The Main Ingredient
May 25, 2008
The Main Ingredient: Malt madness
When it's fish and chips, don't forget the vinegar

I (Tara) never thought I'd begin a column with these words, but here goes.

I'd like to thank Long John Silver's.

Say what you will about the place (I had a friend in high school whose part-time Long John's job included cleaning the fryer at the end of the week, and believe me, she said plenty). But I ask you: How else are the un-British masses to be exposed to the perfection that is malt vinegar?

Robert J. Byers
Sadly, British fish and chips no longer come wrapped in newspaper. But you can do it at home.
(Specifically, malt vinegar on batter-fried fish and chips: Probably the world's best argument for intelligent design.)

I do remember, at about age 4, practically grabbing the wheel and forcing my mother to pull into the Fairlea Long John's and beg the surprised clerk to sell her a whole bottle of malt vinegar off the condiment rack. I needed it at home for fish-stick purposes.

Ordinarily, only the British are that crazy about malt vinegar. They shake it all over their fish and chips, of course, and they also make a traditional mint sauce for lamb: Half finely chopped fresh mint, half malt vinegar, and a little sugar to taste. Awesome.

Alton Brown says, "Malt vinegar is made from unhopped beer." And, basically, that's true. Malt is a grain (usually barley) that's been soaked until it sprouts, then dried and ground into a powder. Mix it with ice cream and you've got a chocolate malt. Ferment it with water and you're on your way to beer, whiskey - or vinegar. In fact, medieval Brits called malt vinegar "alegar," as in made of ale. If you taste a spoonful of malt vinegar with this in mind, you can finally put your finger on what makes it taste so different - it's that beery tang.

Here in the U.S., except for Long John's, you'll probably only find malt vinegar with your boardwalk fries in Ocean City ... or Steak Escape.

But it's worth keeping a bottle on hand at home. You can use malt vinegar just like regular vinegar: in a vinaigrette for chopped salads or greens, stirred into a lentil soup at the end of cooking, or sprinkled over clams.

Or, you know. Fish sticks.

To contact staff writers Robert J. Byers or Tara Tuckwiller, use e-mail or call 348-1236 or 348-5189.

Beer-Battered Fish and Chips

If you don't have a deep fryer, you can fry the fish in a heavy, deep pot filled with about 3 inches of peanut oil. Use a clip-on thermometer to determine the temperature of the oil. 

  Peanut oil for frying

 2 pounds haddock (about 6 fillets)

  Kosher salt

  Freshly ground black pepper

 1/2 cup all-purpose flour

For the batter:

 1 cup all-purpose flour

 1 cup beer

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