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Why does vinegar pickle vegetables?

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Answer: Acetic acid prevents bacteria

Acetic acid prevents bacteriaCorrect! Vinegar contains acetic acid (pH ~2.5), creating an acidic environment where most spoilage bacteria can't survive or reproduce. The acid also firms vegetable texture by strengthening pectin. Salt in brine draws out water, further inhibiting microbial growth. Pickles last months because bacteria can't grow in acidic conditions!

Vinegar dissolves cell wallsWrong. Vinegar doesn't dissolve cells—it preserves them! The acid actually helps maintain texture by cross-linking pectin.

Fermentation creates alcoholWrong. Pickling with vinegar doesn't ferment or create alcohol. That's fermented pickles (lacto-fermentation), a different process. Vinegar pickles use existing acetic acid.

Go deeper: Acetic acid · Pectin
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