Skip to main content

Switchel Up Your Drinking Routine with This American Classic

switchel drink
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Picture it. It’s summer, late 1800s. You’ve been up since five in the morning tending your fields. You managed to plow one, but now the sun is high and you’re sweating like a pig. The heavy cotton (or flax or whatever they wore back then—whatever it was, it probably wasn’t comfortable) clothes you’ve got on are sticking to you and you could really use a drink. What do you go for?

Switchel. You go for switchel. (And now, just like the people who made our great land so great, you can once again quench your thirst with a drink that is more American than apple pie.

The basic make-up of switchel is easy: water, apple cider vinegar, a sweetener of some sort (usually molasses, honey, or maple syrup), and depending on where you were, some other flavoring (like lemon juice or ginger). What results is a tart yet sweet beverage that does wonders for one’s thirst.

Let’s be honest, though,  unless you’re one of the ones out there that is taking shots of apple cider vinegar for your health every morning (or brewing your own kombucha), switchel might at first sound a bit, well, gross.

Sweet vinegar? Who’d want that? Let’s put the principle of drinking it in perspective, though. What about all those IPAs you drink? You can’t tell us you honestly took that first fateful sip of an IPA as a young pup of twenty-one and went, “Woah, this is great!” Hell no, you probably took a sip and went “Damn, this is bitter.” But then you kept drinking anyway.

Same thing here. It might seem unappealing, but give it a few sips and you’re likely to come around just like you did to that fresh-hopped double IPA.

Sometimes called switzel or haymaker’s punch (from the fact that it was consumer by farmers who we can only assume spent their time punching  bales of hay), references to the drink go back as far as the late 1700s in New England. Up until recent years, though, there have not been many commercial switchel efforts. You simply made up a batch yourself and that was that.

That is changing, though, thanks in part to Vermont’s Up Mountain Switchel, a company dedicated to showing off what is really one of America’s first craft drinks.

Sustainably made from local apple cider vinegar, local maple syrup, local water, and organic ginger root, Up Mountain Switchel offers a taste of the past while still giving consumers a modern take on the beverage (i.e. you don’t have to spend eight hours hauling hay and milking cows to enjoy it). Instead, you get a burst of electrolytes without all the sodium that you would from a sport’s drink.

Not only do they provide classic flavors such as Original and Lemon, but you can find energizing flavors such as Cayenne and Yerba Maté as well (this was our personal favorite thanks to the mix of refreshment and energy). Whichever variety you go with, each is packed with flavor.

So, next time you’re out working hard (or hardly working, we won’t judge) and you need something to quench your thirst that isn’t alcoholic, what are you going to go for? Switchel. You go for Up Mountain Switchel.

Sam Slaughter
Sam Slaughter was the Food and Drink Editor for The Manual. Born and raised in New Jersey, he’s called the South home for…
How to make The Last Word cocktail, a gin classic from another era
Impress your guests and make this circa 1916 drink
Last Word cocktail

Gin often plays a prominent role within classic cocktail culture. Such is the case with The Last Word cocktail, a delightful green concoction enlivened by the aromatic clear spirit. It's a cocktail that has practically lived two lives: one as it was born during the heyday of early 20th-century American bar life and another that started about two decades ago.

How did it come about? Drinks folklore says The Last Word was devised by Frank Fogarty at the Detroit Athletic Club circa 1916. Oddly enough, Fogarty was not a bartender but an award-winning vaudeville comedian. Regardless of his progression, he came up with a damn good cocktail that uses some rather obscure ingredients.

Read more
The 5 best vegetarian and vegan dishes to try right now
Even if you love meat, you might be surprised how tasty these meals are
Cauliflower steak with peppercorn sauce

It's spring and a wonderful time of year for fresh produce to make the best vegetarian recipes all the easier to create (and thoroughly enjoy). If you like meat, so be it, maybe get more creative with your sides or try one of these dishes for fun. If you're a vegetarian, it's a fine time to put together some satisfying meals with real heart and soul. Here are some of the best vegetarian and vegan recipes for dinner to try.
Kale sauce with any noodle

This Josh McFadden recipe from Six Seasons
is great to have on hand as it can accompany just about any kind of pasta.
Ingredients

Read more
Everything you ever wanted to know about Pinot Grigio, the perfect sipping wine
Be careful with this one, it's almost too easy to drink.
White wine

If ever there was a perfect sipping wine, Pinot Grigio would have to be it. Bright and crisp, fresh and lively, refreshing and clean, Pinot Grigio is arguably one of the most dangerously easy wines to drink. Also known also as Pinot Gris, depending on where you are in the world, this wine is citrusy and pleasantly acidic with a short finish that won't overpower a dish.

Pinot Grigio's diversity is wonderfully wide. It can become something truly artistic and beautiful or, simply, a blissfully cheerful and pleasant picnic wine. So, if you're looking for a great bottle to pack along on a day trip with a blanket and a wicker basket full of charcuterie, Pinot Grigio is your best bet.
Are Pinot Grigio and Pinot Gris the same wine?

Read more