Most of us donโt spend a lot of time thinking about vinegar. We have a bottle or three (actually, full disclosure: 12) in the cupboard at home, and we use it on our salad, or to balance a sauce that is too sweet, or to wash our windows. Unless weโve paid upwards of $50 for a small bottle, most of us have never tasted real balsamic vinegar. And itโs a safe bet that very few of us have tasted vinegar made by hand, in small batches, by a Benedictine monk at Our Lady of the Resurrection monastery in Lagrangeville, near Poughkeepsie. As a result, most of us have never tasted real vinegar.
Brother Victor-Antoine dโAvila-Latourrette was born in the French Pyrenees, but he has been living in the Hudson Valley for 40 years, and in his current monastery since 1977. The Benedictine order is predicated on a simple rule: ora et labora. โPray and workโ is the essence of the monkโs life. In Brother Victorโs case, the work is the patient, painstaking crafting of superlative artisanal vinegars in a dark, quiet room full of five-gallon glass carboys pungent with the complex sweet and sour smells of fermentation. His red and white vinegars are made in two larger, 18-gallon jugs, and all the vessels have paper tags taped to them showing the variety and date of the contents. All of the containers are open, allowing the vinegars to breathe, since the โmotherโ needs oxygen to do its work.
Vinegarโacetic aidโis made by bacteria that oxidize alcohol. The mother is a combination of acetic acid bacteria and soluble cellulose that forms naturally on alcohol exposed to air for a long period. Brother Victor-Antoine uses a mother brought 40 years ago from a farm near his hometown in France where vinegar has been made for centuries, and he has been using the same batch since to make his own. โNobody makes artisanal vinegar the old-fashioned way anymore,โ he explains, โbut we do it for love and quality. It cannot be done artificially; we have to learn to be patient.โ Brother Victor-Antoine makes seven varieties of vinegar, based on a 12th-century French recipe. He simmers the wine or cider with herbs and spices at the outset, before adding the mother, then strains out the aromatics for fermentation. He stresses that his vinegars are not herb-infused; rather, the herbs impart a savory richness to the result without overpowering the qualities of the fruit. And the results are astonishingly good; due to the patient care that goes into their production, the vinegars have tremendous subtlety and depth of flavor. These vinegars make mass-market versions taste like cleaning products.
The apricot vinegar is made from white wine, and aged with organic dried apricots. The fruit gives an elegant character to the vinegar, and the Special Reserveโfermented for over a yearโis wonderfully balanced and versatile. The raspberry is made from equal parts of the white wine vinegar and raspberry juice, then left to ferment for more time. Itโs not at all cloying, like some commercial varieties, instead offering a delicate raspberry note within the bracing acidity of the vinegar. The white and rosรฉ examples are very strong and assertive. The sherry has a beautiful walnutty core, like a good oloroso, that begs to be whisked together with some walnut oil and poured over greens, pears, toasted nuts, and local blue cheese. The cider vinegar is bright, sharp, and clean, with the taste of a sweet, juicy red apple floating in the middle like a hologram. It almost wants to be drunk as is. The red wineโregular and Special Reserveโturns a humble homegrown salad into something profound, with unexpected overtones hovering over the greens. Any of the above mixed with honey or maple syrup would make for a superlative gastrique to glaze duck, pork, tofu, or anything else that likes to be sweet and sour. The vinegars all age at room temperature between three and twelve months, depending on the contents and the season. Brother Victor knows when a given batch is ready by tasting: โYou canโt rush it; when itโs ready, itโs ready,โ he says. โAll of a sudden, one day it turns into vinegar.โ Those with added fruit tend to ferment faster, due to the extra sugar.
The apricots, rosรฉ, and sherry come from California, but just about everything else is locally sourced, and almost all the ingredients are organic. The monastery bottled 1,200 bottles in 2008, but only 800 in 2009 due to decreased demand in the recession. Brother Victor-Antoine hopes to be back up around 2,000 this year as the economic climate improves. Every summer, the monastery holds its annual vinegar festival on the weekend following the July 11 feast of Saint Benedict. This year it will take place July 17 and 18, and will include other local producers and retailers whom Brother Victor-Antione has invited to participate. Ann Shershin, a self-described โfriend of the monastery,โ volunteers once a week and helps organize the festival. โItโs educational and fun, and it gives people a chance to learn about and taste the vinegars,โ Shershin says, remembering, โone year, a couple came all the way from Atlanta and bought some of everything.โ The monastery also holds a Christmas fair in December.
Robert Mullooly is an assistant professor at the Culinary Institute and chef-instructor at the CIAโs St. Andrewโs Cafรฉ, which focuses on local ingredients. โI just think theyโre fantastic,โ Mullooly says of theย vinegars. โThey have good acid, but a subtle sweetness at the same time.โ Heโs using the cider vinegar in chutneys and smoked ketchup, and the sherry vinegar on salads. Of the sherry, he says, โIโve never tasted anything like it before. Itโs so obvious that itโs natural and not processed in any way.โ Franรงois Bizalion owns Bizalionโs Fine Food in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, where he sells Brother Victor-Antoineโs vinegars. (He will also be at the vinegar festival, selling some of the small-production European olive oils that his store specializes in). โThe monastery vinegar has a distinctive taste; it is not overly acidic, so one can discern the wine or the apple at the source. When on the palate, you can taste the mild sugar of the fruit and its distinct aroma. It also has a cooling effect, a freshness that cannot be matched by commercial products.โ
Brother Victor-Antoineโs gifts are such that he could easily have a cooking show and be a commercial success. But his humble devotion to his vows means that he only makes enough to live, and no more. The rule of Saint Benedict, by which Brother Victor-Antoine lives, dictates that he charge only as much as the cost of the materials, plus a small amount more to keep the monastery running. โWe donโt charge for the time. Itโs very time-consuming to make it this way.โ
The monastery has regular tables at the Arlington and Millbrook farmersโ markets, and several retailers in the area carry the vinegars, though with a significant markup, and Brother Victor-Antoine hopes to find more retail outlets for his products. For the last few years, he has been the sole monk at the monastery, doing almost everything himself. He does get interns from Vassar every year, who help with office and gardening work, and Ms. Shershin is there weekly, but the effort is principally his own. โWe must live from the work of our hands,โ he says, though he acknowledges that his profit-free way of doing business is anachronistic in our aggressively capitalist society. But thatโs the whole point; the vinegar is both a means and an end. Res ipsa loquitor.
Appointments can be made to buy vinegar and other products fromย Our Lady of the Resurrection Monasteryย by writing to Brother Victor-Antoine at the address below.

Our Lady of the Resurrection Monastery
246 Barmore Road, LaGrangeville, NY
This article appears in July 2010.












