This Fire Cider Health Tonic and Homeopathic Remedy recipe stands as one of the most popular on my blog.
I would like to take this opportunity to remind people who take issue with my use of the word homeopathic that I’ve addressed it below and simply will not put up nastiness. People.
It’s not the end of things if we disagree on semantics, but I’m going to insist we be nice here on Foodie with Famiy.
To anyone visiting for the purpose of discussing my use or perceived misuse of the word “homeopathic”:
I am using a casual definition of the word supported by google, WebMD, and Merriam Webster: “That is, if a substance causes a symptom in a healthy person, giving the person a very small amount of the same substance may cure the illness.
In theory, a homeopathic dose enhances the body’s normal healing and self-regulatory processes.” I will not be discussing this issue any further. Any new comments seeking to chastise me for the use of the word will not be published.
Important Note: I am NOT under any circumstances claiming this will cure anything. I’m laying out a recipe that is both delicious and nutritious. I am also explaining some of the purported health benefits of the ingredients that go INTO the recipe.
This post is no substitute for professional medical advice, but is a classic folk tonic/remedy. I trust you all to use your own best judgment in the manner.
Wait! Don’t run away screaming! I know I’m in serious danger of sounding like an irredeemable hippie, but I have something really, really FUN for you today.
What is fire cider?
I have a savoury, spicy, infused vinegar. Yes.
Two infused vinegars in a row! This one is only slightly more complicated than the Coconut Infused White Balsamic Vinegar in has it has a few more ingredients and requires a bit more chopping and grating, but beyond that, it’s every bit as easy, it just requires more patience.
Before I get to why, I want to get to the reason YOU SHOULD MAKE THIS! For starters, it tastes awesome.
I mean AWESOME. Oh, and did I mention it’s a health tonic?
I have a little true story to explain to you how a girl who makes Crispy Cheesy Barbecue Chicken and Bacon Egg Rolls also makes Fire Cider Health Tonic and Homeopathic Remedy.
It all began with me hopping in my car and driving eight and a half hours to Maine to spend four days with my friends.
We spent our days wandering Portland, Maine eating donuts, duck fat french fries, ice cream, bubble tea, cookies, more duck fat fries, fried cheese curds, fried chicken skin banh mi, bacon dusted french fries, and washing it down with beer. Have you noticed the theme? Rich food on rich food on richer food.
It was great stuff, but oy. We were overstuffed.
We wandered into the Cabot Cheese Shop where the clerk enthusiastically offered a sample of something called Fire Cider to us. Given that I have been known to drink pickle juice and/or a shot of raw apple cider vinegar each morning (more on the health benefits of that in a moment), it didn’t take much to convince me to try it.
It was a SHAZAAM moment. It was a savoury liquid infusion with an amazing balance of tangy raw apple cider vinegar, horseradish, garlic, onion, ginger, and citrus with just a hint of honey.
It was exactly what we all needed to de-sluggify all of us after our rich food benders. Brandy, Carrie, and Gina grabbed a bottle. I grabbed two.
When I got home, my husband looked at me sideways when I told him what it was, but he drank the sip I gave him and his eyes grew huge as he declared, “THIS IS GREAT! We’re going to need to keep this around!”
Fire Cider Controversy
I went online to order a larger quantity and discovered that the manufacturer had a bit of fire cider controversy surrounding them because fire cider was an old folk remedy and health tonic made by many herbalists and the company had trademarked the name. Okay, well, knowing me, you’ll probably have realized at this point that when I read I could make my own, that was a foregone conclusion.
Would I regularly buy a product from a company that had trademarked a word that was the herbal world’s equivalent of t-shirt and was enforcing that trademark or would I make my own? Well, um, duh?
UPDATE: The controversy has been settled and the courts have decided that the company can no longer own the trademark for Fire Cider!
Fire Cider Recipe
I wanted to make one as close in flavour to the one I had purchased, so I used my only superpower (identifying flavours in a dish) to figure out what I wanted to put in my Fire Cider Health Tonic and Homeopathic Remedy.
I added fresh horseradish and ginger roots, onion, garlic, lemon, orange, habanero pepper, powdered turmeric, and raw apple cider vinegar to our fire cider. All of these ingredients have the dual benefits of being health promoting AND delicious.
Not to put too fine a point on it, but I nailed it. And I had to wait 4 weeks to KNOW I nailed it because it takes that long for the flavours to infuse. Yeah. Um. Did I mention you need to be patient?
Fire Cider benefits
How is fire cider good for you? Let me count the ways:
-Fresh horseradish is known to be effective against the flu and common cold, tonsilitis, respiratory disorders, urinary tract infections, and pathenogenic fungus.
-Ginger is used to treat arthritis, muscle pain, upset stomach (motion and morning sickness and general nausea), gas, upper respiratory tract infections, and cough.
-Onions are used to boost cardiovascular health, bone and connective tissue benefits, and as an anti-inflammatory agent.
-Garlic is used to treat high blood pressure, high cholesterol, coronary heart disease, heart attack, atherosclerosis, asthma, building the immune system, help level blood sugar, and is used topically to treat fungal infections.
–Habanero peppers boost your metabolism, and offer headache, sinus, and arthritis relief as well as releasing endorphins.
-Oranges are great for heart health, as part of a best-case-scenario-anti-cancer-diet, fighting cholesterol, to help in weight loss, and to break up or prevent kidney stones.
–Lemons are known to aid in digestion, alleviate Meniere’s Disease, kidney stones, and ringing of the ears, cure scurvy (chronic lack of Vitamin C), treat colds and flu, improve the function of blood vessels, and reduce inflammation and retention of water.
–Turmeric is pretty much the be-all and end-all of health foods. It’s known to delay liver damage, reduce carcinogenic compounds in other foods, make cancer cells more vulnerable to chemo and radiation, inhibit the growth of malignant melanoma and breast cancer, alleviate arthritis symptoms and skin conditions.
Heck, maybe I should let the experts describe what the main compound in turmeric -cucurmin- does. Advanced Experimental Medical Biology in 2007 states:
“Curcumin has been shown to exhibit antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, antiviral, antibacterial, antifungal, and anticancer activities and thus has a potential against various malignant diseases, diabetes, allergies, arthritis, Alzheimer’s disease and other chronic illnesses.”
–Raw apple cider vinegar (not plain old cider vinegar!) is known to be a good source of acetic and ascorbic acid (Vitamin C), mineral salts, amino acids, and other key components of good nutrition, but it is also a well-loved folk remedy thought to ease digestion, fight obesity and diabetes, wash toxins from the body, kill lice, and reverse aging.
Does it do all of that? I dunno. But it surely tastes good and it’s nutritional value is undisputed.
–Raw honey (locally produced) is a fantastic, all-natural fighter of seasonal allergies. Because bees collect pollen from flowers in your area and then convert it to honey to feed their hives, eating raw, local honey is like a tasty allergy shot.
It’s also full of vitamins and minerals, anti-fungal, anti-viral, and makes a great, non-narcotic cough suppressant and throat soother.
How much Fire Cider should I drink?
The beauty of this, beyond its all-star cast of healthy ingredients, is that it just plain tastes wonderful. We drink a tablespoon (or more!) every morning to maintain health. Well, okay, we MAINLY drink it because we like it, but the health benefits are nice.
When you feel ill, take a slightly larger dose of Fire Cider to help boost your immune system. Word has it on the street that it’s an extremely effective hangover cure. So, I want to know… are you curious enough to try it? What do you think?
Cook’s Notes
There’s not too much to this, just grate or chop everything up and put it in a jar. That’s where I’m going to caution you.
If you cannot or will not use a plastic lid, do lay a piece of parchment paper on the rim of the jar before fixing your lid in place. Raw apple cider vinegar is quite likely to motivate a canning jar lid to rust or discolour.
You’d hate to have all your waiting and work ruined by a rusted lid. Replace that parchment sheet every week or so.
I prefer to use Bragg’s Raw Apple Cider Vinegar for my Fire Cider. I always keep it on hand because I love the flavour and I also love the health benefits it offers.
Because it still has the ‘mother’ in it, it packs a higher nutritional punch. I understand that Trade Joe’s and Whole Foods also have in-house brand versions that are great.
I’d advise you to use organic produce if at all possible. This way you won’t be infusing your lovely health tonic with anything you wouldn’t want to have in it.
When you grate your horseradish, make sure you do it in a well-ventilated area or you will regret it. That stuff packs some serious oomph and will empty your sinuses in 30 seconds flat.
When it’s time to strain your Fire Cider Health Tonic & Homeopathic Remedy, line a colander with butter muslin, a muslin tea towel, or a double layer of super fine cheesecloth, and set it over a large, stable pot.
Pour the contents of your jar into the lined colander and let it drain for 30 minutes. After the 30 minutes, pull the corners of the cloth together and twist to squeeze the contents until you cannot squeeze any more liquid from it.
You may reserve the solids for tossing in stir-fries or discard them. Either is fine!
You’ll notice there is not an actual quantity of honey listed in the recipe. You should add this to taste.
We tend to like ours less sweet, you may prefer yours more so. Start with 1/4 cup and whisk it well, then add 1 tablespoon at a time, whisking after each addition, until you reach your desired sweetness.
It’s best to choose raw, locally produced honey for the benefits listed above. The second choice is raw honey. The third choice would be pasteurized commercial honey.
Store your finished Fire Cider Health Tonic & Homeopathic Remedy in a sterilized wine bottle or canning jar. Store in a cool, dark cabinet for up to a year.
Oh! I’d be remiss if I didn’t tell you that the finished Fire Cider is fabulous as a dressing for cooked greens or in salad dressings. Boost your health while enjoying your dinner!
Guys. Gals. Friends, Romans, Countrymen… I HAVE PUT Fire Cider Health Tonic and Homeopathic Remedy IN A COCKTAIL. It was magical. Please experiment and report back.
How to make Fire Cider:
- A Food Processor with a Grating Disc is not strictly necessary but will make the process so much easier and keep your hands from smelling like horseradish!
- Easy Cap (reusable bottles) for storing your fire cider.
- a Funnel to help fill your bottles with fire cider
- a whisk to whisk in the honey
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Fire Cider
Scroll down for the complete printable recipe.
Grate the horseradish and ginger roots. Roughly chop the peeled onions and garlic, whole oranges, lemons, and habaneros.
Do not peel the oranges and lemons first! Sprinkle the turmeric in on top.
Pour the raw apple cider vinegar allowing it to settle in through the crevices and adding more so the contents are fully submerged. Lay a piece of parchment paper over the rim of the jar, then screw the lid tightly in place.
Let the mixture sit in a dark, cool place, allowing it to infuse, for 4 weeks, shaking once daily when you remember it.
After 4 weeks, pour the contents into a muslin or cheesecloth lined colander over a stable pot. Let it drain for 30 minutes, then gather the corners and twist to wring out as much goodness as possible.
Add raw honey to the liquid to taste and pour into a sterilized wine bottle or canning jar. Store in a cool, dark place for up to a year, shaking well before using.
Fire Cider: Health Tonic and Homeopathic Remedy
Rate RecipeIngredients
- 1 large horseradish root scrubbed very well, about 7 inches long
- 1 large ginger root about 7 inches long
- 1 large onion root and stem end removed and peeled
- 1 large orange do NOT peel. Use the whole fruit.
- 1 lemon do NOT peel. Use the whole fruit.
- 16 cloves of garlic peeled
- 2-4 habanero peppers stems removed
- 1 tablespoon ground turmeric
- raw apple cider vinegar
- raw honey
Instructions
- Grate the horseradish and ginger roots. Roughly chop the onions, orange, lemon, garlic, and habanero peppers. Stuff them into a half-gallon glass jar with a tight fitting lid or divide evenly between two quart sized canning jars. Sprinkle the turmeric in on top (dividing evenly between the two jars if using quart jars). Pour the raw apple cider vinegar in over the contents, allowing it to settle in through the crevices and adding more so that the contents are submerged. Lay a piece of parchment paper over the rim of the jar, then screw the lid tightly in place. Let the mixture sit in a dark, cool place, allowing it to marry and infuse for 4 weeks, shaking once daily.
- After 4 weeks, pour the contents into a muslin or cheesecloth lined colander positioned over a stable pot. Let it drain for 30 minutes, then gather the corners of the cloth, twisting and squeezing until you cannot release any more liquid. When it’s fully strained, add honey to the liquid to taste and pour into a sterilized wine bottle or canning jar. Store in a cool, dark place for up to a year, shaking well before using.
Nutritional information is an estimate and provided to you as a courtesy. You should calculate the nutritional information with the actual ingredients used in your recipe using your preferred nutrition calculator.
did you make this recipe?
Make sure to tag @foodiewithfam on Instagram and #hashtag it #foodiewithfamily so I can check it out!
Not Your Mama’s Canning Book: Modern Canned Goods and What to Make with Them is available to order through these fine retailers!
Originally published August 8, 2014. Updated August 2016 and January 2019.
Reader's Thoughts...
Roger Phillips says
I’m up the understanding that you have to have black pepper in order for the tumeric to work. Does the jalapeno or habanero pepper do the same thing?
Rebecca says
You can definitely add some lightly cracked black pepper corns to the mixture if you’d like!
Mary says
Can this be left too long and go bad? I forgot about mine and now I’m ready to process my tonic…… the top is a bit discolored, but the rest of the slaw is a lovely turmeric orange. Thanks for the advice!
Rebecca says
Hi Mary- How long did you leave it?
Dona says
Help! I made this about a year ago left it in the pantry with the ingredients marinating in the raw acv….is it still good??
Rebecca says
Hi Dona- Is there any mold or scum at the top?
jlwrZ says
I can not wait to try this….I prefer natural foods for body to heal, I dont see it having the after affects that some medical meds can do to the body but do believe they have place too. I believe modern medical practices should have knowledge and include natural forms of healing . After all some have been tested and tried through time. Thank you so much… 🙂
Juniper Bookout says
This is so lovely! Thank you for the wonderful post. Going to make some this weekend!
Rosemarie Wolf-Hozjan says
I came across your blog and can’t wait to make fire cider! Have plenty of horseradish growing in our garden and didn’t really know what else to do with it than dehydrate it and grind it into a powder (of course at the expense of my very first and only coffee mill). Thank you for sharing this at a time when we all need a little bit of down home made in the cellar homeopathic remedies for life’s maladies. I adore Maine, Connecticut, Vermont, New Hampshire and the east coast. Thank you!
Rebecca says
Thanks so much, Rosemarie!
Wendy says
I absolutely love fire cider but had never made my own. I was sick this past fall and it would not budge! Upper and lower respiratory issues that were the worst I had ever had. Refusing to take the time and money for a doctor visit I continued to try everything known to man to knock this out of me but nothing was working. 7 weeks later….. and still dealing with it, I visited a craft fair where a vendor was selling this amazing concoction that I’d not yet tried. Needless to say, I purchased a bottle and one week later I was back to my healthy self!!!“)
Knowing my bottle was running low, and a month or so of crappy weather left… I live in central Maine, I started to locate the best recipe that reminded me of what I had purchased. I just made your recipe and I am beyond EXTREMELY EXCITED to try this. Testing my patience is an understatement!!!! Thank you immensely. I know I’ve found it ♥️
Molly says
The recipe calls to store all the ingredients for a month in a half gallon jar. How much liquid fire-cider can I expect for the final filtered product?
JOAN SCHNITZER says
Will fire cider be usable indefinitely?
Rebecca says
Within reason… 🙂
Stephanie says
This is a great recipe, thanks for sharing! Seems like some people have waaaaaay too much time on their hands 😉
I appreciate you and stay in your light!
Rebecca says
HA! Thanks, Stephanie! <3
Bettie V Beard says
So very close to a recipe I picked up from one of those healthy food shows several years ago — I think Dr. O. Anyway, I didn’t put turmeric in the concoction nor did I leave my orange and lemon whole. I’m going to make some more soon and add the turmeric although I will probably continue to slice 1/2 lemon and 1/2 orange into the mix. Also, I use Manuka honey in this wonderful medicinal concoction. Sometimes, I use it within just a few days of making.
Thank you so much for posting this! I know that turmeric is a perfect addition to this natural medicinal daily dose.
Nancy says
Rebecca, this is fantastic! I made this for my sister, who’s a Fire Cider connoisseur – and she’s raving about it. It was fun to make, smells so good and it’s also beautiful. I’ll make it again and again. She’s a true believer (as am I) in the holistic benefits of each and every ingredient in it. I’m sorry you had to go to the trouble of defending “holistic”. FANTASTIC RECIPE – thank you!
Rebecca says
I’m so glad you love it, Nancy and thank you for taking the time to rate it and let me know you love it!
Joanne Chase says
This stuff is wonderful! There is so much complexity to the flavors. I love the color when it is shaken, too. Thanks for this!
Rebecca says
I’m so glad you love it, Joanne! Thanks for taking the time to rate the recipe and let me know!
Sherri F Miller says
Made it, love it! I was coming down with head cold this week so upped the “dose”. My sinuses are fine.
courtney says
Thanks so much for a great recipe!
I made this fire cider about 10 days ago, and I realize that I havn’t really been shaking it, more like twisting the bottle a bit every 3 or 4 days. Is that ok?
Also, all the garlic / horseradish etc are floating on the very top. Is that considered submerged? (I’m worried about botulism).
Thanks
Rebecca says
Hey Courtney- Give it a shake and don’t worry. 🙂 As long as it is in vinegar and it isn’t “hairy” you’re okay. It’s pure vinegar, so it’s pretty powerful stuff.
Erin says
I’m so excited for this! Do you have any suggestions on what to do with all the leftover stuff once drained? I saw that you could turn it into Bloody Mary mix? 🤔 My MIL would love that.
Rebecca says
Hi Erin- I have a friend who dehydrates all the goodies that were strained and grinds it to use as a seasoning! That’s my recommendation!
Terryg says
Just decanted the first batch. Yummy
Rebecca says
I’m so glad you like it, Terryg! thanks so much for taking the time to rate the recipe.
Tina K says
Everyone seems to be a fan… I was buying it and it’s SO EXPENSIVE! This recipe seems so simple… I was thinking about adding Ceylon Cinnamon… Wonder if I should add it to sit for the 4 weeks, or add it when I add the honey…
Rebecca says
Hi Tina K! It truly is simple! If you’re adding cinnamon, I would add it at the end when you add the honey!
Tim says
Is letting it sit for 4 weeks completely neccessary?
Rebecca says
Hi Tim- It sure is. That’s the time it takes to infuse the vinegar with a deep flavour and all the goodness of everything you put in it.
Tim Ovadal says
Thanks 🙂 I was just wondering if the health benefits would decrease more so then flavor
Rebecca says
Well, if you have to omit the horseradish, you’ll lose the benefit of the horseradish, but you’ll still have everything else, so that’s good!
Sana says
Excellent recipe
Rebecca says
Thanks so much, Sana! I appreciate you taking the time to rate the recipe!
Carrie says
Shut up, Kate.