Monday, September 22, 2014

Applesauce with a Rosy Glow or the only applesauce recipe I’ve ever tried



As I noted in an earlier post, you know it’s December at my house when all that’s produced is AlmondRoco. Likewise, you know it’s fall at my house when all that comes from my kitchen contains apples, such as applesauce.

As a child I would only eat applesauce if it was served with pork chops for dinner. As for eating apples, I think I ate two by the time I was eighteen years old. Yes, my palette, food preferences and diet have changed significantly since my childhood.

My love for homemade applesauce took hold just over a decade ago after making vegan whoopie pies with my homemade applesauce and liking the richness of flavor this applesauce provides to this recipe over store bought sauces. For several years, my freezer would be packed in September with homemade applesauce and gradually emptied over the following winter and spring to make vegan whoopie pies, to top oatmeal or some form of vanilla ice cream. In late 2005 I learned how to can and successfully canned my first batch of applesauce in September 2006. I’ve canned my homemade applesauce ever since.

While some of you might be surprised at the amount of applesauce which gets produced annually, I can only tell you the happiness, joy and fond memories generated is far greater than the time and effort exerted. My cousin, Jenn, and her family join me at the orchard where we pick apples for all of us. When the apple picking is done, we then walk to the orchard’s farm stand for their homemade apple cider doughnuts. One year my mom assisted in coring and slicing the apples. Another year a girlfriend visited during the process and assisted with tasting the batch. A half pint jar given to a co-worker one morning was returned the same afternoon, emptied, washed, and with the statement “That was good.”

I originally came across this recipe in an issue of the Boston Herald sometime in the 1990s. I don’t have the exact date as the recipe was not in the corner of the page which contained the date. What I like most about this recipe is it’s a great way to use up lots of apples quickly without having to peel them. I’ve tinkered with the recipe over the years, increasing the amount of sugar and cinnamon to make a rich “sweet” batch, removing the sugar and cinnamon to create an unsweetened batch, as well as moving the “mash” process from stove top to oven to prevent the apples from scorching or “blackening” the bottom of the pot which can require a lot of time and manpower to scour clean.

Apples ready to be made into "mash" in
the oven


Rosy Applesauce yield: approximately 6 – 9 pints

5-6 pounds red-skinned applesauce (this is about a 1/2 peck of apples)
½ cup water
1 cup sugar
½ cup light brown sugar
1 teaspoon cinnamon

To make “mash” on stove top: 

  1. Wash, quarter and core the apples.
  2. Place them in large saucepan with the water.
  3. Cook over very low heat until the pulp softens and separates from the peel – from 30 minutes to an hour. Stir occasionally to avoid scorching.

To make “mash” in the oven:

  1. Place oven rack on lowest setting.
  2. Pre-heat oven to 425 degrees farenheit.
  3. Wash, quarter and core the apples placing them in a turkey roasting pan designed to hold 12 – 15 pound turkey.
  4. Add water to apples in pan.
  5. Tent/loosely cover top of roasting pan with aluminum foil, making certain reflective side of foil faces apples.
  6. Carefully place tented roasting pan with apples and water in oven on rack on lowest setting.
  7. Bake until pulp softens and separates from the peel without effort when pressed with large spoon – from 30 minutes to just over an hour.

Once “mash” is made:
  1. Press “mash” through a food mill or colander.
  2. Add sugar and cinnamon to the warm applesauce, mix thoroughly, and let stand until cool enough to eat.
  3. Serve either warm or chilled. Refrigerate any unused portion for up to 5 days, freeze for up to 3 months or can the applesauce using the boiling-water method in steps 4 and 5.
  4. Heat the applesauce until it boils. Ladle into clean, hot canning jars, leaving ½ inch of headspace at the top of each.
  5. Close the jars and process in a water-bath canner with a rack for 20 minutes.
 

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Apple Lemon Bread




I stumbled across this recipe several years ago in my Fanny Farmer Cookbook at about the same time I was introduced to local grown Mutsu (or Crispin) apples whose texture and moistness remind me of a Granny Smith and whose taste reminds me of a Jolly Rancher Sour Apple Stix.

Where the recipe calls for green apples, I decided to give this one a try with local Mutsu apples. On the day I made the first batch, my mother stopped by just as the bread was coming out of the oven. What's noted in my version of this recipe is correct: “Light and moist, flavored with apple and lemon zest, this bread freezes well, if there is any left.” There was none left of the first batch nor of the second. The third batch did get frozen, and yes, this bread does freeze incredibly well. I highly recommend this recipe if you ever find yourself with extra Mutsu apples in September or October which is their peak season.



Apple Lemon Bread

From the revised 13th edition of The Fanny Farmer Cookbook.

Yield: One 9” x 5” x 3” loaf or 12-19 muffins

¼ cup butter or substitute, such as Earth Balance Buttery Spread (http://www.earthbalancenatural.com/product/original-buttery-spread/)
¾ cup sugar
2 eggs, beaten
2 cups flour
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt
2 green apples, peeled, cored, and grated (about 2 cups) or 1 very large Mutsu apple, peeled, cored and grated
Zest or peel from 2 lemons, minced (approximately 1 ½ tablespoons)

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees farenheit. Butter or grease a loaf pan. In a large bowl, cream together the butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs until blended. Mix the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt together and add to the creamed mixture alternately with the grated apple. Add the lemon zest and mix until well blended. Spoon into the loaf pan and bake for 50-55 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center of one of the center muffins comes out clean. Remove from the pan and cool on a rack.

If making muffins, spoon batter into lined muffin tins. Baked for 20-30 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center of one of the center muffins comes out clean. Cool and then remove from tins.