Cherry Bounce
Published Feb. 9, 2026

- Total Time
- 10 minutes, plus at least 24 hours’ steeping
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 4cups/about 20 ounces fresh or frozen pitted tart cherries (such as Morello or Montmorency)
- 3cups tart cherry juice
- ¾cup sugar
- 1(3-inch) cinnamon stick
- 2cloves
- ¼teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
- 2cups high-quality brandy or Cognac
- Seltzer
- Ice
- Lemon slices
For the Cherry Bounce
For Serving
Preparation
- Step 1
Place the cherries and ¼ cup water in a large nonreactive saucepan over medium heat. Cover and allow to simmer for 1 minute.
- Step 2
Lightly mash the cherries in the pan and add ¾ cup water plus the cherry juice, sugar, cinnamon stick, cloves and nutmeg. Stir well and bring to a simmer, continually stirring until the sugar dissolves, about 1 minute.
- Step 3
Stir in the brandy or Cognac and cover. Reduce the heat to medium-low and continue to warm the mixture until it begins to gently boil, about 3 minutes.
- Step 4
Turn off the heat and let the mixture sit, covered, for at least 24 hours and up to 48 hours. (Alternatively the mixture can be bottled, sealed and put in a cool dry place for the flavors to continue to intensify, for up to three months.)
- Step 5
Strain the mixture through a fine-mesh sieve lined with cheesecloth into a clean pitcher for immediate use. You can serve it neat, as is, or over ice — or mix with seltzer, at a ratio of roughly one part cherry bounce and three parts seltzer, and serve over ice, with a slice of lemon. Refrigerate any unused cherry bounce for up to 3 months, shaking the jar gently every few weeks and straining before using.
Private Notes
Comments
In the 1940s, my father put up "sugar money" for a mountain neighbor who occasionally ran off a batch of corn whisky using a still that had been in his family for generations. Given several gallons of the whisky, it and a quantity of local small, black, wild cherries were placed in a small oak cask. The cask was placed in the back of a closet and rocked every night. After some months, the bounce was deemed ready. As a child, I did not get any, but, I have heard that it was mighty fine.
This is also lovely as an ingredient in a whiskey sour! Cherry Bounce Sour 1 1/3 oz Bourbon or Rye 1 oz Cherry Bounce 1/2 oz Demerara Syrup (Made rich at a 2:1 sugar to water ratio) 1/4 oz Lemon Juice 2 dashes Angostura Bitters 1 Egg White (or your preferred substitute) Dry shake first (no ice) to build froth. Then shake again with a large cube or chunk of ice until cold. Strain into a tumbler and garnish with an amarena cherry. And, if you're feeling plucky, a cinnamon stick or lemon wheel.
So the ‘sealed’ mixture can be left un-refrigerated, but the strained one needs to be? Clarification for safety purposes please! Also ala plum wine, won’t fermentation occur-does the mixture ever need to be vented?
I made mine with UNA floral-infused Vodka and turbinado sugar in three months and it came out superb
I made this and couldn't find tart cherry juice where I am so swapped with cherry, grape, and cranberry blend (no sugar added). The viscosity of the grape played well. Also, it came out excellent and was more popular the the Fish House Punch I made alongside it. Strongly recommend. It probably also helps that I had some absolutely incredible cherries to work with.
Hi! This is for the question on a booze free option. Hope, maybe vinegar or a shrub-type drink would work. I have not made but I think those were also traditional, helped preserve the fruit (cherries, whatever) and can be diluted with sparkling water for a refreshing mocktail. I would try that, look for recipes for early American "shrubs." Good luck, Enjoy!