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Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Natural Remedies / How to Make Raw Apple Cider Vinegar

How to Make Raw Apple Cider Vinegar

by Sarah Pope / Affiliate Links ✔

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Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • Which Apples Make the Best Raw Apple Cider Vinegar?
  • Uses and Benefits
  • How to Make Raw Apple Cider Vinegar
  • 3 Medicinal Uses
  • How to Use the ACV Mother
  • References

How and why to make apple cider vinegar that is raw, enzyme and probiotic-rich for all your detoxification, cooking, and medicinal needs. This recipe uses raw honey, which makes the final result even more healthful and potent.apple cider fermenting into vinegar in a glass jug

It’s apple season in many parts of North America which will continue through the Fall. Time to take advantage of the seasonal bounty and make some raw apple cider vinegar! If you don’t have locally grown apples available in your community, a bag of organic apples from the health food store or veggie co-op will work just fine.

Unpasteurized, or raw apple cider vinegar is expensive, so making your own is very thrifty. A typical quart of organic, raw apple cider vinegar will run you $5 or more at most health food stores. You can make a whole gallon, four times that amount, yourself for about the same price or even less if you use apple scraps that you were going to throw out or use for composting anyway.

Which Apples Make the Best Raw Apple Cider Vinegar?

A mixture of apples produces the best tasting and most healthful raw apple cider vinegar. Making it is very similar to kombucha. If you’ve made this or other fermented beverages before, you will find the process simple.

If homebrewing is new to you, try these approximate ratios for your first batch or two and then change it up from there to your own personal liking:

  • 50% sweet apples (Golden Delicious, Fuji (my fave), Gala, Red Delicious)
  • 35% sharp tasting apples (McIntosh, Liberty, Winesap, Northern Spy, Gravenstein)
  • 15% bitter tasting apples (Dolgo crabapples, Newtown, Foxwhelp, Porter’s Perfection, Cortland)

In my neck of the woods, bitter-tasting apples are hard to find. If this is your predicament as well, simply increase the proportion of sweet apples to 60% and the sharp-tasting apples to 40%. While the flavor of this mixture won’t be as complex as with the inclusion of some bitter apples, it will still taste fine.

If all you have is a single apple tree in the backyard, however, feel free to use just that one variety to make your raw apple cider vinegar!

Uses and Benefits

The uses for raw apple cider vinegar are seemingly endless. It’s widely used in homemade tonics, recipes and even for cleaning. I like to use it for detox bathing (1 quart to a tubful of warm water). Friends of mine use raw apple cider vinegar as a hair rinse or for a natural, at-home hair detox.

The well known Master Tonic, a natural flu anti-viral, uses raw apple cider vinegar as the fermenting medium. It’s also an essential ingredient in all types of bone broth made at home.

Pasteurized apple cider vinegar doesn’t have the same benefits as raw apple cider vinegar. Valuable vitamins, probiotics, and enzymes are destroyed by the heating process. If you are going to go to the trouble of making apple cider vinegar, always make it raw for maximum benefits. Another problem with pasteurized ACV in the store is that it is frequently packed in plastic. The acidic ACV leaches chemicals into the vinegar! If you must buy apple cider vinegar, always buy it packed in glass.

How to Make Raw Apple Cider Vinegar

The recipe below outlines step by step instructions on how to make apple cider vinegar that is potent enough to use for all your medicinal, detoxification, cleaning and cooking needs. It is no doubt the most beneficial vinegar to have in your home followed by traditional balsamic vinegar.

Please always store any type of vinegar in glass containers. Storing in plastic risks leeching contaminants into your cider vinegar.

3 Medicinal Uses

Your homemade apple cider vinegar can be used not only in the kitchen and for cleaning. Try it in a vinegar bath (2 cups per tubful) to greatly aid detoxification.

It works much better than a skin-damaging bleach bath for relieving eczema symptoms too.

To ease acid reflux symptoms and for a natural cal/mag supplement, soak crushed eggshells in your homemade ACV to make a simple eggshell and apple cider vinegar remedy. 1 teaspoon in 8 oz of water up to 3 times a day works wonders.

DIY ACV can also be used to make a vinegar compress for sprains and bruises. This is what people used before ice was readily available, and believe it or not, raw vinegar works extremely well!

fermenting apple cider vinegar in large glass jar

How to Use the ACV Mother

After you’ve made a few batches of ACV at home, you may notice that you have a number of vinegar mothers stacking up! What to do with them?

First of all, know that these are living cultures that have a number of beneficial uses around the home. Here are some suggested ideas instead of just throwing them out:

  • Share them with friends so that they can make their own apple cider vinegar too!
  • Use them as a gentle, rejuvenating face mask.
  • Add them to the compost bin for fertilizing the garden.
  • Dry them out at a low temperature (less than 150 F/ 65 C) in a food dehydrator or a warm oven. The low temperature will preserve any food enzymes as well as the probiotics. After drying, cut them into strips and eat them like fruit leather. Store in an airtight container in a cool pantry or the refrigerator.
How to Make Raw Apple Cider Vinegar
4.75 from 39 votes
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Apple Cider Vinegar Recipe

Step by step instructions on how to make apple cider vinegar that is raw, enzyme and probiotic rich for all your detoxification, cooking, and medicinal needs.

Course Drinks
Keyword ACV, apple cider vinegar
Servings 1 gallon
Calories 1 kcal
Author Sarah Pope

Ingredients

  • 5 large apples or scraps of 10 apples, preferably organic
  • filtered water
  • 1 cup raw honey preferably local and organic

Instructions

  1. Before you can make your raw apple cider vinegar, you must first make hard apple cider. The alcohol in the hard cider is what transforms via fermentation into acetic acid, which is the beneficial organic compound that gives apple cider vinegar its sour taste. Nature is amazing!

  2. Wash the apples and coarsely chop into pieces no smaller than 1 inch. Cores, stems and seeds may be included.

  3. Put the chopped apples into a 1 gallon, clean, wide mouth, glass jar. Please do not brew your apple cider vinegar in stainless steel pots, as the acidic vinegar will causing leaching of heavy metals such as carcinogenic nickel.

  4. The chopped apples should at least fill half the container and maybe a bit more. If at least half the container is not filled, add additional apple scraps until you achieve this level as a minimum.

  5. Pour in room temperature filtered water until the chopped apples are completely covered and the container is just about full leaving a couple of inches at the top.

  6. Stir in the raw honey or cane sugar until fully dissolved.

  7. Cover the top of the glass jar with cheesecloth, a thin white dishtowel or floursack cloth and secure with a large rubber band.

  8. Leave on the counter for about 1-2 weeks, gently mixing once or twice a day. Bubbles will begin to form as the sugar ferments into alcohol. You will smell this happening.

  9. When the apple scraps no longer float and sink to the bottom of the jar after approximately one week, the hard apple cider is ready. If for some reason, the apple pieces still do not sink to the bottom after 2 weeks but the mixture smells alcoholic, proceed to the next step anyway.

  10. Strain out the apple scraps and pour the hard apple cider into a fresh 1 gallon glass jar or smaller sized mason jars of your choosing.

  11. Cover with a fresh piece of cheesecloth and secure with a rubberband.

  12. Leave on the counter in an out of the way spot for an additional 3-4 weeks to allow the alcohol to transform into acetic acid by the action of acetic acid bacteria (these are the good guys!). A small amount of sediment on the bottom is normal. In addition, a mother culture will form on top, similar to what happens with kombucha.

  13. Taste your raw apple cider vinegar to determine if it is ready starting after 3 weeks. If it has the right level of vinegar taste for you, strain it one more time and store in clean, glass mason jars or jugs. After 4 weeks, if the taste still isn't quite strong enough, leave it for another week and try again. If you accidentally leave it too long and the taste is too strong, just strain and dilute with some water to a level of acidity that pleases you.

  14. Use as desired and store in the pantry out of direct sunlight.

Recipe Notes

Cane sugar may be substituted for raw honey if desired. Using raw honey will result in the healthiest apple cider vinegar, however.

 

 

Raw apple cider vinegar doesn't go bad, but if you leave it for a long time, another mother culture will likely form on top. This is fine, just strain it again if desired and dilute with a bit of water if the taste has become too strong.

Nutrition Facts
Apple Cider Vinegar Recipe
Amount Per Serving (1 Tbl)
Calories 1
% Daily Value*
Potassium 11mg0%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

References

(1) How to Make Cider
(2) Making ACV

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Category: DIY, Fermented Beverages, Immune support, Natural Remedies, Personal Care
Sarah Pope

Sarah Pope MGA has been a Health and Nutrition Educator since 2002. She is a summa cum laude graduate in Economics from Furman University and holds a Master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

She is the author of three books: Amazon #1 bestseller Get Your Fats Straight, Traditional Remedies for Modern Families, and Living Green in an Artificial World.

Her four eBooks Good Diet…Bad Diet, Real Food Fermentation, Ketonomics, and Ancestrally Inspired Dairy-Free Recipes are available for complimentary download via Healthy Home Plus.

Her mission is dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. She is a sought after lecturer around the world for conferences, summits, and podcasts.

Sarah was awarded Activist of the Year in 2010 at the International Wise Traditions Conference, subsequently serving on the Board of Directors of the nutrition nonprofit the Weston A. Price Foundation for seven years.

Her work has been covered by numerous independent and major media including USA Today, ABC, and NBC among many others.

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Reader Interactions

Comments (325)

  1. Mike

    Nov 7, 2018 at 11:11 am

    Can I use fresh pressed apple cider that was not processed?

    Reply
    • Sarah Pope MGA

      Nov 7, 2018 at 11:14 am

      Yes, but it is a different recipe.

  2. Anaeli Vivian

    Oct 30, 2018 at 11:27 am

    5 stars
    I would like more recipes to try. Thanks

    Reply
    • Sarah Pope MGA

      Oct 30, 2018 at 1:59 pm

      Here is a link to all my fermented beverage recipes. https://www.thehealthyhomeeconomist.com/recipes/drinks/beverages/fermented-beverages/

  3. Margaret

    Oct 18, 2018 at 11:08 am

    Mine is 1 week old and the apples floating on top have fuzzy mold growing on them… Should I toss out the whole batch can I take the mold off?

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Oct 18, 2018 at 11:40 am

      It may not be mold. Here is a guide on when to toss and when everything is ok. https://www.thehealthyhomeeconomist.com/mold-fermented-foods-what-to-do/

  4. Debbie

    Oct 16, 2018 at 7:20 pm

    I had made a batch that was good, stored in quart canning jars with canning lids. I didn’t use up some of the jars and checked on them and the lids were rusted with holes! They were not filled to the top so liquid was not touching the lid but looks like the acidic environment ate thru the lid. They were about 2 years old. I have a new batch ready to be put in jars but I don’t want to use canning lids again! Help!!

    Reply
  5. Rachel Lynn Zeimet

    Oct 8, 2018 at 12:20 pm

    Can I use pasturised acv? I accidentally bought the wrong one at the store!

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Oct 8, 2018 at 3:39 pm

      Pasteurized ACV is dead and has no enzymes or probiotics. Also, ONLY get it packed in glass if you decide to buy it instead of make it.

  6. stormy

    Oct 5, 2018 at 3:29 am

    Have you ever tested your finished home made Apple Cider Vinegar by mixing with BAKING soda?

    Does it bubble as vigorously as store-bought ACV ?

    I’ve tried many methods, but none of them produced acid enough ACV to really bubble when mixed with Baking Soda.

    It does bubble a bit, but to complete the test add Store bought, and it will bubble MORE.. which means that the home made did not neutralize enough of the baking soda.. if it does NOT bubble more then it is as strong as the store bought.

    Appreciate any info you (or anyone else) might have…

    Stormy.

    Reply
  7. Dana Knee

    Oct 1, 2018 at 4:44 pm

    5 stars
    I have an orchard with many apple trees, this year I started with a glass gallon wide mouth jar and it came out nice.
    Now I’m using a five gallon crock to make more, it works fine.

    Reply
  8. Abel

    Sep 30, 2018 at 2:36 pm

    5 stars
    What’s the difference between white apple cider vinegar and raw apple cider vinegar?

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Sep 30, 2018 at 8:43 pm

      This article explores the differences between ACV and other types of vinegar. White vinegar does not come from apples, by the way. It usually comes from GMO corn.
      https://www.thehealthyhomeeconomist.com/best-vinegar-bath-for-detoxification/

  9. Mônica Sousa

    Sep 25, 2018 at 2:41 pm

    5 stars
    Hello ! Every time you make apple cider vinegar, will I have a vinegar mother? How can I use existing vinegar to make more vinegar? Very grateful.

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Sep 25, 2018 at 4:53 pm

      Great question! I will have to post a recipe on how to do that. This recipe is just for making ACV for the first time. You get a vinegar mother every time you make it, but it is usually just tendrils of scoby throughout the vinegar rather than a firm culture on top like with kombucha.

  10. Mat

    Sep 23, 2018 at 8:21 am

    5 stars
    Hey Sarah,
    Loved the post, looks simple and I’m eager to try it out. Just curious, the fermentation process – sugars into alcohol, is that just using wild yeast? And, with the mother being formed (assuming we would use it like a kombucha SCOBY), at what point would adding the mother be recommended, after step 10?
    Cheers,
    Mat

    Reply
    • Sarah

      Sep 23, 2018 at 10:24 am

      You don’t add the mother to this recipe. It forms naturally as part of the fermentation process. It is more like streaks of culture within the brew rather than a firm culture as in kombucha. Yes, the wild yeasts and probiotics already present in the honey/apple pieces is what causes the transformation.

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