Where we come from
The name "Kettleborough" comes from the moniker of the original settlement where the cidery is now located. Kettleborough was inhabited by the LeFevre family whose descendants still live in the New Paltz area. The old Kettleborough School House still stands adjacent to the orchard that has since been planted on their land.
Kettleborough Cider House was founded in 2011 by Tim Dressel. The Dressel Family has been growing apples in New Paltz for four generations, beginning with Tim's Great-Grandfather Fred Dressel in 1923. After graduating from Cornell University in 2007, Tim returned to the family business and still works there full-time. Kettleborough Cider House was born out of his love of horticulture, farm business, and oenology (wine-making). Coming from our apple-growing heritage, we know that great hard cider begins with great apples. Therefore, we have begun planting nearly-extinct varieties of apples that are better suited for hard cider production than your typical grocery store varieties.
Kettleborough Cider House was founded in 2011 by Tim Dressel. The Dressel Family has been growing apples in New Paltz for four generations, beginning with Tim's Great-Grandfather Fred Dressel in 1923. After graduating from Cornell University in 2007, Tim returned to the family business and still works there full-time. Kettleborough Cider House was born out of his love of horticulture, farm business, and oenology (wine-making). Coming from our apple-growing heritage, we know that great hard cider begins with great apples. Therefore, we have begun planting nearly-extinct varieties of apples that are better suited for hard cider production than your typical grocery store varieties.
Rediscovering our Heritage
Hard cider is currently the fastest-growing sector of alcoholic beverages in the United States and Kettleborough is helping lead the charge. Aiding this revival is the resurgence of traditional hard cider apple varieties. Much of the orchard land in colonial America was dedicated to apples that were meant to be made into hard cider, not eaten. When Prohibition took hold in the 1920's, these orchards became useless and were replaced with eating apples or destroyed entirely.
Until recently, cider varieties remained virtually extinct in the US and American hard cider has been made from "dessert apples," (or, even worse, apple juice concentrate) usually with the resulting beverage being a bland, sweet, highly-carbonated, "alcoholic apple juice." Unfortunately, these brands have dominated the market and convinced many people that they don't like hard cider. The craft cider movement is looking to change that. With the rising popularity of our Founding Fathers' favorite drink, many producers have begun seeking out the bittersweet and bittersharp apples that once made it so desirable.
Kettleborough Cider House is one of the proud few cideries in the region that has planted and harvested these ancient apples. With seventeen European varieties (such as Somerset Red Streak) and five heirloom American varieties (like Esopus Spitzenburg), we are on the leading edge of bringing back the unique, complex, and downright delicious beverage our ancestors knew and loved.
Until recently, cider varieties remained virtually extinct in the US and American hard cider has been made from "dessert apples," (or, even worse, apple juice concentrate) usually with the resulting beverage being a bland, sweet, highly-carbonated, "alcoholic apple juice." Unfortunately, these brands have dominated the market and convinced many people that they don't like hard cider. The craft cider movement is looking to change that. With the rising popularity of our Founding Fathers' favorite drink, many producers have begun seeking out the bittersweet and bittersharp apples that once made it so desirable.
Kettleborough Cider House is one of the proud few cideries in the region that has planted and harvested these ancient apples. With seventeen European varieties (such as Somerset Red Streak) and five heirloom American varieties (like Esopus Spitzenburg), we are on the leading edge of bringing back the unique, complex, and downright delicious beverage our ancestors knew and loved.
What we grow
The Dressels have been growing apples in New Paltz for more than 90 years and now harvest 150,000 bushels of apples off of 450+ acres every fall. Four generations of apple know-how and a strong, established orchard set us apart from other cider makers. Every apple that goes into our cider was grown on Dressel soil within 3 miles of where it was pressed. In addition to 20+ "culinary" varieties, we also grow more than 20 varieties devoted entirely to hard cider. Read more about these amazing apples on the "Our Orchard" page.
Drink your apples!