The executive chef of dine by Peter Gordon at SkyCity answers your cuisine questions.
Could you explain the various pros and cons of balsamic vinegar? Normally I would spend around $50 for a 200ml bottle, but I see the best balsamics aged 100 years sell for $1200 for 300ml - this would be approximately $5 for quarter of a teaspoon. How would you use such a valuable ingredient? Is it possible that such small quantities would be lost on the dish? What dishes would be enhanced by such an expensive ingredient? And how does one choose the best value for money when buying balsamic vinegar?
- Regards, Peter
Answering that is as tricky as justifying the price of a bottle of exceptional fine wine or a rare and seasonal ingredient.
For many reading this, trying to justify why "vinegar" could possibly cost $20 a teaspoon will be pointless, and in many ways that's completely understandable. For others, however, it'll be a culinary experience well worth celebrating along with a glass of Dom Perignon (compared to a bottle of bubbly NZ white) and a white Alba truffle (compared to a button mushroom). Personally, I've never tasted a 100-year-old vinegar, but I have had them aged for 50 years or so and I have to say I found the taste exquisite.