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73 Comments
JenniferJ
August 1, 2020
I love these comments! Great ideas and combinations and cautions. I have my first ever cold-process shrub covered on the counter as I type this. These comments are part of why I love Food52. Thanks to you all. : )
Bjohnson1971
June 29, 2020
Strawberry, blackberry, raspberry, and. Blueberry(added flavor). Equal amounts in weight. I used 1 cup stevia in the raw to be less sugar added. The apple cider vinegar 3/4ths, red cider vinegar and a splash of The balsamic vinegar. Cooked 10 minuteA, simmered till color darkened and fruit rested. I put it in a jar for 2 days... then strained the juice into an old apple cider vinegar with stopper. It’s divine. I made it as a joke mixing multiple berries that grow from shrubs, then declared I brought him a Shrubbery! Monty Python jest... for those not in the know. ;) Enjoy and let me know if you join me in multiberry. I used Zing 72 to mix the drink. Soda stream to make carbonated water. Mrmm
Lynn K.
November 30, 2019
I made this with Stawberries, cold method - one on fruit, 2 cups sugar and 1 cup red wine vinegar, splash of balsamic- it’s too sweet for me, next time I’ll cut the sugar down to 1.5 cups (I used cane sugar..)
Tuni
August 30, 2019
I made this with nectarines in both hot and cold methods. the outcome is delicious on both ends- but rather sweet! I was wondering if it's possible to ferment the fruit in vinegar first, and add sugar syrup to taste at the end...
Lazyretirementgirl
August 17, 2019
Great post and great comments. So timely, too.We are close to a peach oversupply situation, as our backyard tree is in the home stretch. Plus, I have somehow acquired a LOT of random vinegars that are all too sharp for my taste in salad dressing, so this gives me lots of ideas to ponder. Thanks!
Rick G.
August 17, 2019
I would caution about using strong or distinctly flavored vinegars because in my opinion this should be fruit forward
Joan
August 1, 2019
I've been making shrubs this summer in my instant pot, super quick hot process. 10 minutes on high, let it sit until cool, then strain and bottle.
Mixed frozen berries and lime, strawberries and lime, pineapple ginger. Waiting for my peaches to ripen and will do them with ginger also. Pour over some ice, fill glass with soda water
Mixed frozen berries and lime, strawberries and lime, pineapple ginger. Waiting for my peaches to ripen and will do them with ginger also. Pour over some ice, fill glass with soda water
Rick G.
August 2, 2019
OK, now you’ve got me interested. What are your ratios when using the Insta pot? I live in the rainforest and now my favorite combination is lemongrass and ginger which I grow myself but I have also used homegrown pineapple and locally grown passionfruit also
Joan
August 2, 2019
I have been using 2:1:1 ratio. 2 cups cut up fruit, 1 cup sugar, 1 cup vinegar, and 1/2 cup water for the pot. Today I used 1/2 cup each of Splenda and sugar; tasted the same as all sugar. When I want to take the time, I mix the sugar and fruit and let it sit for a few hours before adding the vinegar and cooking.. Trying to get all the juice I can!
The fruit that is left after straining is interesting. Strong! I froze the ginger pineapple, and put a couple pieces in the glass as a garnish. I envy your fresh fruits!
The fruit that is left after straining is interesting. Strong! I froze the ginger pineapple, and put a couple pieces in the glass as a garnish. I envy your fresh fruits!
Rick G.
August 2, 2019
how do you strain? i've used cheese cloth but have been using a food mill to good effect for some time now. Maracuya (passion fruit) is tricky. it must have a ton of natural pectic as it gels up. this leaves me with an acidic, very passion fruit tasting , ¾ set jam, but used in the right context, great. what it isn't, is a readily dispersible syrup. i have white pineapple and the key is using it at the correct ripeness to capture it's distinction. mango is another tricky one as far as resulting in a mixable syrup form, but the flavor from fresh mangos is quite good. i'm able to grow my own ginger and lemon grass and use it is at a ratio of about 9:5. now, if i could only grow rhubarb
Wendi
July 12, 2019
Should the Apple Cider Vinegar have "mother" in it? Will the "mother" have an effect on shelf life?
Kaitlin
July 5, 2019
I live in an extremely humid area (ie; a baguette i bought got moldy in 3 days). so idk if my question is dumb but, do i have to leave it on the counter for a few days? or can i store it in the fridge? while it macerates. i just dont want any mold or anything growing on it...
Emily B.
July 3, 2018
I’m way late in the game on this one - but - do you think you could do this with tart red cherries? I have some frozen from last summer from an old neighbor’s tree. Maybe with a little more sugar to counter the tartness of the cherries? What vinegar and sugar options would you recommend?
Christopher P.
August 20, 2018
Done it, very tasty. I used lime zest and almond extract with white sugar and cider vinegar.
L.E.
May 17, 2018
Probably a dumb question, but I’m going to ask anyway. I have put strawberries in sugar and got juice, but there is still a lot of sugar in the bowl. Do I add the sugar in with the juice and then add the vinegar or just keep the just and leave the sugar and fruit solids?
Ellen
June 3, 2018
It's really a matter of preference and how sweet you want your shrub to be. If it was my shrub, I'd stir the fruit/sugar/juice and let it sit a bit longer to dissolve the sugar and maybe get a bit more juice. I've found shrubs to be pretty flexible though, so adding the sugar and juice to the vinegar would be fine, but so would leaving the sugar behind with the fruit solids.
Vaishali M.
February 10, 2018
Lovely idea! Now, what if I want to make shrubs with juice instead of the fruit? How will that work?
Caroline L.
February 10, 2018
Hmm... It won't quite be the same (it's very intensely fruity) but you could experiment by adding a little splash of vinegar (like red wine vinegar or tarragon vinegar) to a bit of juice (like tart cherry) and topping it off with soda water.
Rick G.
October 24, 2017
i've tried 5 different commercial shrubs and ginger was my favorite. i can easily imagine my ranking might change as i make my own. my question for the community is in making ginger shrub..... proportions. fine grating? medium grate size?
Mark S.
July 13, 2017
I have made a couple of batches. I like to heat the vinegar to infuse herbs. I tried black cherries and pineapple with rosemary in red wine vinegar. Will use just a couple of sprigs next time. Got a black cherry and plum with thyme in red wine vinegar and black pepper brewing now. This is a great way to be creative with flavors and ingredients. Great article!
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Les K.
July 8, 2017
Has anyone tried freezing the finished shrub? I want my rhubarb shrub available in small amounts all winter long.
Rick G.
October 24, 2017
you're killin me...... a rhubarb shrub, if the rhubard flavor does indeed come through, would be heaven
Rick G.
October 24, 2017
you're killin me...... a rhubarb shrub, if the rhubard flavor does indeed come through, would be heaven
Bernadette H.
June 12, 2019
The vinegar should preserve it. I've made 3 shrubs with rhubarb. One with honey, one with ginger and one with cardamom. They are the best thing I have ever had. Sadly I'm at the end of my rhubarb but sometimes I get a late summer crop. Fingers crossed!
kimfriday
July 26, 2019
I have a weekend house in the Hudson Valley and got turned onto shrubs by a local maker, Hudson Valley Shrubs. They do a strawberry rhubarb that is out of this world!
Charity
July 5, 2017
Your article referred to the Alice Waters book containing interesting recipe for shrubs - https://food52.com/blog/9123-a-week-s-worth-of-simple-food-with-alice-waters - instead of using vinegar, you are making it with shrub - also using apple cores and skins and not the fruit that would be wasted. "Apple Peel Cider Vinegar" from MY PANTRY
EM
May 17, 2017
Has anyone used an ISI Whipper (or the like) to make a shrub? I wonder if the several week long steep could be cut drastically short using the rapid infusion method.
meet Y.
April 27, 2017
Can the leftover solids be used in anything afterwards? I made a rhubarb shrub and was hoping I could use the leftover rhubarb in a quick bread, muffin, scone?
Laura415
April 27, 2017
Absolutely. If you used raw rhubarb and followed this method simply taste the leftover rhubarb mash and if it tastes good then add it to your quick bread or muffin recipe. Be sure to drain it well so it doesn't mess up the wet to dry ratio in your quick bread recipe. Other things I've done with leftover fruit in shrubs is to cook it and season with sugar (if needed) to make a refrigerator jam. I've made sauces and toppings for other desserts and used it for yogurt mix in. Use it to flavor a second ferment in your kombucha. The list goes on and on:)
Nancy C.
March 2, 2017
I just tried this with interesting results: had a tablespoon of blueberry jam left in a jar. Added a 1/2 teaspoon-ish of cider vinegar. Screwed the lid on tightly, then shook till well combined. Poured into a double old-fashioned glass with ice then added plain Perrier. Stirred with a spoon. Delish. Has anyone tried this with jarred jams or preserves? What about rosemary? Too powerful? Love to hear back as I gave up wine for Lent and I have to try something!
Rick G.
October 24, 2017
rosemary is pretty intense/concentrated. can you imagine tarragon's intensity?
Katz
February 24, 2017
I've been making my own fruit vinegars and as a foodie-Holic , I'm now inspired to use the shrubbery techniques. Cheers to food chemistry!
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