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How to Make Apple Cider Vinegar at Home

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How to make apple cider vinegar at home from apple scraps
Wellness Mama » Blog » Recipes » How to Make Apple Cider Vinegar at Home

Every fall we take at least one trip to an apple orchard near us. They have family-friendly activities, wonderful local canned goods for sale, and of course, apples. So many apples! My kids love applesauce so I take advantage of the apple season to make homemade applesauce so that we can enjoy it throughout the year.

Don’t Waste Apple Cores and Peels!

I don’t always peel the apples when I make applesauce but if you do take the time to peel the apples (maybe you even prefer your applesauce that way), you can use the peels and the cores to make apple cider vinegar. This way you have virtually no waste!

It is also totally possible to make apple cider vinegar from the whole apple so don’t worry if you don’t have leftover peels and cores from anything.

When I make applesauce, I typically do large quantities at a time so I have enough peels and cores for a batch of apple cider vinegar. If you only occasionally use apples, you can store the peels and cores in the freezer until you have enough gathered to start a batch.

If you don’t have an apple orchard nearby, farmers markets are another great place to get organically grown apples. Just check with the farmer. Organic apples are ideal for apple cider vinegar, especially if you will be using the peel. If you cannot find organic apples, peel them first. Discard the peel and just use the inside portion.

What Is So Special About Apple Cider Vinegar?

Apple cider vinegar (ACV) has many healthy uses. It is made through the process of fermentation and is high in phosphorus, magnesium, potassium, and calcium. Hippocrates is believed to have prescribed ACV for a variety of ailments.

ACV for Digestion and Heartburn

ACV is the base of spicy cider which is a great remedy to help quickly knock out a cold.

Amazingly, and contrary to what seems logical, ACV also has a valuable role in preventing heartburn and aiding digestion. In most cases heartburn is actually caused by too little stomach acid which slows down digestion. Food and gasses put pressure on the stomach, causing stomach contents (including stomach acid) to leak back into the esophagus. When you remedy heartburn with ACV it increases stomach acid and helps the body digest the food more quickly. This prevents the build-up and subsequent leakage which causes heartburn. You can read more about natural heartburn relief here.

ACV Topically

In addition to its many benefits when taken internally, it is wonderful for the skin. When added to bathwater, it helps to naturally restore balance to the skin’s pH. It also helps kill bacteria and fungus on the skin which can lead to a host of problems, including eczema, dandruff, and other skin conditions.

Because of its great pH balancing benefits and dandruff preventing abilities, it makes a great hair rinse that replaces conditioner and can be used after shampooing with a natural shampoo.

Unfiltered, Unpasteurized, And With “The Mother”

Most of the ACV you find in the supermarket is pasteurized and highly filtered. These versions still work well for cleaning but they are not optimal for internal and culinary uses because most of the benefits are gone once the “mother” is filtered out and the vinegar is pasteurized.

There are a few available that are “with the mother” which means they leave in the beneficial bacteria that develops during the fermentation process in the vinegar. When you make your own ACV you can be sure that your vinegar retains this beneficial “mother.”

Important Notes:

  • This recipe uses sugar. The sugar is necessary to “feed” the yeast, but most (if not all) of the sugar is fermented out. People often ask if they can use honey. The short answer is yes, but it really does not work as well and causes the whole process to take longer. And to be honest, because the sugar is broken down, there really isn’t anything to be concerned about as far as the effect it will have on blood sugar.
  • Make sure all of your equipment and your jar are very clean. It is important to make sure you don’t introduce any bacteria other than what is naturally occurring in the process.
  • My favorite apple variety to use for applesauce is Gala so my scraps are usually a majority Gala. However, you get the best flavor if you have a mix of varieties. I use mostly Gala, but I will throw in a mixture of other types for the rest. Some I have used are Fuji, Honeycrisp, Granny Smith, and McIntosh. It just adds some complexity to the flavor.
  • White scum is going to form on the top. This is normal. Mold, however, is not good and will spoil your ACV. Be sure that the apples stay submerged under the water. This will help prevent mold. You can use a fermentation weight or even just a smaller glass jar (thoroughly clean the outside) and set it on top of the apples to keep them submerged.
  • Gnats and flies love ACV so you need to make sure your jar is well covered. However, it needs to be able to breath and release gasses created from the fermentation process so do not use a solid lid. Cheesecloth or a coffee filter work well.

Final Notes

At some point while making apple cider vinegar, you will probably notice a SCOBY-like “thing” that forms on the top. This is the “mother.” You can remove it or you can just leave it floating in your vinegar.

If you don’t want to make your own apple cider vinegar, it is becoming more common for grocery stores to carry organic ACV “with the mother.” Or you can buy it online.

How to Make Apple Cider Vinegar

Before starting to make ACV, there are a few things you’ll need to have on hand first:

Supplies:

  • Clean jar – you can use any size jar (I have used a wide mouth quart jar and a half gallon pickle jar)
  • Organic apple scraps – enough to fill your jar ¾ of the way full
  • Organic cane sugar
  • Filtered water
  • Fermentation weight or small glass jar
  • Cheesecloth or coffee filter
  • Rubberband
How to make apple cider vinegar at home from apple scraps

Apple Cider Vinegar Recipe with the Mother

Apple cider vinegar with “the mother” has many benefits and it is simple to make at home with some organic apple scraps and a little time. Here’s how…
Prep Time 5 minutes
Total Time 42 days 5 minutes
Calories 6kcal
Author Katie Wells

Servings

2 cups

Ingredients

  • organic apple scraps
  • 2 TBSP cane sugar
  • 2 cups water (filtered)

Instructions

  • Clean a quart jar very well and let air dry.
  • Fill the jar ¾ full with apple scraps. If you are using whole apples, roughly chop them up before you put them in the jar.
  • Dissolve the cane sugar into the cup of water.
  • Pour sugar water over the apples until they are completely submerged. Add a little additional water if needed to make sure the apples are covered.
  • Weigh down the apples with a fermentation weight or with the small glass jar. Any apples that are exposed to the air could mold.
  • Cover with the cheesecloth or coffee filter and secure with the rubber band.
  • Store in a dark place at room temperature. I put mine in a cabinet in the kitchen.
  • Leave it for approximately 3 weeks. Check on it every few days to make sure the apples are staying under the water and to make sure no mold is growing.
  • After 3 weeks, it will still smell fairly sweet. Strain the apples pieces out and return the liquid to the jar. Compost the scraps.
  • Recover and put the jar back in a dark spot for another 3-4 weeks, stirring every few days.
  • When the ACV has reached the “tartness” you like you can put a lid on it or transfer it to a different jar with a lid and start using it!

Nutrition

Nutrition Facts
Apple Cider Vinegar Recipe with the Mother
Amount Per Serving (2 TBSP)
Calories 6
% Daily Value*
Sodium 1mg0%
Carbohydrates 0.3g0%
Sugar 0.1g0%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Notes

This recipe is for a quart size jar of apple cider vinegar. If you are making a larger jar, just make sure your apple scraps fill the jar ¾ of the way and are covered with sugar water.
When the ACV is finished you can save “the mother” that has floated to the top or just a small quantity of the finished ACV to start a new batch that will ferment more quickly. 

Like this recipe? Check out my new cookbook, or get all my recipes (over 500!) in a personalized weekly meal planner here!

How do you use apple cider vinegar? Will you try your hand at making your own?

Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

221 responses to “How to Make Apple Cider Vinegar at Home”

  1. Judi cox Avatar

    Honey you say works but takes longer, and you say sugar is fermented so no problem, but I am so again refined white sugar for other reasons also. Does Xylitol work? Or Monk fruit?
    Thank u 4 ur answer.

  2. Aimee Clark Avatar
    Aimee Clark

    Hi Katie, the first attempt at this recipe worked perfectly, then I tried a larger batch and 4 weeks after I’ve taken the apple bits out the liquid smells right but is much lighter in colour, sort of ‘cloudy’, is this ok?

    Thanks 🙂
    Aimee

  3. Shirley Avatar

    I am trying to make ACV from my homemade apple cider. It now has mold on top of it that I skimmed off. Is it ruined. Thanks for your help.

  4. Shakti Avatar

    4 stars
    NEED FEEDBACK PLEASE
    i’m in the second week of ACV production, there’s the white scum foam forming on apples on top layer (particularly on the skins that are slightly exposed even with a cup on top). Remove those apples?
    Leave them and skim off the white/greyish foam/film?
    Thank you so much

  5. Brian Avatar

    In some other Recipes it calls for yeast first to be used ?

    Can you please tell me why your recipe is different – or why you skip this step? Or is it actually doing an extra step without the yeast?

    Thanks
    Brian

  6. Ahmed Avatar

    In apple cider vineger recipes
    Can I use (((Pure Organic Natural Molasses Black strap Sugar Cane Syrup Black Honey ))) Instead of natural sugar?

  7. Ahmed Sakr Avatar
    Ahmed Sakr

    We have natural cane juice in Egypt
    Is it possible to replace natural sugar in that recipe?

  8. Janice Avatar

    My ACV batch has been fermenting for a few months now. I’ve strained out the apples and keep it in a bottle now, tightly closed but it still doesn’t taste like ACV & smells weird, definitely fermented but not like vinegar. What should I do?
    Thanx
    Janice

  9. Najib Avatar

    Hello
    Thank you for the recipe, I tried it and waiting now for the fermentation. My question is, what is the ratio of sugar/water? if i want to make a bigger sample? Thanks!

  10. Novita Avatar

    5 stars
    Hi, thank you for the recipe. I tried to make apple cider vinegar in home, it has been 10 days long. I noticed this morning that the little bubble and white scum disappeared. There are greyish stain in the glass jar however. Does it means that the fermentation process fail? Or is it a normal process? Thank you

  11. Faye Avatar

    Hello;
    I went to strain my apple cider vinegar for second part of the ferment and it was all gelatinous and gooey rather than runny and watery. What happened? Did I brew it too long? I used a fermenting water lock lid this time instead of just a towel and rubber band. Was it not getting enough air because of this process? Can I salvage it?

  12. Dale Avatar

    5 stars
    I absolutely live by your blogs Katie!
    They’re incredibly informative and you always have the recipe and notes I am searching for!

    I have been wanting to do my own ACV fermentation for a long time and have now gathered enough apple off-cuts to do one!
    I have been searching the net for how I would incorporate additional elements such as ginger, turmeric, lemon and pepper. I imagine this would follow as a secondary ferment? Would it be that I would ferment as per your recipe and then grate all the ingedients and add the vinegar to complete a secondary ferment? Would you be able to shed any light on this?
    I would really appreciate your advice!
    Cheers
    Dale

  13. Cassie Avatar
    Cassie

    5 stars
    Excited to try this!
    I saw these questions earlier but couldn’t find an answer:
    1) Should I seal lids on in a hot water bath if I am making a large batch to make them last longer?
    2) What is the shelf life & should it be refrigerated?
    3) How long will “the mother” last?
    Thank you in advance 🙂

  14. Theresa Avatar
    Theresa

    I have some questions regarding homemade apple cider vinegar. I think that I might have accidentally created some. How? Well, it appears that a gallon of organic apple cider had been opened at Thanksgiving last year and then put back on a far shelf in my basement pantry. I happened upon it today when grabbing some items in front of it. It looks like it has a thin skin on the surface (mother?) and otherwise has kept the same appearance as far as color and clarity. I didn’t open the top of the gallon jug to smell it. Your article states that it needs to breath. What happens if it does have a solid cover on it?

  15. Christina Avatar
    Christina

    Do you know how to make more ACV from the mother made from the last batch without using more apples?

  16. Sharon Avatar

    For clarification, the Ingredient portion of the recipe says 2 tbsp sugar and 2 cups water. Then the Instruction portion says 1 tbsp sugar and 1 cup water. Which is the correct measurement of sugar and of water?

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