Cooking pasta with vodka

It's $3 because it's only a 16 oz bottle. It has the same amount of alcohol as regular wine. But as you and others noted, it is not a good tasting wine due to added salt and lower quality grapes used. So yeah, getting one of those small 4-packs of actual drinking wine for $6 may be a better way to go.
I thought it had the same amount of alcohol, do not ask me why I thought it had the same amount of Alcohol!
 
Don't they sell cooking wine in smaller bottles for $3 at most grocery stores?
True, but Charles Shaw is also just $3.50 for 750ml. Even if I throw away half after 2 meals it is still cheaper than those $3 Sutter Homes.

About "cooking wines", or any cooking alcohol. The reason they have salt is likely for tax reason outside of US. Some countries tax their alcohol to discourage alcoholism, and if they salt the wine for cooking then they don't need to tax it.

Why does alcohol matter if it's just cooked off anyway. In the case of Vodka. Water and alcohol once the alcohol is gone is it not just water?
1) It helps make the meat less gamey. You can also use ginger, chilli pepper, white pepper, etc, but it does break down some of the gamey meat's odor.

2) It help dissolve and evaporate the aromatic compound of food, and it does help tomato flavors and smells in blind test.

3) It helps emulsify oil in water, so it goes well with cheese and cream as well.
 
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Always use Vodka and fresh cream in my pasta sauce. Trader Joes is fine and cheap too. Always impressed with their offerings for the money, used to serve 2buckChuck all the time when we had family gatherings. Always got positive comments about it.
 
True, but Charles Shaw is also just $3.50 for 750ml. Even if I throw away half after 2 meals it is still cheaper than those $3 Sutter Homes.

About "cooking wines", or any cooking alcohol. The reason they have salt is likely for tax reason outside of US. Some countries tax their alcohol to discourage alcoholism, and if they salt the wine for cooking then they don't need to tax it.


1) It helps make the meat less gamey. You can also use ginger, chilli pepper, white pepper, etc, but it does break down some of the gamey meat's odor.

2) It help dissolve and evaporate the aromatic compound of food, and it does help tomato flavors and smells in blind test.

3) It helps emulsify oil in water, so it goes well with cheese and cream as well.
Yes cooking wine is essentially denatured alcohol.
 
Why does alcohol matter if it's just cooked off anyway. In the case of Vodka. Water and alcohol once the alcohol is gone is it not just water?
The alcohol boils off but the flavor remains. Ever had a red wine sauce? Cookies with rum flavor? The alcohol boils off but the flavor lingers. It's the same with vodka, presuming you use vodka that has a flavor. Many do: citrus, honeysuckle, cranberry, peach, cucumber, etc. Some cooks put gin in tomato sauce.
 
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About "cooking wines", or any cooking alcohol. The reason they have salt is likely for tax reason outside of US. Some countries tax their alcohol to discourage alcoholism, and if they salt the wine for cooking then they don't need to tax it.

Someone taught me how to cook certain Chinese foods and insists that I need to use Shaoxing cooking wine - especially for braised pork belly. Usually it's really cheap and labelled as not suitable as a beverage, and ostensibly wasn't taxed. But once I found something that had almost the same label, but a slightly different label color, and it didn't say it wasn't a beverage. It also had the standard warning on the label about the dangers of alcoholic beverages. I tried sipping it and it was dreadful to drink, but was OK as a cooking wine.
 
You can also get 187-250 ml small bottles of wine. I know Sutter Home sells several types in our liquor stores. That way you are closer to using it up in one serving without have much left over.

I remember once I was going to a free concert where BYO alcohol was allowed but had to be in cans or plastic. I had booze but wanted a little bit more and got some Barefoot Wine in a 187 ml plastic screwtop bottle at a Walgreens. Stuff was drinkable. Nothing spectacular, but still drinkable. But the craft beer I brought was much better drinking.

It was a huge pain though since they didn't allow coolers. Everything had to be in clear plastic bags, where I found one and dropped my beer and some reusable cold packs in there. It looked really weird and didn't insulate at all.
 
Yes, vodka is only alcohol and water with very little carry-over from the distillation, and it is not aged in a barrel nor is anything added for flavor. Basically watered-down white lightning. So unless the distillery is particularly poor then all vodka will taste very similar - especially if you are using it as a mixer or in cooking.

Costco is a good place to buy vodka.

Sure it's almost all ethanol and water, but it's the other stuff that can make for minor differences that can be noticeable. There are measurable amounts of other alcohols and compounds that might not be distilled out.

Despite distillation and multiple filtering, it is not possible to produce 100 % ethanol. The obtained solution with a minimum ethanol content of 96 % also contains trace amounts of other compounds such as esters, aldehydes, higher alcohols, methanol, acetates, acetic acid and fusel oil (Regulation, E. C. N. 110/2008; Hu et al. 2010).​
 
Sure it's almost all ethanol and water, but it's the other stuff that can make for minor differences that can be noticeable. There are measurable amounts of other alcohols and compounds that might not be distilled out.

Despite distillation and multiple filtering, it is not possible to produce 100 % ethanol. The obtained solution with a minimum ethanol content of 96 % also contains trace amounts of other compounds such as esters, aldehydes, higher alcohols, methanol, acetates, acetic acid and fusel oil (Regulation, E. C. N. 110/2008; Hu et al. 2010).​
I'm sure if you really want to you can get close to 100% but it would be super expensive and not worth it. For cooking it is almost pointless. For extracting aroma (i.e. making fragrance) that small amount of water may be a problem.

As far as cooking goes, if I am really picky I would probably need to buy a $3.50 Charles Shaw every week and keep it in the fridge, but I am sure I will have to toss most of it away before I am done, and to be honest, I'm more comfortable with just tomato flavors instead of wine, so far Vodka is working pretty well in most of what I want to do. Maybe I'll soak some sun dry tomatoes in a small jar of vodka before cooking with it, who knows, it may be the best thing ever.
 
Not exactly the "vodka sauce" with cream, just trying to use vodka to extra tomato's flavor without using wine (not able to finish a bottle before it goes bad, no space in the fridge, neutral flavor, etc). So I'm wondering, between the cheap $6 Trader Joe to those $15 better stuff, does it make sense to use the cheap one for cooking? How does vodka taste different than say, brandy or other distilled alcohol that won't go bad once open?

Also can you taste the difference between say, potato, or grape based vodka? or for cooking vodka is vodka is vodka?
From my understanding that highly refined vodka has very little flavor. Hence using it in mixed drinks. I think that potato vodka came about because Russia and Poland has lots of potatoes and they used what they had.
 
Sure it's almost all ethanol and water, but it's the other stuff that can make for minor differences that can be noticeable. There are measurable amounts of other alcohols and compounds that might not be distilled out.

Despite distillation and multiple filtering, it is not possible to produce 100 % ethanol. The obtained solution with a minimum ethanol content of 96 % also contains trace amounts of other compounds such as esters, aldehydes, higher alcohols, methanol, acetates, acetic acid and fusel oil (Regulation, E. C. N. 110/2008; Hu et al. 2010).​
Correct, those are the carryover products from the distillation. But as a whole there are far fewer congeners in vodka than some other distilled spirits such as whisky or especially brandy. Those give you a much worse hangover as they are more toxic.
 
I'm sure if you really want to you can get close to 100% but it would be super expensive and not worth it. For cooking it is almost pointless. For extracting aroma (i.e. making fragrance) that small amount of water may be a problem.
Ethanol forms an azeotrope so the highest concentration you can achieve with distillation is around 95% (Everclear). To get anhydrous EtOH you have to use a drying agent and that's not permitted for beverages, only laboratory products.
 
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