Apple Cider

Published Nov. 22, 2022

Apple Cider
Mark Weinberg for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Yossy Arefi.
Total Time
20 minutes
Rating
4(46)
Comments
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To understand the difference between apple cider and juice, think of it like this: Unfiltered cider is a complex dark brown multigrain, whereas filtered apple juice is a plain sweet white bread. There’s a place for both, but to fully savor the fruit, make raw, fresh cider. Benford Lepley, the co-founder of Floral Terranes, a small-batch cidery and winery on Long Island, suggests using a mix of apples, ideally fresh ones grown in your general area, but Pink Lady is a supermarket favorite. Adjust the variety based on your preference of sweet to tart, then crush and press. (This recipe calls for a blender or food processor and a cloth-lined colander.) Drink and repeat all season long.

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Ingredients

Yield:About 1½ quarts
  • pounds sweet apples, such as Honeycrisp, Fuji, Gala or Golden Delicious
  • pounds tart apples, such as Pink Lady, Granny Smith, Gravenstein, Jonagold, Jonathan or Braeburn
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (22 servings)

59 calories; 0 grams fat; 14 grams carbohydrates; 3 grams dietary fiber; 10 grams sugars; 0 grams protein; 2 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Line a colander or sieve with muslin or two layers of cheesecloth (allow for some overhang) and set over a large bowl or pot.

  2. Step 2

    When making your own apple cider, follow the same guidance you’d follow when eating raw fruit: Wash and dry apples thoroughly and remove moldy parts. If picking your own apples, do not use windfall or drop apples (i.e. apples from the ground). Core and coarsely chop the apples, leaving the peels on.

  3. Step 3

    Fill a blender or food processor halfway with apples, then add about ¼ cup water. Blend until the apples are coarsely mashed and juicy. (You can blend further, but your cider will be cloudier.) Add a little more water if the blender gets stuck. Transfer the puréed apples to the lined colander, gather the muslin around the puréed apples and twist. Squeeze and press to extract the apple cider. Open the muslin so it hangs over the colander and leave the puréed apple in the muslin.

  4. Step 4

    Repeat Step 3 with the remaining apples, and add to the apples already in the lined colander. Give it a good squeeze, then press it with a wooden spoon, meat mallet or heavy pot to extract as much juice as possible. If your apples aren’t giving up their juice, let them sit a few minutes before trying again. (If you would like to pasteurize your cider, heat it to 160 degrees for 1 minute, skim off any foam, then refrigerate. The flavor will be muted but the cider will still be delicious.)

  5. Step 5

    Drink warm, cold or at room temperature, and consider spiking or mulling it. Refrigerate for up to 5 days. Use the pomace (leftover pulp) to make apple butter, or add it to oatmeal, muesli, smoothies or quick breads.

Ratings

4 out of 5
46 user ratings
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Comments

20 minutes?! Are you kidding me?! Where and how did you come up with THIS number?!

This is a recipe for homemade apple juice. This is NOT cider. True apple cider has a small alcohol content and is a little bit fizzy. I grew up in the middle of an apple orchard in Va. My father made apple cider every year in an oak barrel.

When I worked in an orchard as a teenager we got a quarter/bushel for tree-picked apples, a dime/bushel for cider apples - also called drops or windfalls. As a child my grandmother had been appalled seeing her father make cider from drops so she asked to use cleaned, unbruised apples. She made about a quart and decided that it tasted too bland to use. There's little worse than strained, pasteurized, 'clean' apple juice. Get me old-fashioned cider.

Make good ol' ACV (Apple Cider Vinegar) the same way, peels, cores and all (&/or any fruit but citrus) and sugar with water. Fine mesh cloth (omits bugs but lets air flow) & elastic covers the jar. Stir every day. This then ferments. Once fruit sinks, skim it out and re-jar. Cover with parchment paper, elastic. In a few weeks you'll have vinegar! Look it up. BTW the "mother" will develop; it's cellulose. The jellyfish looking white blob that floats @ top. Save it and add to next batch. Voila!

I made this as directed -- used half honeycrisp and half pink lady. I would tip the blend to be slightly more tart next time, but it was delicious. I then used the remainder to make apple butter (lots of recipes out there but I basically simmered the remainder with some water and star anise on the stove for three or four hours, then pureed it in a blender, added some vanilla, and then baked it at 280 for a couple of hours until a rich brown.

So glad to see the note in step 5 to be sure to use the leftover pulp (pomace) for other recipes. This has great concentrated flavor for a quick apple loaf and really enhances oatmeal, etc.

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