The Soaked Bean

Seeking Nourishment, Finding Traditions

  • About
  • Recipes
  • Library
  • Events

Green Fire Cider

October 16, 2015 By Lauren

gingerThere’s no denying it any longer.  Skies are grey and often filled w/ rain, leaves line the sidewalks in swaths of gold, and I now need to turn the kitchen light on to eat breakfast at 7:30AM.  Winter’s coming, friends and it’s time to prepare.

My medicine cabinet is crammed full w/ tinctures like echinacea and st. joan’s wort, my slow-cooker’s working overtime making broths + chaga-mushroom tonics and, at the bottom of my kitchen cupboard, a jar of green fire cider is currently infusing away.

Fire cider is more than just a magickal-sounding name.  It’s an effective remedy against all sorts of Winter-y things.  Things like colds and flus, poor circulation, sluggish digestion and even the Winter blues.

The traditional preparation of fire cider consists of a number of pungent roots and herbs submerged in apple cider vinegar and steeped (and agitated daily) for at least 6 weeks, then strained and mixed w/ honey.  Time allows the medicinal constituents of these roots and herbs to be extracted into the vinegar and the addition of soothing, antiviral, immune-boosting honey creates quite the elixir.

This version utilizes the nettle (or green) vinegar I made last Spring.  Herbal vinegar is a tasty method for extracting minerals from your favorite green thing. (Common herbs like mint, sage, lemonbalm and rosemary all make wonderful vinegars). It takes 6 weeks to extract all the plant-magick, so if you don’t have any herbal vinegar on hand just substitute plain ol’ apple cider vinegar instead.

ginger

Print
Green Fire Cider

I don't list specific amounts for the ingredients b/c it depends on the size of yr jar and, really, what you have on hand. Experiment! And enjoy in good Winter-y health!

Ingredients

  • Ginger-root, grated
  • Turmeric root, grated
  • 1 yellow onion, chopped
  • 12 cloves garlic, chopped
  • 2 hot peppers, sliced in half
  • 2 lemons, sliced in half and juiced (use the rinds!)
  • Few sprigs rosemary
  • Few sprigs thyme
  • Herbal vinegar
  • Honey

Directions

  1. Place all ingredients in a large glass jar. Cover w/ herbal vinegar until all other ingredients are submerged in liquid. Seal w/ glass or plastic lid. If using a metal lid (like w/ most canning jars) line w/ parchment paper as the metal will rust and contaminate the cider.
  2. Infuse for 6 weeks, agitating daily.
  3. Strain cider into a glass jar and mix w/ few spoons of honey to taste.
  4. Seal and store in fridge. Will keep for as long as it lasts (1 year or so).
3.1

Share:

  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)
« Equinox Uovo-Margherita (or Egg-Pizza)
Franco-American Apple Pie »

Filed Under: Fall, Herb, Seasons Tagged With: elixir, fall, herbal, herbalism, herbs, vinegar, winter

Comments

  1. Chef Jemichel says

    October 16, 2015 at 10:42 pm

    Awesome! I’m reminded of Thieves Vinegar that I’ve made a number of gallon batches of recommend universally (culinary, medicinal, even house-cleaning!).

    I take it that the lemon rinds are included after squeezing.
    I’m looking forward to making this batch soon!

    • Lauren says

      October 18, 2015 at 10:09 am

      Hi there Chef,

      Just edited the post to clarify, but yep! definitely include those rinds! Happy infusing and let me know how it turns out.

      L

  2. Dan Bevar says

    October 18, 2015 at 7:29 am

    Hi Lauren,
    not knowing at all the fire cider, I did some seeking in the web and found different ways to take it.
    I read that after the 6 weeks, you have to extract the vinegar, and even squeeze the pulp.

    Do you have any suggestion for us? Do you take a straight spoon of it or you mix it with something else?

    Thanks for your great recipes!

    Daniele

    • Lauren says

      October 18, 2015 at 10:06 am

      Salut Daniele,

      So glad you’re enjoying the blog! Yep, after 6 weeks you strain (or extract) the cider into a jar and mix it w/ some honey. I usually just take a spoonful straight up when I’m feeling a cold coming on, but you could also mix a spoonful into a tisane –ginger would work nicely — if that’s too intense.

      Thank you for reading and let me know how you find it!

      L

Copyright © 2025 · The Soaked Bean