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Our complete collection showcases the full range of traditional American fermentation. We offer a diverse selection of craft vinegars made from premium wines, ciders, and beers. Every product in our works is slow-fermented using authentic methods from the early 1800s. We age our small batches in American oak barrels to ensure a smooth and professional finish. This catalog includes everything from our bold Porter Beer Malt to our delicate Chardonnay Wine Vinegar. We also offer curated gift sets and sampler packs for culinary exploration. Every bottle is hand-filled raw and unfiltered at our historic New England vinegar works. This commitment to quality ensures a superior taste for your dressings, marinades, and cocktails. Our inventory reflects a deep respect for heritage and a passion for modern flavor. Discover your new favorite pantry staples in our full professional collection.

Why Our Craft Beer Selection is the Best Malt Vinegar Brand

Many home cooks search the web to find the best malt vinegar for fries, pub-style fish and chips, and gourmet marinades. Our unique collection features porter, IPA, and seasonal Oktoberfest varieties to satisfy every culinary preference. We take pride in producing premium, barrel-aged alternatives to mass-produced commercial store brands.

Curious home chefs often ask about the practical difference between beer and malt vinegar. Traditional options rely on standard malted barley grain washes. In contrast, our beer malt vinegar begins directly with finished craft beer. This direct brewing process creates a much richer flavor profile filled with subtle caramel and roasted notes. Our small-batch methods answer the frequent question of how to make malt vinegar from beer with true artisan dedication.

Our products offer incredible versatility across a wide range of everyday malt vinegar uses. They provide the perfect tangy base for a house-made malt vinegar aioli, a zesty glaze, or a classic splash over crisp french fries. Stop settling for generic grocery options. Shop our premium collection online today to experience real fermentation craftsmanship.

Vinegar FAQs

Why are you called American Vinegar Works?

Our founder was a geography major in college (true story!) and is obsessed with place and products that reflect an authentic sense of place. The French call it terroir but we are not that fancy…

We are called American Vinegar Works because we only use quality American wines, ciders, beers, and sakes to make our vinegars. In this way, our vinegars build on the great work being done by the American craft alcohol community. Your local microbrewery was the inspiration for American Vinegar Works.

How is vinegar made?

Traditional vinegar is made by fermenting some type of alcohol—think beer, wine, cider, sake – into acetic acid. To make vinegar you need five key ingredients: alcohol, vinegar bacteria, oxygen, heat, and time.

Depending on the ABV (alcohol by volume) of the specific alcohol you may need to add water to dilute the alcohol. This is because when you get to a certain height in ABV the vinegar bacteria simply cannot operate and eat away at the alcohol to transform it into acetic acid or vinegar. This, by the way, is why your bottle of scotch will never turn into vinegar.

Over time and at the right temperature the vinegar bacteria will eat away at the wine or cider and turn into vinegar. Depending on the level of ABV, the environmental conditions, and the amount of vinegar you are trying to make this can take anywhere from two weeks to about six months simply to complete the fermentation. During this time you will see that a film, often thick, will form on top of the liquid. This is vinegar mother and is a byproduct of vinegar fermentation.

Better traditional vinegars are then aged for months to years after fermentation. This allows the vinegars to develop more nuanced flavor profiles and not just be acid bombs.

Reach out if you have any other questions on how vinegar is made.

Do you produce your own vinegar?

Absolutely. We ferment, age, and bottle all of our vinegar in our vinegar works in Massachusetts.

We know that even having to ask the question may strike some of you as crazy. But the modern food world can be a bit crazy. It is common practice for food companies to just be recipe and marketing companies. They come up with a recipe-- and sometimes not even a recipe—and then they go to larger centralized manufacturers called “co-packers” that actually make and bottle the products for them. As you can imagine this means foods are increasingly standardized and the “innovations” come in the form of marketing buzz and jazz hands instead of in the form of better foods.

As you might be able to tell this really bums us out both because it is misleading to consumers and because it leads to a bland standardization of our foods.

Mother always told us to “ Fight the vinegar industrial complex!” and we hope you will too.