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Fermented Foods,  Green Living,  Preserve Your Harvest

Preserving Apples: How to Make Homemade Apple Cider Vinegar

Homemade apple cider vinegar is one of my favorite things to make and preserve. That’s because we use apple cider vinegar, also known as ACV, pretty much every single day! It’s also incredibly healthy for you. We love to use it for salad dressing, to make fire cider, or take small shots straight! Since we have an apple tree that provides us with more apples than we can consume fresh, this is a fantastic zero-waste solution to preserve our apple harvests.

The best news of all is that apple cider vinegar is quite simple to make at home. We usually use whole apples since we often have abundance, but you can also make ACV using apple scraps too. One very common method is to save up used apple skins and cores over time, storing them in the freezer, before starting a batch of ACV.

Read along to learn how to turn apples or scraps into fermented, probiotic-rich, delicious homemade apple cider vinegar. This post will provide easy step-by-step instructions, tips to make the best-tasting apple cider vinegar, and ideas for ways to use ACV too.


Two large wicker baskets are sitting on a back patio table. They are overflowing with apples that range in color from dark and bright red to green. The patio is enclosed by raised wooden garden beds, the gate underneath an arch was left open and there are three chickens of various colors sneaking onto the patio.


Benefits of Making Your Own Apple Cider Vinegar


It’s Cost Effective


When we buy apple cider vinegar, we choose the high quality stuff: raw, organic, unfiltered, “with the mother”… such as Braggs, our go-to brand. While I wouldn’t call ACV expensive, it isn’t necessarily as cheap as more basic vinegars, like white or red wine vinegar. Plus, if you use it as regularly as we do, it can add up! Making your own apple cider vinegar at home has huge cost-savings benefits, especially if you’re using scraps, homegrown, or otherwise low-cost apples. Even if you buy them just for this project, a few apples can create a lot of vinegar!


It Reduces Waste


We always suggest discarding excess produce in a compost system, as opposed to throwing them in the trash. On this little homestead, we have several types of compost bins that help take care of the majority of our kitchen and garden waste. Personally, our favorite composting method is vermicomposting, also known as worm composting. So, while you could compost your excess apple scraps, why not turn them into apple cider vinegar instead? Up-cycling for the win! 


It is Healthy & Versatile


Apple cider vinegar has many wonderful uses and surprising health benefits! As with all fermented foods, it’s loaded with probiotics. This means ACV aids in digestion and helps to balance gut health. Did you know there is a direct correlation between a healthy gut and every other organ in the body? To read more about the health benefits of fermented foods, check out this article that I wrote on that subject.

Homemade ACV can be used for a lot more than drinking or eating! See other uses for apple cider vinegar at the end of this post.


How does apple cider vinegar help diabetes and blood sugar?


One of the key active components of apple cider vinegar is acetic acid. Acetic acid is excellent at slowing gastric emptying and reducing blood sugar spikes, thus stabilizing blood glucose levels. Being Type 1 Diabetic, I find that if I take a shot of ACV before a meal, I have improved blood sugar levels following that meal! Studies have shown to have similar effects for those with Type 2 Diabetes, when either taken with a meal or before bedtime.  


From a birds eye view, two large wicker baskets sit atop a narrow barn wood coffee table. They are overflowing with apples that range in color and size from different reds to greens. These apples are going to be used to make apple cider vinegar (ACV).


SUPPLIES NEEDED


  • Organic apples, or apple scraps – For this recipe, you can use whole apples or apple scraps. A great time to make apple cider vinegar is after creating another apple dish, like baking apple pie, when you have a lot of cores and skins at once! If you cannot collect fresh scraps at one time, store them in the freezer as you continue to add to your supply. Organic produce is always the best choice, especially when it comes to fermenting! See notes on apple varieties below.

    The amount of apples needed is totally flexible. As you’ll see in the recipe section below, you can scale the portions up or down as needed.

  • Filtered Water or other un-chlorinated water is best for making living, fermented things like homemade apple cider vinegar. Do your best with what you have! We simply run ours through a basic carbon filter (in the fridge).

  • Organic cane sugar

  • A large glass vessel, your choice of size. We make large batches in this two-gallon glass crock, but many people use far smaller containers – like quart or half-gallon mason jars!

  • Bottles to store your finished apple cider vinegar in. You won’t need these for a few months, so you have time to collect some. We simply repurpose old Braggs ACV bottles!


Wait… Did you just say you won’t need bottles for a few months?  Yes. Fair warning: this process takes several months from start to finish. The minimum time from starting to using the finished product is about 2 months, though some people let their ACV ferment for 4 months or longer. 


What are the best apple varieties to make apple cider vinegar?


The best-tasting apple cider vinegar will result from using a variety of different apple types, if possible. Using a combination of sweet and tart apples creates a well-balanced finished flavor. A good goal is to use about two-thirds sweet apple varieties like Gala or Fuji (our Anna apple falls into that category) and one-third tart, such as Granny Smith. Pink Lady would fall somewhere in between. Truth be told, we don’t always mix in tart varieties with our Anna’s since some are picked slightly underripe and tart. It still turns out pretty damn good, just not quite as tangy.


Two large glass one-gallon crocks are on a table, full of chopped up apples and liquid - fermenting into apple cider vinegar. The two crocks are in the center, flanked by 2 bottles of finished apple cider vinegar on each side.


HOMEMADE APPLE CIDER VINEGAR RECIPE 


When you’re making apple cider vinegar, the goal is to fill your chosen container about halfway full of chopped apples or apple scraps. Then, the rest of the container is filled with a combination of water and dissolved sugar. 

Sugar to water ratio: 1 tablespoon of sugar per one cup of water, or scaled up to 1 cup of sugar per one gallon of water.

Yes, the use of sugar is essential in this process. There are several types of beneficial bacteria naturally present on fruit, including our friends lactobacillus and acetobacter. The addition of sugar provides food for those bacteria to rapidly grow and thrive. They will change the environment in the crock through a series of chemical reactions, first changing the sugar to alcohol, and then further transforming that alcohol into acetic acid over time. Therefore, the final apple cider vinegar is very, very low in sugar, and the alcohol content is virtually non-existent! 


INSTRUCTIONS


Step 1) Gather & Prepare Apples 


If you are using collected apple scraps, this part is extra easy! There is no prep needed. If your apple scraps were frozen, let them thaw out before starting. A cold ferment is not a happy ferment! I do suggest adding at least some fresh scraps with your frozen ones, if possible. This will ensure your brew is inoculated with live bacteria. When making apple cider vinegar with whole apples, the prep is pretty dang easy too. Simply wash the fruit well with water (no soap!) and chop them up into smallish chunks. You can leave the skins, cores, seeds, and even stems in there! 

Add the apples to your glass container of choice, filling it about halfway full with apples. We use this 2-gallon container, but many people make much smaller batches! Ensure the container is nice and clean, but doesn’t have any soap residue present – which can cause off-flavors. We clean all of our fermentation supplies with plain white vinegar and hot water.


A two way image collage, the first image shows a 2 gallon glass crock that is half full of apple chunks. The crock sits atop a wooden cutting board. The second image shows a close up of the inside of the crock which reveals the apples cut in fairly similar sized chunks, some of the apples still have there seeds and core because when making apple cider vinegar this is just fine and even encouraged.



2) Add Water & Sugar


Next, it is time to get wet and feed the bacteria! Pour room-temperature to lukewarm filtered water over the apples until the container is completely full. Keep track of how much water you add as you go! To do this, I suggest adding water with a measuring cup, or a jar that you can note the volume of. We need to know the water volume to determine how much sugar to add.

Unfortunately, it isn’t as simple as half of your container. For example, when we fill a 2-gallon crock “half full” of apples, that doesn’t mean it is taking up a true half of the volume – because of the air space between the cut fruit. We can generally still fit 1.5 gallons of water inside.

Now, scaling up or down as needed, add 1 tablespoon of sugar per one cup of water used, or 1 cup of sugar per one gallon of water. Stir thoroughly until all of the sugar appears to have dissolved into the water. Here is where the “lukewarm” water helps out!

To inoculate and kick start our batch, we usually add a few glugs of finished apple cider vinegar. This step isn’t necessary, but may help prevent the formation of mold – especially if you are attempting to do this during a cold time of year. 


A four way image collage, the first image shows the crock, half filled with apples and a pile of cane sugar sitting on top. The second image shows a jar of water being poured over the top of the apples and sugar. The third image shows the crock full of apple chunks and water, the water is slightly off color due to the mixing of the sugar. The fourth image shows a hand holding a bottle of Bragg Organic apple cider vinegar next to the crock full of water and apples. It will be used to inoculate the soon to be apple cider vinegar.



3) Let Sit to Ferment – and Stir!


Once the apples, water, and sugar are all combined, cover your container with a breathable material, such as a lint-free tea towel, old pillow case, or coffee filter. I do not suggest using cheesecloth or any looser-knit material – it may allow fruit flies in!

Set this container in a location that is around 70 to 75°F, if possible. This is the ideal temperature range for fermentation. The container should also be kept in a dark location. Because we need to see and access it daily for the first two weeks (described below), we keep ours out on the kitchen counter, but wrap the crock in a dark towel or pillowcase to block the light. 

For the first two weeks, your fermenting apples should be stirred every day. The purpose is to ensure the sugar doesn’t settle on the bottom, and also rotate which pieces are floating on top. If the same apples are left to float, exposed to the air, there is a chance of mold developing on them. Stirring prevents mold. If you miss a day here or there, it isn’t the end of the world! However, I suggest making a concerted effort stirring daily during the first week especially. 

During this time, you’ll notice the apples will turn more brown, and the liquid becomes cloudy. Small bubbles should also appear, and it will start to smell a bit like hard apple cider. A layer of yellowish-white sediment may also collect on the bottom. This is all normal and good! Any obvious, fuzzy, green or white raised mold on the surface is not. In all the years making ACV, we have never had ours mold!


A close up image of the apples inside the crock after they have been sitting with sugar and water for a few days. There are bubbles holding onto the apples starting to appear.
Bubbles beginning to develop on Day 3, as the apples start to ferment.
The crock of soon to be apple cider vinegar is shown after its initial two week ferment. The apples have turned brown and most have sunk to the bottom. There is sediment sitting along the bottom of the crock mixed with the apples and the liquid is now more brown in color and cloudy. There is a red and white checkered tea towel sitting atop the crock, which acts as the lid or cover.
Near the end of week two, the bubbling activity has declined, some of the apples are sinking, and the liquid is much more cloudy.



Step 4) Strain Apples


After two weeks of daily stirring, it is time to strain the apples to separate them from the liquid. To accomplish this, we set a fine-mesh strainer on top of a large bowl and slowly pour the contents of the crock through it. You can also use cheesecloth, or whatever else works! The collected fruit can now be composted. Return the captured liquid to a clean glass container of the appropriate size, and cover in the same manner it was before. 


A two way image collage, the first image shows the crock being tipped over and it contents being poured into a large white ceramic bowl. A stainless steel strainer is being held over the bowl, straining all of the apple chunks from the liquid. The second image shows a hand holding the strainer full of apple chunks above the bowl that is now full of soon to be apple cider vinegar.
I have to strain in batches, because there are far more apples than this strainer can hold!



Step 5) Continue to Ferment


This is where the waiting game begins… Store your covered crock in a temperate, dark location for at least one month, or longer! The bacteria will keep working to convert more and more of the sugar or alcohol to acetic acid, creating vinegar. The rate at which your partially fermented apple cider turns into full-blown vinegar will vary, depending on the storage conditions and apples used. Our apple cider vinegar usually sits for about 2 to 3 more months before we bottle it.

After a month has passed, you can give your vinegar a taste-test. If it tastes plenty vinegary for your liking, move on to the next step. If not, allow it to ferment longer. When it doubt, you can check the pH of your apple cider with these simple pH test strips! Finished apple cider vinegar should have a pH in the range of 2-3. 

Note: During this time, sometimes the vinegar develops a layer of SCOBY on the top – sort of like kombucha does! It is a thin, smooth, off-white membrane made up of accumulated beneficial bacteria and yeast. It is normal and harmless. We discard it once we are ready to bottle the vinegar. Our chickens love to eat SCOBY, but make sure to chop it up well for them!


The crock is shown after the remaining liquid was strained and poured back into the original container. The liquid is whitish yellow-brown and cloudy in appearance. The liquid needs more time to continue to  break down and turn into apple cider vinegar.
The strained apple cider vinegar. This crock will now get covered and stored in a dark, temperate location for a couple months.



Step 6) Bottle & Enjoy


Once it reaches that perfect fermentation level, transfer the apple cider vinegar into bottles with tight-fitting lids for storage. We re-use old ACV bottles, or store it in our swing-top kombucha bottles. As an acidic concoction, homemade apple cider vinegar does not have to be refrigerated for safety-sake! It is best to store it in a relatively cool, dark place.

If we have the space, we typically refrigerate at least some of our bottles at this point. Why? Well, once they’re refrigerated, the bacteria activity will slow way down and prevent the vinegar from fermenting beyond the point we enjoy it. Plus, most people like to enjoy their ACV cold anyways! I know we do.

Even stored at room temperature, homemade apple cider vinegar will stay good for up to five years! However, the quality and flavor will likely be best within the first two years.


Two full quart jars of apple cider vinegar are lined up on each of the front and backside of two crocks that have just been filled with apples, water, and sugar. It shows the beginning of the process with the apples soaking is sugar water as well as the end product, apple cider vinegar in bottles and ready for use.
Bottled one finished batch, and started another!


Ways to Use Apple Cider Vinegar


Apple cider vinegar can be used in wide variety of meals, recipes, taken straight on it’s own, or used in other natural health, home, and body care applications.

  • As a salad dressing – drizzled over salad with olive oil, or used in other salad dressing recipes.
  • Use apple cider vinegar in other recipes that call for vinegar, such as our favorite easy refrigerator dill pickles. We also like to add a small drizzle to egg salad, potato salad, and similar dishes.
  • Take a small shot (1 to 2 Tbsp) before a meal to reduce blood sugar spikes (aka postprandial blood glucose levels).
  • Learn how to make homemade fire cider with apple cider vinegar here. Made with garlic, onion, turmeric, ginger, honey, and spices, fire cider a fantastic tangy tonic that can support your immune system and naturally reduce the intensity and duration of cold and flu symptoms.
  • ACV can be diluted and used as a hair rinse, which removes built up minerals in your hair (such as from hard water) while also conditioning, balancing, pH, and healing hairs outer cuticle.
  • Many herbalists and naturalists use ACV as a natural facial toner, or as an ingredient in other natural beauty and healing remedies!
  • Acidic vinegar makes a great natural surface cleaner and disinfectant, such as in the sink, garbage disposal, stinky cutting boards, or even used to soften laundry. Learn more about using vinegar as a cleaner here.


And that’s how to make apple cider vinegar!


I hope you found this tutorial helpful, and interesting! Next time we have an abundance of apples, I think we are going to take a stab at making our own hard cider. I will report back! Do you brew your own apple cider vinegar, or hard cider? What are your other favorite ways to preserve apples?


If you are interested in other healthy fermented goodies, you may enjoy these articles:


Homemade Apple Cider Vinegar Instructions
Print Recipe Pin Recipe
4.75 from 58 votes

Homemade Apple Cider Vinegar

Make your own Apple Cider Vinegar at home! It is a great way to use or preserve excess apples, or a zero-waste solution to use unwanted apple scraps like skins or cores! Apple cider vinegar is easy to make, and is healthy, delicious, fermented, and packed with probiotics.
Prep Time20 minutes
Fermenting Time60 days
Course: Natural Medicine Beverage, Preserved Food, Salad Dressing, Sauce
Keyword: ACV, Apple Cider Vinegar, Fermented

Ingredients

  • Diced apple chunks, or apple scraps (skins, cores). Enough to fill half of your chosen fermenting vessel (e.g. quart jar, half-gallon jar, 1 gallon crock)
  • 1 tbsp sugar, per 1 cup filtered water OR
  • 1 cup sugar, per 1 gallon of filtered water

Instructions

  • Wash and chop the apples into chunks, or gather collected apple scraps (which can be saved in the freezer over time) and add them to your jar or other large fermenting vessel until it filled about halfway full.
  • Pour lukewarm filtered water over the apples into the container until it is almost full, but measure/note the total amount of water added.
  • Stir in sugar in ratios of 1 tablespoon of sugar per cup of water added, or for larger batches, 1 cup of sugar per gallon of water added.
  • Optional: Add a splash of finished organic apple cider vinegar (e.g. store-bought) to inoculate the culture and encourage fermenting.
  • Stir combined ingredients until thoroughly mixed, and cover with breathable material.
  • Store in a dark location around 70 to 75 degrees F for two weeks to ferment, and stir everyday to prevent mold from forming on top. If needed, add another layer of material like a dark towel on top of the container to block light.
  • After two weeks, strain and reserve the liquid into a similar sized container and cover again. Compost the spent fruit.
  • Move the covered container of liquid to a location that is out of the way to continue long term fermentation. Maintain dark. A cooler "room temperature" at this stage is okay, but do not refrigerate yet.
  • After one month, sample the vinegar to see if it is finished fermenting and tart to your liking. If needed, allow it to continue to ferment for a total of two to three months.
  • Once it is fermented to your desired flavor, transfer the apple cider vinegar into bottles with lids (or swing top bottles). Store at room temperature or in the refrigerator, and enjoy!
  • Properly fermented apple cider vinegar should "stay good" for over a year – as long as it does not have visible mold, or a strong and unusual flavor or appearance.



DeannaCat signature, keep on growing

214 Comments

  • Anna

    About to try this as we got so many apples this year! A quick question: after straining the apples out, should the liquid go in a container with a lid on? Or cloths as in the first step?

    Thanks!

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Anna, congrats on your apple harvest! We just use the same cloth that we used in the first step, be sure it is tight woven enough so fruit flies or gnats can’t get through it and you should be good to go. Good luck!

  • Yonah

    5 stars
    Wow so informative! We live in a country where for some reason they do not import fermented apple cider vinegar, so we can only buy the clear kind :,-( sooooo my question is: when topping off the initial ACV starter with finished ACV, does it need to contain the mother? My only option would be to top off with clear store bought ACV. Thank you so much for this amazing article!

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Yonah, wow, that’s very interesting the country you live in doesn’t allow unfiltered apple cider vinegar. Adding ACV (with the mother) to the batch at the beginning is more of an optional step to give the new batch a kickstart but it isn’t a necessary step if you don’t have ACV with the mother available, you will still be able to successfully make a batch of ACV either way. Hope that helps and good luck starting your batch of ACV!

  • Debra D

    5 stars
    Hello

    I’m in my 3rd batch of the ACV. All at different dates. My first batch bubbled up snd over like crazy. 2nd batch very minimal bu bling. Exact same apples but a week older. 3rd batch, same apples, more bubbles but not crazy smounts like 1st batch. Doing the same to all. I shake them a couple times a day the 1st 2 wks. I use the lid but left very loose.

    Am I doing something wrong? Apples too old?

    Thank you so much

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Debra, it sounds like everything is going as planned, we haven’t had the mixture bubble over but there is some bubbling during the ferment. What is the problem that you think you are having aside from the difference in activity? We don’t typically shake the jars either, we just stir them so maybe you are getting a bit more bubbling and activity from that compared to just stirring? Either way, as long as you aren’t seeing mold, it seems everything is progressing as it should. After two weeks, the activity should be minimal to where you would then strain the apples and move on to the next step. Hope that helps and good luck!

  • Lisa

    Hi, and thank you for your recipe! I’ve followed it, including stirring faithfully during the first week but forgetting a couple days during the second. I’m at the 2-week point today and the apple pieces haven’t settled to the bottom of the glass jar. The product smells somewhat like apple cider but doesn’t taste as good as that. No mold though. I’m not sure what I should do– wait longer for the apples to settle, or strain them now. Do you have any advice? The only thing I can think might have gone wrong is that the temperature has likely been warmer than 75F.

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Lisa, if your ACV isn’t bubbling anymore you should be ready to proceed to the next step of straining the apples and moving the crock to an area for the second/longer ferment. Good luck on finishing up your ACV!

      • Alicia Yoder

        Good morning.
        I’m at the two- week point and just strained my apples out of the cider. Unless I’m blind, I’m not seeing anything about the mother; is that the ‘scobby’ you mentioned? I’ve read on other recipes to save the mother for various things incision making more ACV. Can you please help clarify that for me?

        • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

          Hi Alicia, your ACV should start to form a mother or SCOBY during the this step of the fermentation process that you are about to begin, if you added some bottled ACV at the beginning of the process, it likely gave your ACV a head start. Either way, you should start to see the mother start to form in time, hope that helps and good luck!

  • Rebecca

    Hello! I am excited to try this with my backyard apples – thank you for the excellent instructions. I have a ceramic fermentation crock; can I use that? Or is glass essential?

  • Jillian

    Hi! I’m really wanting to make this but my housemate is worried about gnats. I’d imagine since the apples are covered with a towel and submersed in liquid that they wouldn’t be much of an issue, but I was wondering if you’ve ever had problems with them? I’d like to ease her concerns before I start making this. Thank you!

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Jillian, fruit flies shouldn’t be a problem if you use a lid or a towel with a tight enough knit and rubber band to secure it. We have had fruit fly issues in the past when we thought cheesecloth (even folded over itself a few times) was enough to keep them out, but it is not. Hope that helps and good luck!

  • Alissa owle

    5 stars
    So I followed a recipe like this but. I did not cut up my apples I had a bag of frozen apples. Sat 2 weeks. I forgot to add in previous cider..I stirred daily 2 weeks. Then strained. Let it sit 1-2 weeks. Then poured into another glass jar with a lid. It is pale yellow. it doesnt taste like acv. It’s bubbly and actually reminds me of hard cider. Is it it ruined? Can I put it back in a dark location with a coffee filter it start over?

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Alissa, I would add a splash of fresh ACV to your batch and see if that helps inoculate the batch a little bit and just let it continue to sit and ferment in a cool and dark location. We usually let ours sit for a couple months before we use it, just taste it on occasion until it reaches a point that works for you. Hope that helps and good luck!

  • Shante Black

    Hi! I just took my ACV out after almost 2 months. The color is very dark and has a brown layer on top. Is this bad???

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Shante, as long as you don’t see mold it should be good to go, the brown layer you are seeing is likely the ACV’s SCOBY (symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeast) which also occurs when one makes kombucha. I would give it a taste and see how you like the flavor, hope that helps and good luck!

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