"Catarratto" white wine vinegar (2x 500ml)
Azienda Bosco Falconeria
CHF 1.84 / 100ml
CHF 18.40
This vinegar is produced on the Bosco Falconeria farm in Partinico, Sicily, from organic "Catarratto" white wine. It is carefully fermented in a process lasting several months and then bottled unfiltered and unpasteurized. The "Catarratto" white wine vinegar has an intense acidity. Its aroma can be slightly addictive!
Still 47 of 50 available
Estimated delivery date
Anfang Juli, if you order until 20. Mai
Anfang Juli, if you order until 20. Mai
Taste and use
That is what makes this Sicilian white wine vinegar so special:
- Taste: This white wine vinegar owes its fruity and full-bodied taste to the old Sicilian grape variety "Catarratto". This white wine vinegar has a very intense acidity.
- Quality features: Acetic acid content: 7.5%. In a first step, wine is pressed from the "Catarratto" grapes in a nearby winery. Vinegar is then made from this at the "Bosco Falconeria" farm in a specially built cellar. The one-year-old wine is mixed with vinegar to make 50% and fermented for six months with a constant supply of air. As soon as the vinegar has reached the desired taste and acidity, it is filled into a closed wooden barrel for storage. It is only bottled shortly before it is sold. Natalia Simeti says of her product: "I'm almost a bit addicted to this tangy acidity: if our vinegar isn't in the house, my salad doesn't taste good!"
- Use: It only takes a small dash of this vinegar to give a salad dressing that certain something. If the strong taste tends to be too intense, you can balance the dressing with a spoonful of almond butter.
Cultivation and ecology
This is how the grapes are grown:
- Cultivation method: Organic farming. Between the vines of the "Catarratto" and "Nero D'Avola" varieties, there is a wide variety of trees on the "Bosco Falconeria" farm: citrus fruits, almonds, pears, peaches, avocados, olives and much more grow here. By planting trees, but also by reducing mechanical soil cultivation, Natalia Simeti is trying to apply more and more permaculture methods on her farm.
- Producers: Antonio and Natalia Simeti, together with a family from Albania, are increasingly managing their farm "Bosco Falconeria" in the spirit of regenerative agriculture. The social aspect is very important to them, given the amount of manual labor involved in such farming. Natalia says: "I pay everyone who works for us a fair wage. It can happen that something is left undone because we simply don't have the money to hire additional workers." "Bosco Falconeria" uses the "Addio Pizzo" label to declare that they do not pay protection money to criminal organizations.
This is how the price is made up
Natalia Simeti from Bosco Falconeria receives 3.60 euros per bottle of wine vinegar.
Cultivation & processing
CHF 8.16
- Cultivation and harvesting: Natalia Simeti and her helpers from Bosco Falconeria
- Processing: Bosco Falconeria, Valdibella
Transport & logistics
CHF 4.91
- Export and logistics: Valdibella, Galliker
- Fees: Customs
- Quality assurance: SQTS laboratory
- Packaging: Zurich plant
- Shipping: Post
Procurement & distribution
CHF 4.84
- Coordination, communication, online market: Crowd Container
Weight | 1.800 kg |
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Product note | Store in a cool, dark place. |
Ingredients | White wine vinegar. |
Nutritional values per 100g | n/a |
Myriam Kirschke -
We wouldn't want any other white wine vinegar in our kitchen. It goes perfectly with Valdibella extra virgin olive oil.
I agree with Carole, a little bit less than usual is enough, the taste of the vinegar is incredibly authentic.
Try the following: break off pieces of Parmesan with a knife and sprinkle them with white vinegar using a fine kitchen sprayer, add fresh pepper (from the Kerala mail order business) from the mill, delicious for an aperitif.
Turtschi -
Very intense vinegar flavor. Delicious in a salad dressing.
Carole -
My recommendation: Use a finer dose than conventional wine vinegar, as Catarratto has a very intense flavor. It goes perfectly with high-quality olive or rapeseed oil in salad dressings.