Those who know me know my penchant for
locally grown fruits and vegetables, including apples. Several years
ago by accident, I found a combination of local grown Melrouge and
Cortland apples makes a nice base for the apple pie filling I make for my apple pie recipe. Firm and
soft with all the flavor local grown apples provide, I wanted nothing
more than to be able to freeze these apples for making apple pie
during January and February when a pie made from these apples would
be a great winter treat.
I needed to look no further than my
copy of “Brooksby Apple Bake Cook Book” by the Peabody Historical Society which I purchased over a decade ago. Chock full of apple
related muffins, breads, cakes, cookies, desserts, sauces,
marmalades, page 21 contained the following on freezing apples for
pie:
“Freezing Apples for Pie:
Peel, halve, core, and slice apples quickly. Put in freezer bag and
put in freezer as quickly as possible. Do only enough apples for one
pie at a time; in this way the apples do not have time to discolor.
When you are ready to use the apples for pie, you do not need to thaw
them. Put them wile still frozen in your pastry shell, add sugar,
spices, flour and bits of butter, top with top crust, flute edges and
bake as you would a fresh apple pie.”
I started with enough apples for one
pie,--two Melrouge and four Cortland apples. I peeled, halved, cored
and sliced the apples shortly after buying them. I placed them
immediately in a ziploc freezer bag and placed in freezer. Several
months later, I made my pie crust for apple pie, lined a pie plate
with half the crust, mixed the sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg and flour. I
then retrieved the apples from the freezer and immediately hit a
stumbling block.
The apples were frozen solid into a
rectangular shape. The pie crust lined a circular pie plate. I did
manage to get the rectangular block of apples into the circular pie
plate along with the sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg, flour and butter as
well as get the top crust over this misshapen middle. The end result
was a pie which tasted great but where the apples closest to the edge
of the crust had no season.
Rectangular block of apples
waiting to be made into apple pie
Determined to improve upon this, I
developed the following guidelines for freezing apples for pies and
crisps:
- Pre-measure the apples. In other words, make sure your freezing enough for one pie, crisp, etc.
- Freeze apples which work well with the recipe you are freezing them for. For example, I freeze a combination of Melrouge and Cortland apples for apple pie.
- Plan to use the apples within six months.
- Use Ziploc freezer bags especially if you don't plan to pre-freeze the apples. This will make a partial thaw (see last bullet point below) when using apples easier.
- You can pre-freeze apples individually on a plate or baking sheet lined with parchment paper to keep them from clumping or forming a solid mass during the freezing process. If you're like me, you don't have any room your freezer for this pre-freeze step.
- When using apples for pie or crisp which were not pre-frozen and are a solid block, make your first step in the recipe filling a large bowl with medium-hot water and placing the apples in the water. As you go forward with your recipe, the apples will begin to thaw. Thaw apples enough to where the solid block can be easily broken by hand into chunks small enough to be used in your recipe. Apples should be cold to the touch, they do not need to be completely thawed.
Melrouge and Cortland apples, previously frozen,
baked into an apple pie.
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