Thursday, September 9, 2010

Applesauce

This isn’t my recipe for applesauce. This is a process you can go through to try to create your “recipe” for applesauce.

Ingredients:
Apples

Ingredients to have on hand:
Sugar (brown or white)
Cinnamon
Nutmeg
Cloves

What kind of apples? Ask the person who grows your apples. Yes, that means going to an apple orchard. My favorites are Hillside Orchard near Casco, Wisconsin and Collegeville Orchards in Collegeville, Minnesota. My favorite applesauce apple is Macintosh. I recently did a batch using Paula Red, and it turned out well.

How many apples? As many as you have, or as many as fit in the pot. For your first batch, grab a peck (a small bag)

Begin your sauce by washing and polishing the apples. This removes any pesticides or anything else nature may have left behind. Please, don’t think peeling the apple removes all of this stuff. It removes a lot, but, in my opinion, if it’s on the knife, it could be in the pot. I feed this stuff to babies…

When they’re clean and dry, sit down and start peeling. You can use an apple machine if you have one, but a simple knife will do. (Well, two actually, one to peel and one to quarter and remove the cores from your apples.) While I don’t mind my applesauce turning a little brown, if you do, toss your apples into water with Fruit Fresh or lemon juice after you peel them.

Cooking the sauce: Cover the bottom of the pan with a little bit of water. Add the apples (drained, if you had them in water) and salt them. When I say salt, I mean, as if they were a helping of mashed potatoes or vegetables. Cook on medium low, stirring every few minutes. Apples can scorch, so keep an eye on the pot.

From here, the recipe becomes yours. How long do you cook the sauce? Until it’s the consistency that you like. What it thicker? Keep cooking. Like it lumpy? Cook it less. Like it smooth? You might want to whip it with an immersion blender or hand mixer in the pot, or in a blender or stand mixer just before canning.

As for sweetness, spiciness, etc. It’s up to you. When the sauce is nearing the consistency you like, taste it. Is it sweet enough for your taste? If not, add sugar, brown sugar or some splenda – about a quarter cup at a time. Stir until it’s well-incorporated, then taste again. If you like cinnamon, add it, a half or full teaspoon at a time. Nutmeg, try a quarter teaspoon at a time. Cloves, a pinch. Each time, stir until well-incorporated. IMPORTANT: you can always add a seasoning, you can’t take it away, so go slow.

To preserve: Applesauce freezes well, so if you have the space, pour into a freezer zip-top back, get rid of as much air as possible and freeze. Personally, I prefer to can it. Pour the sauce into jars, leaving a little headspace. Process pints in a boiling water bath for 20 minutes.

Every time I make applesauce, it tastes different, and that’s ok.

1 comment:

  1. This recipe is my ultimate favorite - I think it's the vanilla that makes it so divine. My kids beg for it. http://crockpot365.blogspot.com/2008/09/crockpot-applesauce-recipe.html

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