Fall is the time of year for lots of apple eating and pie baking, so why not put those scraps to use and make your own raw apple cider vinegar? It’s easy to do, with all the peels and cores you’ll have leftover from fresh apples.
Apple cider vinegar can be made in large batches in a crock or a jug when peeling and coring large quantities of apples. But, for your first attempt, it’s wise to make a quart jar.
Apple Cider Vinegar Making Tips
- Use organic apples free of pesticides.Select fruit free of mold, fungi or rot.Rinse fresh apples under running water.If you’re using whole apples, soak them in a bowl of water along with a tablespoon of apple cider vinegar for five minutes before peeling. The apple cider vinegar serves as a fruit wash to kill bacteria and remove any fungicide or pesticide residue.
Supplies and Ingredients:
- Quart canning jarCanning lid and ring Muslin cloth, or you can use a clean, unused coffee filter.Apple cores and peelsSpring waterSugar (optional)
Instructions:
- Fill a sterilized quart jar with clean apple peels and cores. Or add apple scraps over the course of several days from your snacking apples (be sure to cut away bitten areas). Add spring or filtered water, free of chlorine, to the jar, ensuring that the apple scraps are completely covered.(Optional step) To speed up the fermentation process add ¼ cup of sugar to the jar and stir.Cover the filled jar with a circle of muslin cloth or the coffee filter and secure it with a rubber band or canning jar ring. This will help keep fruit flies out of the jar and permit the mixture to breathe.Place the jar out of direct sunlight, in a warm place, near a hot water heater, refrigerator, wood stove, or on top of the gas range, (but not directly on a burner), to speed up the fermentation process.After a few days, the contents of the jar should start to thicken. The mixture will begin to foam and bubble.After two weeks, strain out the apple scraps and pour the liquid into a clean quart jar. Cover as you did before with a muslin cloth and canning jar ring. Store on a pantry shelf.After a few weeks, the mixture should appear cloudy and a film will form on the surface. This is the “mother,” which can be used to start future batches of ACV.At six week from the start, the fermentation process should be complete. There will be a residue inside the bottom of the jar and the vinegar will taste tangy. If the ACV smell or taste is undeveloped, allow it to sit longer. Once the ACV has developed, cap the jar with a lid and store in your pantry until needed.When you’re ready to make another jar of ACV, remove the “mother” and add it to a new batch of apple scraps and water and repeat the process.
Note: Since it’s difficult to know the exact strength of homemade apple cider vinegar, it’s best not to use it in canning or pickling recipes where a high concentration of acid is required.
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- Deborah Tukua
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