This Slow Cooker Apple Cider recipe is easy to make from scratch, and full of the best sweet cinnamon apple flavors!

Sometimes I wonder if I get a little too excited about recipes I love on the blog.
Reason tells me that I should tamp down my enthusiasm, that I can become the “girl who cried delicious” if I sing the praises of too many recipes, and that people will start to doubt my sincerity. But you know what, I have come to accept that I’m just naturally one of those people who tends to get really excited about just about anything I love in life! Be it an innovative new band, a challenging editorial, a new restaurant, a perfect winter moisturizer, you name it — if I find something I love, I want to shout its praises from the rooftops. Because good things are meant to be shared, right?! :)
Well, that said, today’s recipe for homemade slow cooker apple cider might not seem like the most exciting “new” recipe. But it is one that makes me so — like, so — happy. It’s made 100% from scratch, and has been one of my favorite entertaining recipes over the past few years. So since I have been given this blog which is the proverbial modern “rooftop”, I’m giving it the modern shout-out. Here’s why it’s my fav…

First off? This homemade apple cider recipe is made 100% from scratch, which means that it’s made with real apples. Lots and lots of colorful, crisp, fresh, keep-the-doctor-away, delicious apples. I like to use a mix of varieties, partly for the variance in flavor, but mostly to create a literal rainbow of apples for my cider (with a few oranges thrown in there for mulling). Beautiful.

Second, I love that this particular recipe is made in the slow cooker. I have a recipe for homemade apple cider that is made on the stove, and I made it for winter parties for years and years. But then the lightbulb finally went off that the recipe would be made even easier in the slow cooker! And sure enough, it works like a charm. Simply add your apples, a few oranges, and some mulling spices to a slow cooker and let it cook for a few hours.

Then once the apples are soft, mash them up with a spoon or a potato masher, and let those juices seep even more into the cider. Then strain out all of the pulp and and seasonings until there is only broth left, and then sweeten it with your desired kind and amount of sweetener. (I like a mix of brown sugar and maple syrup.)

And then two amazing things will happen:
1) Your home will smell absolutely amazing at this point. I made a batch last night for a party, and the first thing that all 20 or so people said when they walked in was how incredible the place smelled. (Fall candles…you don’t hold a “candle” to the amazing smell of this cider!)
2) A delicious batch of 100% homemade apple cider will be ready to ladle up and serve…and enjoy. Some of my friends love it best garnished with a cinnamon stick and a few orange slices. Some of them love to spike it with some bourbon or rum. Some love a steaming cup completely plain. But I’m telling you, everyone who tries this cider unfailingly loves it.

I love it because it genuinely is so surprisingly simple to make completely from scratch. But even more, I think I love it because there’s something comforting knowing that countless generations of people who came before us also made and enjoyed this same drink. It’s nothing fancy, nothing new. (Well, the slow cooker part is new, and cheers to that!) But it’s autumn at its best, and I have no doubt that generations after us will be toasting warm glasses in the company of friends for years and years to come too.
So yes, as Molly Shannon would have said, “I love it, I love it, I love it!” And I hope you do too. :)

Slow Cooker Apple Cider

Ingredients
- 9 medium apples, assorted types (I used a mixture of red, yellow and green apples)
- 1 orange
- 3 cinnamon sticks
- 1 whole nutmeg
- 2 teaspoons whole cloves
- 1/2 teaspoon whole allspice (optional)
- 12-16 cups water
- 1/3 – 2/3 cup brown sugar (or your desired sweetener*)
Instructions
- Wash apples and the orange, and then roughly cut into quarters. (Don’t worry about removing peels, seeds, or stems.) Place in the bowl of your a large cooker. Add cinnamon sticks, nutmeg, cloves and allspice. Cover with water, filling the slow cooker until it is nearly full. (I left about 1/2 inch of space at the top of my pot.) Cook on high heat for 3-4 hours, or on low heat for 6-8 hours.
- About an hour before the cider is done cooking, use a potato masher (or tongs or the side of a spoon) to mash the apple and orange slices once they are soft. Finish cooking for one more hour.
- Strain out the apple cider juice into a clean pitcher or pot. To get the maximum juice out of the apples, you can press them through a fine-mesh strainer or strain through a cheese cloth. Stir in your desired amount of sweetener until it is dissolved.
- Serve hot. (You can also transfer the cider to a heat-safe sealed container and refrigerate for up to 5 days. Just rewarm the cider to serve.)
Notes





I just finished making this. My house smelled amazing but my cider is bitter! ? I even added a lot of sweetener. Next time I think I won’t cut up the orange. I’ll just leave it whole see if that helps.
I can’t wait to try this! I’ll be featuring this recipe tomorrow on my blog, Creating My Happiness.
Awesome Stacey, thank you for sharing! :)
Making this today! Perfect for my vacation at home starting now, thanks for this :)
This looks so good! I’ve been wanting to try cider in the crock pot so this is perfect! Love the pictures, by the way! :)
This is Apple juice, not cider? Cider is fermented, very clear difference. This is mulled Apple juice, not saying it doesn’t look nice, just don’t call it cider unless you’ve thrown in some yeast and fermented it for a couple of weeks
Just made this today in the crockpot, so lovely! And my home smells wonderful! Couple things though. I couldn’t get whole nutmeg, only ground. :( So I put the spices in some cheesecloth and tossed it in. After 6 hours I ran everything through a food mill and strained through cheesecloth into a pitcher. That went back into the crockpot with a new baggie of spices.
After the mill, I’ve got the finer solids of fruits as the mill caught the seeds and what not. What I’m left with reminds me of extra thick apple butter. I don’t want to throw it away though. What can I do with it? Can I make true apple butter from it?
Thanks for the recipe, I’ll be making some more for Christmas with the family!
This looks perfect for the holidays! I love that you make it in the slow cooker!
Update: I took the oranges out and let it sit for about an hour before straining. Added maple syrup (real stuff from Canada!) and it has improved a lot! The flavor is great, but it still has a bit of a bitter aftertaste. I think I let it go for too long. Next time, I’ll maybe take the oranges out halfway through. Thanks for the recipe!
Delicious—–it’s been cold here. A hot apple cider——heaven!
I just made this in my slow cooker; left it all day. Just got home and tried it after mashing…it’s really bitter! I’m wondering if it is the orange pith making it seem that way. I haven’t sweetened it yet, so maybe that will help. Has this happened to anyone else?
Oh no! It could possibly be the orange peel, but shouldn’t be. Have you tried adding extra sweetener?