainsides around Modena, Italy, or in the province of Reggio Emilia. As early as 1912, Elena Monari and her brother decided to apply for a license to sell their carefully kept secret recipe.
Currently, the family Monari in its third-generation takes care of the partly age-old stock of Aceto and selects only the best, firm grapes for our marvellous balsamic vinegar. The grapes have to be fully ripe or even better overripe. A unique concentrate is revealed through the procedure of very gentle reduction at a maximum of 80 degrees Celsius, [this is over 170 degrees F] then matured in long rows of wooden casks in well ventilated lofts. These casks of different sizes and types are exposed to the seasons. Dryness and humidity refine the valuable elixir day by day. Originally enriched with old wine vinegar and vinegar mother a part of the balsamic vinegar will gradually evaporate and will be refilled with new wine. This produces an immensly sensitive mixture of young and matured balsamic vinegar.
first off I just got off the phone with the people at vom fass, and all of their vinegars are raw and unfiltered. They are not however organic The info above is from the link on the 'aged balsamic vinegars' - that same link isn't available on the aged fruit balsamic vinegars, so I have no way of knowing whether it applies to all of their selections or not. There are some balsamic vinegars that are raw (or claim to be), but it's the exception rather than the rule (and most would be clearly labeled).
Google search "is balsamic vinegar raw?": http://tinyurl.com/32rrk2o
Google search "raw balsamic vinegar":http://tinyurl.com/387x63e
But let's talk about Bragg's for a minute '
Braggs likes to brag that their raw apple cider vinegar "contains the mother"
But does it really? I know two people who tried to use Bragg's as a starter culture for their own vinegar. both failed. Both knew what they were doing, and both eventually succeeded when they SWITCHED to a different starter
I don't believe that Bragg's has the mother in it. I just don't. I have yet to meet anybody who has successfully used it as a starter culture for anything. Have you? If you or anyone else has successfully used it as a starter culture I would be very curious to find out how it went.
So is it really raw? We don't know. We only have their word to go on and quite frankly we now know that the Bragg's family has a long colorful history of telling one lie after another, but I guess that is another story. And yet it is related. Because these are people you cannot trust. I mean Patricia isn't even Paul's daughter as she claims to be. And let's not even get into all of Paul's ridiculous lies that he told over many decades
Sorry, I don't use Bragg's anymore (I get a less expensive/generic brand that I'm happier with); maybe someone else will have information regarding the"Bragg's issues".
so what about the pesticide issue? many people do not realize that pesticides actually break down quite readily during the fermentation process. I doubt there is even the tiniest trace amount of any pesticides left after 10 years of fermentation!
By all means believe whatever you'd like about fermentation & poisons :) My point wasn't /isn't to debate whether or not poisons break down during fermentation - I was simply pointing out that non-organic grapes are particularly high in pesticides/herbicides, because there are many people (myself included) that don't believe that fermentation eliminates poisons (and there are people that don't care to ingest the mysterious by-products, even if fermentation does).
And besides all of the above, the fact of the matter is that this vinegar does something for me that no other vinegar has ever done. It is such a unique and powerful experience. 'Glad to hear you had a good experience!
Uny
from your post above >>> the fact that fermentation process breaks down pesticides is well... a fact. That's not a matter of opinion <<<
This issue affects us all greatly - and since you're claiming this is a fact and not an opinion, I'm assuming you have evidence (and that is evidence that I/we all should definitely see and know). I'm ALWAYS willing to learn valid information that can replace something I believe that isn't actually correct at all...so I'm actually excited to see & learn something that would correct misinformation! I sure hope you're willing to share how you concluded that 'fermentation breaks down pesticides' (I assume you mean all pesticides -?- but I don't know what type of fermentation you're referring to).
I've reviewed quite a few abstracts & studies on various pesticides, insecticides, fungicides, and other "cides" ...and how they degrade or are adsorbed (or not) during various lab fermentation processes (using very specific yeasts or other microorganisms in contolled solutions & conditions). I've never found anything that concludes "general fermentation morphs all agri-poisons into non-toxic substances and leaves only harmless by products". Rather, what I typically find are conclusions similar to these:
The yeasts [ in this case: two strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae ] adsorbed and degraded the studied insecticides to various extents, but their fermentative activity was not affected. A moderate adsorbtion (approximately 10% of the residue) was observed for chlorpyrifos-methyl, fenitrothion, parathion, and quinalphos. When absorbed, the insecticides were also degraded by about 50%. SpringerLink - Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Volume 43, Number 2
Farmers fight grape diseases and insects applying pesticides that can be found at harvest time on grapes. The persistence of pesticides depends on the chemical characteristic of the active ingredients as well as on photodegradation, thermodegradation, codistillation, and enzymatic degradation. The pesticide residues on grapes can be transferred to the must and this can influence the selection and development of yeast strains. Moreover, yeasts can also influence the levels of the pesticides in the wine by reducing or adsorbing them on lees. During the fermentative process, yeasts can cause the disappearance of pesticide residues by degradation or absorption at the end of the fermentation when yeasts are deposited as lees. ScienceDirect - Advances in Food and Nutrition Research : Pesticides' Influence on Wine Fermentation
In some cases the presence of pesticides has also stimulated the yeasts, especially Kloeckera apiculata, to produce more alcohol. After fermentation, pesticide residues in wine were always smaller than those on the grapes and in the must, except for those pesticides that did not have a preferential partition between liquid and solid phase (azoxystrobin, dimethoate, and pyrimethanil) and were present in wine at the same concentration as on the grapes. In some cases (mepanipyrim, fluazinam, and chlorpyrifos) no detectable residues were found in the wines at the end of fermentation. Pesticide residues in grapes, wine, and their proc... [J Agric Food Chem. 2000] - PubMed result
The action of a yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) upon the insecticides Carbaryl, Tetrachlorvinphos and Deltamethrin and the fungicides Quinomethionate, Triadimefon and Vinclozolin during aerobic fermentation was investigated. The yeast adsorbed all the pesticides, four of them completely and two (Carbaryl, 50%, and Triadimefon, 90%) partially. In the case of Deltamethrin and Quinomethionate, degradation also occurred. SpringerLink - Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Volume 29, Numbers 2-3
Five cholinesterase-inhibiting insecticides (demeton, malathion, parathion, Phosdrin, and Sevin) were still present in the finished wine, whereas three cholinesterase-inhibiting insecticides (ethion, Diazinon, and Trithion) and all of the chlorinated insecticides tested (DDT, chlordane, Kelthane, Tedion, and endrin) were not detected in the wines. It was definitely established, however, that all the chlorinated compounds tested were in the sediments or lees removed after fermentation. Three cholinesterase-inhibiting compounds (ethion, parathion, and Trithion) were also more concentrated in the lees than in the original musts. Diazinon was not found in any component after fermentation, probably because it is hydrolyzed in acidic solution. Chlordane, DDT, endrin, Kelthane, Tedion, ethion, malathion, parathion, and Trithion were detected in the distillates from the lees containing these compounds, chlordane being considerably more concentrated than in the original must. Distribution of Pesticides in Fermentation Products Obtained from Artificially Fortified Grape Musts - PAINTER - 2006 - Journal of Food Science - Wiley Online Library
Of course, none of these show anything at all conclusive like "natural fermentation renders all agri-poisons non-toxic to humans", only that a few are affected by certain strains in certain percentages in laboratory controlled experiments. And for those of us that consume the 'sediment' of most everything we ferment (as well as the vinegars we ingest), the fact many of these studies show the poisons are just as high in the sediment as they were in the original grapes or 'grape must' is concerning. A quick search also shows that MANY agri-chemicals are created by liquid fermentation. All of this (and other similar studies I've seen) lead me to believe that 'general fermentation' is FAR from being something that conclusively removes all agri-poisons from foods. But obviously, I haven't read every study on 'cides' & fermentation and don't have all the data necessary to conclude anything but what I can conclude from what I've seen, which is: "sometimes certain types of fermentation of certain produce reduces or eliminates (or increases) some agri-poisons, in various percentages".
'Long time ago on CZ there were several "eagle researchers & scientists" (most are gone now), but back then when one of them posted something, most of us believed whatever they'd posted. With a few newer 'science & research' oriented posters on CZ, most of us are learning to NEVER just "believe something someone said on CZ" (or on the internet) without solid proof/evidence...no matter WHO said ir says it (a good lesson to learn, for sure). So, since you seem to know it's 'not an opinion', but rather it's a fact that the fermentation process breaks down pesticides, I'm assuming you have solid evidence of that fact you'd be willing to share....and I'm sure there are dozens (if not hundreds) of folks on CZ (including myself) that would LOVE to have that proof. Sheesh, if we could all ferment toxic-laden produce & foods and not need to spend extra on organic, that'd be a Godsend for sure AND for certain.
So please, when/if you have time of course, post the information/research that led you to conclude this is a solid fact and not just an opinion or belief. I'm sure I'm not the only one on CZ that would like to replace misinformation with truth :)
'Like they say, "inquiring minds wanna know"!
Uny
The reason I'm replying is simply 'for the thread information', not because I'm trying to convince you/Tizona of anything. I don't want anyone to think because I didn't respond, that I'm in agreement with your reply to me.
To recap, you said it was a fact, not an opinion, that fermentation breaks down pesticides (I assume you meant the fermentation & pesticides in vinegar, since that was the topic). Since you said it was a fact (and since I'm always wanting to learn), I asked you to share the data that proved that fermentation breaks down pesticides (after showing several abstracts that prove that many times this is not the case, in at least one case they were actually more concentrated, and in quite a few cases the pesticides were simply moved to the sediment). You provided no factual evidence that the process of fermentation (particularly vinegars or foods) breaks down agri-chemicals (particularly not the vast array of them utilized).
the reason that I said that pesticides are broken down by the fermentation process, is that a good portion of the bioremediation industry is based on that concept. these companies are called in when Oil, pesticides, etc. contaminate an area. They introduce bacteria and/or fungus and/or some other type of living organism and allow the fermentation process to break down the pesticides into naturally inert compounds. This, of course, would not be even closely similar to home or commercial fermentation of vinegar (or any other food) - so certainly it doesn't come close to proving factually that "fermentation breaks down pesticides" as far as vinegar (or other fermented foods) are concerned. There are certain microorganisms that break down certain substances, but dousing an area in the open with specific microorganisms to break down a specific chemical is disimilarl to fermenting vinegars in many different ways. Obviosly, this doesn't address the possible toxicity of the by-product/s.
the information you have there clearly shows that the fermentation process of wine does in fact degraded pesticides. The information I offered showed that in a few cases, the pesticides were broken down and seemingly eliminated (but the data says nothing about the by-products and how toxic/harmful they might be); it showed that many times the poison is simply moved in the lees/sediment rather than the wine (which would do no good for those that shake their vinegar before using...or ingest the whole jar of whatever they ferment). And in three the chemical-poisons were even more concentrated! Now imagine that instead of a year or two of fermentation, there is 10 years of fermentation as we have with these types of vinegar's. That would/could mean that the 3 poisons that were more concentrated would be even MORE concentrated...and we don't know what would happen to all those that were simply moved to the sediment. They might lessen, they might break down into other toxins, they might somehow increase...we simply don't have enough data to determine anything conclusive. It's just not something I'm worried about 'Tis certainly your choice to ingest whatever you want to ingest. With grapes being one of the most toxic fruits (due to using a fluoride-based pesticide) I certainly wouldn't advise or ingest vinegars (or any substance) made from non-organic grapes.
1 Department of Environmental Toxicology, University of California, Davis, California 95616.
Cryolite (sodium aluminofluoride, Na3AlF6) was applied to Thompson Seedless grapes at various rates and in various formulations for control of the omnivorous leaf roller. Grapes given a single application of cryolite had acceptable residue levels 30 days after application (4.9 and 5.1 ppm). When the same formulation was applied on two separate dates, June 3 and July 21, initial residues on the grapes were much greater but residues 30 days later were about the same (5.9 ppm). Late applications, however, especially two applications, resulted in unacceptably high residues on washed, dried, and sorted raisins produced from the grapes (> 7.0 ppm).
There is NOTHING "acceptable" about a fluoride level of 5ppm and greater than 7ppm is even more insidious. When we factor in that grape plants/vines uptake large amounts of fluoride (as do tea plants) and that grape vines in a typical vineyard are sprayed and harvested for MANY years - we may be looking at fluoride concentrations well in excess of >7ppm in grape vinegars in older vines. And ALL balsamic vinegars are required to have a grape wine 'base' or they're not supposed to be labeled 'balsamic'...and that wine base in balsamic vinegar is "concentrated must" ("must" = sediment). So if the fermentation processes INCREASED the concentration of poison and then it was concentrated further? That could result in a highly toxic concentration of fluoride.
And as I keep saying, the beneficial aspects of this vinegar are about 50 times any other kind of vinegar I've ever had. I'm sure that trumps whatever teeny tiny little trace of pesticides might have survived the fermentation process. And like I keep saying, I'm glad your experience/s with this balsamic vinegar have been positive. If you feel it "trumps" the possibility of 7+ppm fluoride, that's certainly not any of my concern.
and of course we go back to Bragg's. They claim to be organic. Are they? This is a family that's willing to lie about virtually anything and everything. Who they are where they came from how old they are, their relationships to each other etc. etc. their entire lives are nothing but lies As I mentioned previously, I don't care to 'debate' Braggs (I use another brand) - but I do think it's odd you seem so concerned about them lying after it was pointed out to you the company that sells the balsamic vinegar you're recommending told you it is "raw', when their site states it's processed at 170F.
And they also lie about having the mother in their vinegar. It's right there on the label and it's a big bold face lie. So maybe they are lying about being organic too? God only knows. it is a company you cannot trust. It's already been shown the sellers of the vinegar you purchased lied to you, so 'God only knows' "what" about the vinegar you're recommending?
And about 'vinegar mothers' - I've read many different articles about vinegar making (because I hope to be making my own in the next year or two) - some same the cellulose mother floats atop the vinegar, others say it's sediment, some say it can be either/both. Braggs vinegar has a thick sediment, so unless you've tested it for 'life' and cellulose content, there's no way you can say their claim is 'big bold face lie'. Here's a google search on "vinegar, mother, sediment" for those that care to research further: http://tinyurl.com/3xug9fg
"Real" vinegar is ANY type of vinegar that meets the criteria of vinegar. The balsamic vinegar of which you speak is no more or less "real" than any other type of vinegar.
Unyquity
I honestly didn't even read your whole post because you're giving me a headache Like I said, I wasn't replying "to you" - it actually doesn't concern me whether you read the post or not...but I am sorry if I inadvertantly gave you a headache.
instead of simply ordering one of these vinegars and trying it for yourself, you have decided you can intellectualize and theorize exactly how and why when the effect it might have on you. You can't. Right now I have over 14 bottles of vinegar in my pantry - 5-6 of them are balsamics (two are much higher quality than those you suggested). I have never once intellectualized or theorized what effect "your special vinegar" might have on me (I've been using balsamic/other vinegars for almost 25 years). Besides, if I ordered it and reported what I thought, I can't imagine that you'd be interested in hearing what I had to say, or discussing it objectively (based on your posts in this thread).
You can post reams and reams of information about various pesticides in various fermentations and malic acid content and your own concepts and your own theories and how they prove this and how they prove that ad nausem, and guess what? It won't change a thing! I haven't posted about my own concepts or theories or proven anything - all I've done is posted various facts about balsamic vinegars and abstracts of studies showing what you claimed to be a fact (fermentation breaks down pesticides), is not a fact at all (except in a few cases with specific chemicals and specific microorganisms)..and pleasantly asked you to provide data that would support what you claimed to be a fact. The last time I checked, all CZers are allowed to post data, offer information and challenge other posters' claims if they feel they are erroneous. I am quite sure I don't know everything (not even close) about issues regarding "fermentation & chemicals" - that's why I asked you to provide data that supported your claim...because I wanted to learn.
AGAIN, I'm glad you've had a good experience with these vinegars, and that the black currant is yummy.
Uny