Whatever kind you drink.
No, white wine vinegar and white cooking wine are not the same. White wine vinegar is a type of vinegar made from white wine, while white cooking wine is a type of wine specifically made for cooking and not for drinking.
You probably can, but keep in mind that port is much sweeter than red wine.
No, sherry vinegar and sherry cooking wine are not the same. Sherry vinegar is a type of vinegar made from sherry wine, while sherry cooking wine is a fortified wine used for cooking.
port
No, white cooking wine is not the same as white wine vinegar. White cooking wine is used in cooking to add flavor to dishes, while white wine vinegar is a type of vinegar made from white wine and is used for salad dressings and marinades.
Port is a type of wine. Port is made in the city of Oporto, which is located in Portugal.
White cooking wine is a type of wine that is used in cooking to add flavor to dishes, while white wine vinegar is a type of vinegar made from white wine that is used to add acidity and tanginess to dishes. The main difference is that cooking wine is alcoholic and used for flavor, while white wine vinegar is non-alcoholic and used for acidity.
No, cooking sherry and sherry vinegar are not the same. Cooking sherry is a type of fortified wine used in cooking, while sherry vinegar is a type of vinegar made from sherry wine.
No, red cooking wine is not the same as red wine vinegar. Red cooking wine is used in cooking to add flavor to dishes, while red wine vinegar is a type of vinegar made from red wine and is used in salad dressings and marinades for its acidic taste.
Port is a type of fortified wine. It's sweeter and has a higher alcohol content than most wines.
Port is a Spanish /Portuguese wine That is much sweeter than most other red wines. For this reason Port can enpart a "sweetness" to a dish that a red table wine cannot. Port "reductions" are found in a lot of dessert applications... I would say an adequate substitute for port used for cooking would be adding sugar to any dark red table wine (cabernet savignon, shiraz, chianti, merlot, etc.)... 1 cup Port = 1 cup red table wine(+2 Tbsp sugar)...
You can use equal parts dry sherry/pale sherry wine; not the cooking wine... the drinking wine. :)