Grex Cooking Conference

Item 111: Apples

Entered by chelsea on Fri Oct 20 13:32:17 1995:

Autumn is apples and other than garlic it is my favorite 
cooking ingredient.  Oh, basil is close, but apples...

Do you have a favorite recipe calling for apples?  Care to
share it?
130 responses total.

#1 of 130 by chelsea on Fri Oct 20 13:51:16 1995:

I forget whether I've entered this before, so if it looks
familiar, I apologize for the rendundancy.  This is an
easy way to make outstanding, chunky, full-flavored 
applesauce.  This isn't the baby food-style stuff you
get in jars.  This is applesauce for lumberjacks.  Enjoy.

         ***  Eve's Original Applesauce ***

 *Wash, core, and chunk enough apples to fill a 5 quart
  crockpot to the brim.  This quantity is something like
  4 lbs. or 2/3 peck of apples.  I used a mixed batch of
  seconds.  The more varieties of apples involved the better. 

 *Add 2 Tbsp. ground cinnamon
      1/2 cup (packed) dark brown sugar
      2 Tbsp. Calvados
      1 Tbsp. fresh lemon juice

 *Cover, set to low heat, and let 'er rip for about 12 hours.

 *Stir until at desired consistency.  The residual peels are 
  not a problem and add to the texture but if they bother you
  then just allow the sauce to cool and run it through a 
  food processor.

 *This freezes very well.  


#2 of 130 by scott on Fri Oct 20 16:12:35 1995:

*cook* apples? Sacrelige!

<scott has based his life on the movie "Young Einstein" - always eating
apples, in any situation>


#3 of 130 by omni on Fri Oct 20 16:53:08 1995:

  I used to roast apples over a campfire. Darn good if you ask me.


#4 of 130 by popcorn on Sat Oct 21 04:42:23 1995:

What is Calvados?


#5 of 130 by chelsea on Sat Oct 21 12:33:24 1995:

A French apple brandy.  Now, when you go to buy it you're going to gasp
and put your wallet back into your bag.  But don't.  It makes this recipe,
is wonderful in apple spice bread, apple chutney, etc. And it goes a long
way.  I've been making this applesauce for maybe 8 years now and my
original bottle is about a third full. 



#6 of 130 by eeyore on Sun Oct 22 04:35:14 1995:

i cheat for apple sauce....i just cut the cored apples in half (skins left on!)
in the oven (airbake pans are wonderful for this), with the cut side down.
let 'er rip at about 350 until they are soft, and the mush up, removing skins
only if  you are a wimp.  if's i'm feeling adventurous, i might add some 
cinnamon and/or nutmeg....but no sugar allowed!!!  i like it tart!!!!!
(granny smiths are good...sor are mutzu's...:)


#7 of 130 by popcorn on Sun Oct 22 12:56:31 1995:

What's a mutzu?  An apple variety, I guess?


#8 of 130 by scott on Sun Oct 22 13:23:02 1995:

Yah, Mutzu is an apple variety.  Supposedly, in Japan they grow Mutzu apples
that weight a couple pounds, and you have to very elegantly carve them up and
serve them to your friends with a sort of ceremony...


#9 of 130 by eeyore on Mon Oct 23 17:55:54 1995:

they've really only been around here for about 7 years...but they are my
absolute favoreite......VERY crisp, tart,  not too juicy...they make megs
happy.  :)


#10 of 130 by scott on Mon Oct 23 23:23:14 1995:

Went apple picking at Wasems Sunday, and got a whole bushel of Golden
Delicious.  I'll have apple for maybe a month out of this.  :)


#11 of 130 by chelsea on Sat Nov 11 14:28:25 1995:

I attended a cooking demo at Kitchen Port a few weeks ago when the owner
of the Dexter Cider Mill shared her recipe for an amazing curried squash
soup. It was wonderful soup but called for some oil and used half and half.
I tried it with a few lower-fat substitutions and found it didn't at
all change the "creamy" experience.  


            *** Curried Squash Soup ***
     Adapted from _The Dexter Cider Mill Cookbook_

Ingredients:
   1 cup chopped onion
   1/4 cup vegetable broth in which to saute onions
   1 1/2 teaspoons curry powder
   2 small (1 1/4-pound) butternut squash,
     peeled and cut into 1 inch cubes
   2 medium Winesap or Macintosh apples, peeled and chopped
   1 (14-ounce) can vegetable broth
   1 1/2 cups water
   1 1/4 teaspoons salt
   1/4 teaspoon pepper
   1 (12oz.) can evaporated skim milk

Garnish:
   Chopped parsley or chives
   Dollop of sour cream

Directions:

   In a heavy 4 quart saucepan saute the onion in 1/4 cup vegetable broth
until translucent and tender (approx. 10 minutes).  Add more broth as
needed to prevent sticking or browning.  Add the curry and stir constantly
for one minute.  Add the squash, apples, 14 oz. broth, water, salt and
pepper. Bring to a boil and reduce the heat to low.  Simmer, covered, 45
minutes or until the squash is very tender, stirring every 10 minutes or
so.  Remove from heat and allow the mixture to cool until it can safely be
pureed with either a hand blender or in the food processor.  Process until
very smooth and totally chunk-free.  Stir in the evaporated skim milk and
reheat to serving temperature.  Garnish the individual servings with
parsley or chives over a dollop of sour cream. 

Serves 6. 
 


#12 of 130 by popcorn on Sat Nov 11 14:30:13 1995:

Mary, that soup sounds wonderful!!


#13 of 130 by bmoran on Thu Nov 16 15:28:07 1995:

When I used to cook for a living, we made this to serve with chicken breasts.

Heat butter in a saute pan
put in some brown sugar and stir
put the apple slices in pan and toss till warm and 
        coated with butter and sugar
drizzel apricot brandy (a little) over mixture and heat
serve over chicken, accept applause.


#14 of 130 by denise on Wed Nov 29 16:21:18 1995:

Mary, awhile back, I tried finding some of the apple brandy that you
had mentioned [at a local liquor store] but they hadn't heard of it...
Do you know if this is just a regional thing or should it be available
nationwide?  Guess I could go look at other liquor stores...  :-)


#15 of 130 by chelsea on Wed Nov 29 20:23:21 1995:

Calvados should be available at a full-service liquor store, one
that tends to carry more wine than beer. ;-)

It's imported and expensive but goes a long, long, way.  Treat 
yourself, you're worth it.


#16 of 130 by iggy on Sun Dec 17 13:43:03 1995:

i had a friend who grew up in normandy, and said that a lot
of calvados was made around there.


#17 of 130 by md on Wed Sep 17 10:54:18 1997:

Time to revive this excellent item.  Question: Does anyone have a
favorite method or tool for peeling and coring apples?  We have
a few devices in our kitchen, ranging from the standard corer knife
to a small wheel-like object with blades for spokes that you press
down on the apple (or pear) and it sections and cores in in one
stroke, to a crank-driven machine that peels and spiral-cuts
apples of a certain size.  (It doesn't work on the big commercial
ones.)

Also, does anyone have a favorite orchard to go apple-picking at?


#18 of 130 by omni on Wed Sep 17 19:40:09 1997:

  Michael- I thought you of all people would know better than to end a
sentence with a preposition. ;)

  Seriously, I have found that the orchard just north of South Lyon
on Pontiac Trail to have excellent picking opportunities. 


#19 of 130 by valerie on Thu Sep 18 03:51:37 1997:

I usually leave the peel on the apple.  For coring, I cut the apple in half
with a knife, then use a teaspoon sort of like it was a melon-baller, to scoop
out a hemisphere-shaped piece of apple core.

Dunno any good apple picking places.  But Wiards is a bit scary, especially
when their haunted barn and hay rides are in full swing.


#20 of 130 by mary on Thu Sep 18 11:30:34 1997:

We tend to core apples with this tube-shaped thingie that is simply
plunged through the apple extracting a core sample that (for the most
part) includes the seeds.  Aim is an acquired skill.  And what is left
behind allows you to look clear through your apple before devouring it. 
This tends to intimidate the hell out of the remaining apples in the bowl. 

When a recipe calls for peeled apples I first de-core (see above) then
de-skin using my Oxo sure-grip vegetable peeler.  What a wonderful tool. 

My favorite eating apple is a fresh Cortland, one that is still snappy.  A
close second is Jona-macs. 

My plan is to make applesauce this weekend but first I need to hit the
liquor store for more Calvados. (smack) (hic) 



#21 of 130 by mary on Thu Sep 18 12:03:04 1997:

My favorite cider mill is Franklin Cider mill, although I haven't
been there is maybe 15 years.  It was already getting very commercial
last I saw of it but it was where my high school crowd went 


#22 of 130 by mary on Thu Sep 18 12:04:42 1997:

 .  Is the cider still amazing?


#23 of 130 by valerie on Thu Sep 18 15:43:54 1997:

<valerie topples over laughing, picturing a bowlfull of intimidated apples>


Those apple-corer tubes always seem to take out a lot of apple flesh.  It
seems like a waste.


#24 of 130 by md on Fri Sep 19 02:54:07 1997:

Franklin Cider Mill is awfully commercial, yes.  You can barely
see the jugs of cider for the soi-disant "home made" pies, candy
apples, Halloween candy, maple products (from Canada), and the
separate stall down at the end where they sell Hickory Farm crap.
But the cider and doughnuts are excellent, and the little bridge
over the little brook is a nice spot to sit and drink on a weekday
when there aren't swarms of people.  I love the bees and wasps
that congregate around the mill, but you might not feel the same way.
The apple stand next to the store sells a nice selection of fruit.


#25 of 130 by mary on Wed Oct 1 10:42:03 1997:

Once of the owners of the Dexter Cider Mill will be at Kitchen
Port, in Kerrytown, today, at noon.  She will make three recipes
from her apple-based cookbook.  I've attended a couple of her
demonstrations and they are wonderful.  Alas, I'll be working,
but I thought it was worth mentioning to anyone with the time
and the interest.


#26 of 130 by void on Wed Oct 1 23:12:28 1997:

   if i'd been awake, i'd have gone. her name is kathy koziski.


#27 of 130 by valerie on Wed Oct 1 23:15:22 1997:

Neat!  Wish I'd logged in earlier.


#28 of 130 by eeyore on Wed Oct 29 06:29:51 1997:

I'm super excited....I get to make (and can!) a ton of apple sauce on
saturday....YUM!!!!  :)
(and apple pie, and baked apples, and...and...and...:)


#29 of 130 by danr on Sat Nov 22 18:23:54 1997:

Silvia and I went to Alber's Orchard out near Manchester a couple of 
weeks ago.  The apples were really good and the cider was tasty, too.


#30 of 130 by mary on Sun Sep 6 16:15:35 1998:

Fall is my favorite season.  And part of what makes fall
special is making applesauce.  The first batch of this
season is in the crockpot and the house smells full of 
cinnamon even though the windows are all wide open.

I'm wondering if Dan (danr) would care to share his
recipe for apple pie.  I hear it's quite special.


#31 of 130 by danr on Mon Sep 7 15:14:58 1998:

I don't want to sound immodest, but the recipe isn't really all 
that special.  What's important is knowing how to mix the ingredients of 
the crust and how to pick the apples.  I'll try to write it all down, 
though, and post it here.


#32 of 130 by iggy on Tue Sep 8 01:33:25 1998:

out of curiosity, has anyone ever dared to make
the 'mock apple pie' that is usually found on
the side of a ritz cracker box?


#33 of 130 by keesan on Tue Sep 8 02:49:41 1998:

I have tasted it.  I was, thanks to the fact that my home room teacher was
the advisor, on the board of the literary magazine at my junior high, and we
were the judges for the cooking contest.  I recall it being rather good.


#34 of 130 by omni on Tue Sep 8 05:41:33 1998:

  My mother's grandfather used to make them all the time. I personally think
that they are evil. My mother has made noises about one day making one, but
that is usually tabled when I remind her that apples are plentiful, and that
crackers, no matter how good they taste, are no substitute for apples.


#35 of 130 by valerie on Tue Sep 8 12:03:59 1998:

I'm curious about the Ritz cracker Mock Apple Pie sheerly for kitch value.
It's the kind of thing to bring to a Grex pot luck one day.  :)


#36 of 130 by davel on Wed Sep 9 02:33:15 1998:

I had one many, many years ago (or, rather, a slice of one).  I too recall
it as being just fine.  At this point I'd rather have real fruit, though.


#37 of 130 by gracel on Wed Sep 9 16:46:18 1998:

If you want variety from just apples, put in some green tomatoes ...


#38 of 130 by eeyore on Sun Oct 11 13:00:30 1998:

Mary: What do you add to your apple sauce?

Today is supposed to be applesauce making day for my mother and I, but
I tore a muscle in my apple-mushing shoulder, so applesauce for little Meg's.
Hopefully next weekend though!  All we ever add (when we make it for 
canning for the year anyway), is just a VERY little sugar (A cup for several
gallons of sauce).  If I'm making in small batches for myself, it can tend
to add brown sugar and cinnamon.  :)  YUM!!!


#39 of 130 by valerie on Sun Oct 11 13:33:53 1998:

Yowch about the shoulder -- I hope you feel better soon!


#40 of 130 by mary on Tue Oct 13 13:03:47 1998:

The applesauce recipe I use is entered in this item, response #1.
It makes for some pretty potent applesauce.  If you like it
milder, and more on the Mott's side, try it first with only
one tablespoon of cinnamon and omit the Calvados.

Over time I've come to like the applesauce less chunky so now
I peel the apples first.

This recipe makes great applebutter too.  Just cook it (again, in the
crockpot on low) for 24 hours.  I know, that sounds kind of scary, but it
works great. 



#41 of 130 by remmers on Tue Oct 13 13:17:49 1998:

For the benefit of Backtalk users, here's a clickable reference to the 
applesauce recipe:

        resp:1



#42 of 130 by denise on Wed Sep 5 19:32:13 2007:

Ok, with school being back in session again, it's now unofficially fall.
 So what's the  latest on the area cider mills and apple-picking places?

I stopped by Wiards once, on a weekday, late last fall--I wanted to
aviod the apparent ' carnival'-like atmosphere that goes on over the
weekends there.  To me, it seemed  very commercial as well as a bit on
the pricey side.  We used to go to the Franklin  Cider Mill when we were
kids [when we lived closer to that area] and loved the cider  and the
plain donuts [the *only* kind of donuts to consume with cider, IMHO.  I
did  return for a visit there in the late '90s sometime [a brother and
SIL live nearby].  

After the family moved to AA, we used to go apple picking every fall but
I don't  remember for sure which place we went to [but do have photos
that I took on one of  the occasions; we had some family friends go with
us and it was one of those  absolutely gorgeous autumn days].  And
somewhat more recently, I went to one with  another brother and family
and with my SIL's brother's family-though this one was  somewhere in the
Grand Rapids area. No, actually, I take that back, it was a pumkin 
patch outing [I have cool pictures of that, too].


#43 of 130 by slynne on Thu Sep 6 01:01:38 2007:

We used to go to the Franklin Cider Mill when I was a kid. I dont
remember it being very crowded or overly commercial. But then, that was
thirty years ago or so. I wonder what it is like these days?

Last year, furs and I went to Erwin's Orchard in South Lyon. First we
had trouble parking and then got out only to discover that the line for
cider and donuts was almost a mile long and not really moving all that
quickly. We left sans cider and donuts. 

I think Wiards, at least, has a separate store away from all of the
activities so presumably a person just out for a little cider and donuts
can avoid the crowds. I keep meaning to swing by there on a weekend in
the fall to see if it is true. :)


#44 of 130 by keesan on Thu Sep 6 02:09:30 2007:

We found two really good apple trees on Whitmore Lake just before N.
Territorial, and a few other not so good ones.  About half way to there are
a few sour cherry trees but they are deep in poison ivy and the apple trees
are not.  North Campus has several apple trees.  There are a few near the U
of M Hospital.  A couple in the median strip of some big road south of town,
a few good ones in an apartment complex parking lot (our secret).  City Hall
has a couple of trees.
Today (and yesterday when I started) we managed to dry a dryer full of sliced
drying tomatoes using a solar reflector and with a small computer fan on top
of the dryer.  It reaches 105-140 deg F depending on time of day.  You are
supposed to start drying at 95-105 and raise it gradually to 140 for a short
time at the end to kill any insect eggs.  Next we will try apples - dried
slices and maybe dried apple sauce (leather).  I always hated to run a heated
dryer when it was 95 degrees out.
People used to dry lots of apples and make pies from them.  
I have also dried pears, which need peeling first and are a mess, pitted
cherries, mulberries (they get very hard and tasteless), apricots (easy),
squash (easy).  A friend dried avocadoes for fun.  Bananas are a sticky mess.
I might try eggplant and pepper but they are easy to freeze.
Apple butter is very time and energy consuming.  Frozen apple sauce is easy.


#45 of 130 by mary on Thu Sep 6 13:26:24 2007:

Do you have a crockpot, Sindi?  If so, it makes an excellent apple butter.


#46 of 130 by keesan on Thu Sep 6 19:55:14 2007:

We have one, but don't see any reason to make apple butter instead of apple
sauce.  It wastes a lot of heat and generates a lot of steam, which makes the
dehumidifier run more.  The dehydrator also generates steam but now it is
steaming the outdoors and not generating heat.  We have made pear butter.
The pears need preserving during warm weather.  It is a lot more energy
efficient to just freeze everything (or solar dry it), as well as easier.


#47 of 130 by edina on Thu Sep 6 20:26:00 2007:

Put the crockpot outside.  That's what I do in the summer here.


#48 of 130 by keesan on Thu Sep 6 22:26:18 2007:

We have a glass bowl that goes into the solar reflector which heats it to 140
or so, and could leave the top ajar, but I don't see any reason to make apple
butter.  I like dried apples and they are less work.
Jim is going to try a pressure cooker in the reflector, and a bread pan.
The reflector/oven are on loan from friends.
We should learn to bake raccoon, opossum, groundhog, and squirrel.  Only got
two skunks so far.  Two nights ago some very large critter pulled the trap
door open, bending some rather sturdy metal.  I suggested it was a ground hog
that can get through tree roots.  Today just a small opossum.


#49 of 130 by edina on Thu Sep 6 22:34:42 2007:

For a second, I thought you were serious.

And apple butter is good on bread.  That's why you'd make it.


#50 of 130 by denise on Fri Sep 7 00:51:30 2007:

Yep, I love apple butter on bread. I haven't had any in ages and ages,
though.  I think I  may try making apple sauce as well as apple butter
[if I can get enough apples this fall]. I  like and would eat them both;
*that's* why you bother to make something--if you like it  well enough.
If ya don't think its worth the trouble, that's fine, too. If you enjoy
it  somewhat and don't want to heat/steam up the house using just a
crock pot, then check  out the farmer's market; they often have people
that sell it [and often, in various-sized  jars. Then you'd have a jar
to recycle].


#51 of 130 by keesan on Fri Sep 7 04:03:55 2007:

We eat bread with applesauce.  Rane's windfall apples (with pink flesh) made
the best applesauce, tasting of cinnamon with nothing added.  We put
applesauce or dried apples on our oatmeal.  Potato pancakes are a pain to make
but once a year we have them with applesauce.  Applesauce with leftover rice
is a good dessert.


#52 of 130 by denise on Fri Sep 7 12:26:25 2007:

Sindi, how do you go about drying apples?  I enjoy dried apples,
especially the ones I got  at a vegeatable/fruit type market not too
long ago.

And I agree that potato pancakes are good with applesauce; they're good
with sour  cream, too. I remember growing up, my dad used to make potato
pancakes but for  whatever reason, we'd have them on a piece of bread
and then topped with a bit of salt  and/or pepper.


#53 of 130 by keesan on Fri Sep 7 15:01:23 2007:

Fruit dryer (dehydrator) for dried apples, pears, tomatoes, etc.  It blows
heated area through ventilated trays.  Commercial ones are peeled.  They don't
need peeling to dry.  Pears do, they don't dry well otherwise.


#54 of 130 by edina on Fri Sep 7 16:09:10 2007:

I watched Alton Brown make a homemade food dehydrator with HVAC 
airfilters, bungee cords and a box fan.  His zeal for having kitchen 
appliances that can do more than one thing led to his homemade 
invention.  You put the fruits between a paper towel, then put that 
between two air filters (you can obviously do more than this - he had 
stacked together about 5 air filters with fruit between them), bungee 
them together, then stick them in front of a fan.  About 4 hours 
later, he was done.  It waas fascinating to me.


#55 of 130 by keesan on Fri Sep 7 16:55:50 2007:

Sounds clever, but the paper towels would slow down air flow.  Someone offered
us a homemade model about 5' high by 3' wide and deep.  You are supposed to
add heat when you dry things, starting at 90 or more, so the above method
would require a hot day (or reflectors again).  Over the last half hour raise
it gradually to 140 to kill spores or eggs.  Starting off at that temperature
would cause the outside to dry first and keep the inside moist, and it would
spoil.
Not a good drying day today, even for laundry.


#56 of 130 by edina on Fri Sep 7 17:24:40 2007:

Maybe it wasn't paper towel...I'd have to watch it again to be sure.

Alton Brown makes me go "squee!" in terms of fandom.


#57 of 130 by keesan on Fri Sep 7 20:03:40 2007:

Who/what is Alton Brown?


#58 of 130 by edina on Fri Sep 7 20:15:24 2007:

He's the host of Good Eats on the Food Network.  Very into explaining 
the science of foods.


#59 of 130 by denise on Sat Sep 8 01:16:43 2007:

<<Fruit dryer (dehydrator) for dried apples, pears, tomatoes, etc.  It
blows heated area through ventilated trays.>>

And that doesn't cause more heat and energy usage than crock pots?  [I'm
trying to  understand some of the 'logic' you're using in what you will
and will not use in the house,  or even outdoors.  But also, I like the
concept of making dried fruit but don't have the  funds nor the extra
space of a food dehydrator.]


#60 of 130 by keesan on Sat Sep 8 01:48:36 2007:

Yes, dehydrators waste energy if you plug them in and blow hot air around,
which is why I put ours outside in the solar reflector instead.  The tomatoes
were not getting dry since no air was circulating, so Jim put some tape around
the bottom of a computer fan to keep it from sitting right on top of the hole
in the dehydrator and blocking it, and it pulled air through the 110 degree
dehydrator and things worked perfectly  If I aimed it directly at the sun it
was up to 140.  I adjusted the angle frequently to follow the sun (or not
quite follow it in mid day to keep the temperature below 120).

Our dehydrator is about 16" across and a foot high.   
We have also made fruit leather from the sauced fruit.  First Jim cut some
round sheets of a parchment-paper like plastic that fit over the center
projection on each rack, and spread the sauce onto those neatly.  When it is
leathery you roll up the sheets and freeze them, or refrigerate and eat
within a month or so.  Or don't refrigerator and keep some place cool and eat
within a couple of weeks.


#61 of 130 by denise on Sat Sep 8 13:02:27 2007:

So where else are there apple orchards in the southeastern Mi area that
you may have  checked out?  There are a couple websites that list
orchards by state [and then regions  withhin the state] but I'm not sure
how up to date the lists are].  My dad was saying that it  was an
orchard in S.Lyon that we used to go to-but said that it closed a number
of years  ago and the land was sold to a developer [what a waste, huh?].
 On thee web-lists, they  do menion an orchard in SLyon but I'm assuming
its a different one.  

I hear that the one in Dexter is a popular one but I haven't been.  


#62 of 130 by slynne on Sat Sep 8 16:36:54 2007:

Erwins is a popular orchard in South Lyon at the corner of Pontiac Trail
and Silver Lake Rd. 

http://www.erwinorchards.com/

They used to have a separate store like Wiards does but a few years ago
they sold it and the land it was on to a developer. It is possible that
is what your dad is thinking of. The main orchard is still there but it
is behind the new CVS drug store so it is, perhaps, less visable. 


#63 of 130 by cmcgee on Sat Sep 8 16:42:44 2007:

We might want to go to the traditional "After the Grexwalk" lunch when
everyone meets up at the Dexter Cider Mill.

IIRC, there are apples as well as apple-related products there, in
addition to the cider.


#64 of 130 by denise on Sun Sep 9 00:32:03 2007:

Oooh, that would be fun. Especially if we made it a trip on a Sunday
instead!?  Please,  please, pretty please??


#65 of 130 by denise on Sun Sep 9 20:39:30 2007:

Do any of you have recipes for easy apple pie or apple cake? I'm not
sure what the going  prices are for apples this year but I'm hoping
they're reasonable enough for me to try  making lots of things... 
Especially the applesauce and perhaps the apple butter, apple  cake
would be good, too, for a change from pie.  And cider, I can't go
through the fall  without any cider.


#66 of 130 by cmcgee on Sun Sep 9 21:22:06 2007:

Apple pie is extremely easy.  Make (buy) a pie crust. For a 9 inch pie
pan, cut up apples until you have 4 or 5 cups.  About 7 apples. 
Sprinkle them with 2 tablespoons lemon juice.


Mix 1 cup of sugar (use a mixture of brown and white) with a tablespoon
of flour, and 1/2 teaspoon each of nutmeg and cinnamon.


Place the cut apples in the pastry-lined pie pan.  Sprinkle apple slices
with sugar and flour mixture.  Lay top crust over apples and crimp along
the edges with the bottom crust.  Cut a couple vents in the top crust to
let the steam out.  

Bake in a pre-heated 400 F. oven for about 35 or 40 minutes.

Let set for about 15 minutes after removing from oven.  

Enjoy!

Early American settlers served fruit pies as part of breakfast, so don't
feel guilty substituting it for your cereal and fruit in the morning.

 


#67 of 130 by keesan on Sun Sep 9 22:51:22 2007:

We make apple pie without added sugar since we like the taste of apples.  Or
simply microwave the apples and eat them, sometimes with dried apricots.
We barbecued a couple in foil at the lake in someone's leftover coals.


#68 of 130 by denise on Mon Sep 10 00:23:10 2007:

Sounds easy enough; thanks Colleen!

Any suggestions for a dutch apple pie?


#69 of 130 by denise on Wed Sep 12 22:19:39 2007:

I was taking care of my niece for a few hours last night. When I left,
my  SIL gave me some apples they had gotten from Eriwn's Orchard over
the  weekend - as well as tomatoes from their garden. Gotta love this
fresh  stuff, huh?  So today, on my way home from an appt., I picked me
up a big  bag of apples, too. This is in anticipation for making up some
of Mary's  applesauce and some apple butter. If there's any apples left
[which there  might be, since my crock pot is smaller than was mentioned
in the recipe],  then perhaps I can make a pie or two.  I just need to
plan in a few more  ingredients into my grocery budget [brown sugar,
lemon juice, and maybe  even the special ingredient Mary's talked abou]
and then if I do any pies,  then I need to get the crust as well as bag
of flour.  Time [and then  money] will determine how soon I can get this
stuff done.


#70 of 130 by mary on Thu Sep 13 02:33:39 2007:

I'll bring some Calvados to the HH for ya.  


#71 of 130 by denise on Sun Sep 16 01:15:34 2007:

I now have the required ingredients for making the applesauce [thanks, 
Mary, for the 'special ingredient to try out] and I hope to get to it 
tomorrow or Monday.  Mary, do you think, since the Calvados is so 
exxpensive, that maybe some of the apple or cinnamon liquors or schnapps
 type thing would work in a similiar fashion?


#72 of 130 by cmcgee on Sun Sep 16 12:40:12 2007:

Calvados is an apple brandy.  An apple liquor or schnapps might be a
good substitute.  Hard cider might also substitute.  

If you use any of those, I would also suggest using a bit of undiluted
frozen apple juice concentrate as well.  

In fact you might even find that a bit of vodka added to the apple juice
would make a fair substitute.  


#73 of 130 by mary on Sun Sep 16 13:10:47 2007:

I suspect schnapps might be tasty here but I've never tried it.

Try it with the Calvados and go from there.  If you find the taste too 
intense then I'd just leave all alcohol out.  By far, Calvados will be the 
smoothest, least harsh, of all possible alcohol additions, in my opinion.


#74 of 130 by denise on Sun Sep 16 21:37:10 2007:

I have a batch cooking away right now. My crock pot is a 3 qt one, so I 
somewhat cut down the other ingredients.  It's been simmering away on 
low for about 9 hours so far. It's cooked down [in amount] by about 1/3 
or so and it's a bit more 'liquidy' than thicker as the store-brought 
kind of applesauce is. Perhaps for the last hour or two, I might cook it
 with the lid off to see if it'll thicken up a bit more. It smells
great,  though, so regarless, I think it'll taste just fine.

I do have enough apples left over to do at least one more batch [maybe 
with a few apples left over to hold onto until I manage to get some 
more]. The decision with the next batch will have to be if I want more 
applesauce [to freeze] or to try some of the applebutter. I'll see what 
I'm in the mood for next time.

And when I run out of the calvados, I'll see if I can get some other 
apple-flavor alcoholic beverage. If not, perhaps a touch of some other 
kind of flavoring might be good, too [like some kind of extract or 
something]. Or I can just use the other listed ingredients.


#75 of 130 by denise on Sun Sep 16 21:38:25 2007:

[And most of the apples I'm using are golden ginger [or something like 
that] along with a couple gala apples that my SIL gave me.]


#76 of 130 by mary on Sun Sep 16 22:21:38 2007:

It isn't until it's done and I start stirring it that I see how much it's 
really reduced in volume.  And it will most certainly thicken when cooled.   
If you like it chunky, don't mash it up.  If you like it smooth, have at 
it.  This freezes very well.

I am so curious to see if you like the finished product.  And doesn't the 
house smell like grandma's at Christmas?



#77 of 130 by keesan on Mon Sep 17 00:22:57 2007:

Today we biked about 10 miles to pick apples from three trees near Whitmore
Lake Rd (and also got two dozen brown eggs, from the Rhode Island Red chickens
who came out to observe us).  Jim has a fancy red-enameled metal large apple
picker gadget which he attached to some 1" grey electrical pvc conduit, 5',
with another 5' piece fitting into the joint.  He screwed an improvised carrier
for this gadget to the raccoon cage on his bike and it only stuck up about
2' above the bike.  The raccoon did not comment.  (He finally caught the
monster that ripped the cage open twice before in the past week, and stole
food out of it the night before last, by reinforcing the cage three ways).
About 1/3 of the apples he aimed at jumped off onto the soft grass.  We are
going to sauce the ones with a lot of bad spots and refrigerate the rest to
have with oatmeal all winter.  I dried a couple jars full of the sour green
summer apples (with electricity, the heat was welcome this weekend).
There is another tree along the way with unripe apples that we will check next
week, and two trees south of town in a parking lot that we generally pick in
mid to late October, one of them an excellent keeper.  A few on north campus
and near the hospital.  Some up the street at the nursing home (but no pears
this year).  I might eventually make fruit leather out of some of the apple
sauce.  Two cups sauce, one cup xylitol (sugar which does not cause tooth
decay), dry in the dehydrator after spreading about 1/2" thick on a rollup
thin plastic mat that Jim cut to fit over the grating.

There are lots of other abandoned apple trees around here.  A few with larger
apples behind a doctor's parking lot where the neighbor takes her kids. 
Nobody else seems to want free apples that need a bit of trimming.  We fill
three refrigerators by October, with apples, cabbages, ripening tomatoes. 
I have tried carrots in sand in the root cellar.  Apples keep best at about
35 degrees.


#78 of 130 by denise on Mon Sep 17 09:54:18 2007:

I love this applesauce; I definitely don't want to go to the store-
brought stuff any more!  :-)

The only thing is that it did reduce in amount a lot more than I thought
 it would. With starting out with a full 3 quarts and almost 12 hours
set  on low on the crockpot, I ended up filling three 1 3/4 cup
containers  between 1/2--2/3 full [Last night I put 2 of the containers
in the  freezer; I'm eating some [all, maybe] for an early breakfast
now].   Makes me wish I had a bigger crock pot! :-)  Mary, have you ever
tried  this recipe but cooked it less than the 12 hours? I'm wondering
how the  flavor would be if I did cook it less, before it would reduce
as much  [though I bet it wouldn't taste as good].

I have another somewhat related question, too. I haven't done a whole 
lot of cooking with crock pots--only stuff like stew or something that 
only takes a few hours.  So with a recipe like this that simmers/cooks 
for 12 hours [or the apple butter that would go for 24], how long can we
 safely go without stirring it?  The sauce was simmering/bubbling almost
 the whole time-so I stirred it almost every 2 hours or so-probably more
 than I needed to. So would I be ok in letting this cook away over night
 without worrying about stirring it up?  I've had stuff simmer in
regular  pots that wouldn't be able to simmer that much and not get away
 withsemi-frequent stirring. I do realize that crock pots are somewhat 
different; I just don't have that much experience with them yet.



#79 of 130 by denise on Mon Sep 17 09:58:57 2007:

Are all the trees your picking from, Sindi, on public property and thus,
 free for the taking?  For me, I'd feel rather uncomfortable picking
that  many apples to fill 3 refridgerators full. Even if the trees
seemed  abandoned, it seems like some of them, at least, would still be
on private  property.  


#80 of 130 by mary on Mon Sep 17 12:08:17 2007:

I'm so glad you like the applesauce, Denise.  I've made batches that only 
cooked for around eight hours, and they were fine, although maybe a little 
chunkier if I used lots of Granny Smiths.  That variety seems to hold up 
the longest.  I don't remember if the end volume was significantly more, 
but the less reduced it is the milder the flavor. So you can see how there 
is room to making this "to taste".

As to how it would go making applebutter in your crockpot - it 
depends.  Up until this year I had a really old Rival crockpot.
Like, from the seventies.  It would only break into a visible simmer
if it was on high for hours and hours, covered.  I now have a new
crockpot and it simmers on low, no problem.  I did a bit of research
on this and crockpots have changed over time - getting hotter.  Too
bad, really.  I think it was a food safety thing.

When I make applebutter in my new crockpot I'll have the apples ready to 
go first thing, early morning.  And let it rip until bedtime. I'll then 
simply turn it off and let it cool until morning. That would give me a 
good 16 hours of cooking, which I think would do the job at that higher 
heat.  I also don't stir it at all while it's cooking but not because I 
think that's a problem (the literature says that's only an issue with 
older crockpots) but because I'm into appreciating the "hands-off" 
crockpot feature.


#81 of 130 by mary on Mon Sep 17 12:14:22 2007:

Regarding your stirring question - I suspect that the more you stir the
more you need to stir as every time you lift the lid you lose moisture
and the product gets thicker.  Maybe.  All I can tell you is I don't 
stir this recipe from the time I put the apples in the pot until after
it's been off and cooled some, and sticking has never been a problem.

But then that was with my old crockpot.  Things may change. ;-)

I'm going to make a batch within the next couple of weeks.  I'll report
back.


#82 of 130 by keesan on Mon Sep 17 15:08:28 2007:

The apples we collected were falling on the ground.  Half of what we got was
windfalls.  On previous occasions we had picked up the non-rotten ones and
thrown all the rest into a small pile, which is helpful to the people who mow.
It is also helpful to them that more apples do not fall.  Obviously nobody
was picking them or picking them up.  Americans do not like apples with bad
spots, which most of these have.  The tree we got most of the apples from is
next to a parking lot of a restaurant which is closed and for sale.  We used
to pick pears from a local pizza place but they chopped down the tree because
it was dropping pears on the parking lot and was messy.  We also picked up
fallen branches and threw them into a pile.  The other tree was dropping
apples onto the road.  There were lots of apples under it.  


#83 of 130 by glenda on Mon Sep 17 15:34:04 2007:

You are still trespassing and breaking the law.  The property may be for
sale or appear abandoned, but it does belong to someone.  You could be
arrested if someone called you into the police while you were there
picking up the fruit.  I would never do such a thing without contacting
the owners of record and getting explicit permission. 


#84 of 130 by keesan on Mon Sep 17 16:31:54 2007:

You do what you like, and we will do what we like.  We waved at several people
in trucks going in and out of the parking lot and they all smiled at us.
We have asked permission to collect apples from trees in people's yards
(always given gladly - less for them to pick up before mowing).   We got
permission from a manager at an apartment complex (she wanted us to sign a
release in case we fell out of a tree) and brought her a few of the best
apples.  Nobody has every objected and most were grateful.  


#85 of 130 by slynne on Mon Sep 17 17:19:31 2007:

resp:83 You gotta admit, though, that the odds of anyone calling the
cops on someone picking up old apples off the ground are pretty close to
zero. 


#86 of 130 by keesan on Mon Sep 17 23:26:38 2007:

We also got permission to pick cherries, three times.  Can one trespass in
a public parking lot?  


#87 of 130 by denise on Tue Sep 18 00:54:56 2007:

That's true, Mary, about the flavor being milder if it wasn't 'reduced'
as  much. And I do love the flavor of the stuff I made, so I'll stick
with  that. Or, perhaps, take some of it out at about 7-8 hours and let
the rest  go the full time and compare the two.  And I'll let it go
without taking  the lid off and stirring so much, too.  :-)

I thought I had to go do some stuff tomorrow but found out this evening 
that it needs to be postponed. So tomorrow I'll try and do another
batch.  [and will also find something to fix up using the small tomatoes
that I  got from my SIL last week].



#88 of 130 by denise on Wed Sep 19 21:28:15 2007:

I made my 2nd batch of applesauce yesterday.  I really packed those 
chopped apples in there tight and filled it to the brim so that the 
cover had *just* enough room to sit on top of the pot without any heat 
getting out.  And per the above suggestions, I didn't stir it at all. It
 cooked for maybe 10 hours, then after turning it off, I let it sit in 
the pot for another hour or so to start cooling off. I then finally took
 the lid off and stirred... And as a result, I had so much more than
last  time, probably double! It's a bit more 'liquidy' than the first
one, but  that's ok. I had a taste of it last night as I filled my
containers [was  still nice and warm] but haven't tried any yet today.
Will do so with  dinner this evening. I currently have one bowl in the
'fridge and added  4 more to the freezer [with the 1 3/4 cup containers
almost full; the 2  in the freezeer from the last batch don't have quite
as much]. 

 I'm going to enjoy this stuff--and will continue to make more until my 
supply of apples run out. I do have somee, but not enough for the 3 qt 
crock pot. But sometimes my dad brings home some fruit for me every week
 from the grocery store [while I take care of my mom while he's gone].
So  hopefully, as the apples come in and are on-sale, he'll get some
more.  Hmm, perhaps if I entice him with some sauce I've already made,
perhaps  that would ensure he'll provide the needed fruit.  :-)  And of
course,  whenever I get out to the grocery store again, I'll get some,
too, if  they're on salee...



#89 of 130 by keesan on Thu Sep 20 02:54:20 2007:

We only cook ours for about half an hour, until it is soft.


#90 of 130 by mary on Thu Sep 20 17:58:43 2007:

I find it thickens when refrigerated.  Consistency also varies some
with the type of apples used.  But I've never had a batch come out
as thin as Motts natural, which I consider decent jar applesauce.


#91 of 130 by denise on Fri Sep 21 00:59:45 2007:

When I heated up a portion of the applesauce earilier today, I added a
dab  of carmel [the kind for dipping apples and such into]. It was good,
though  a tad bit on the sweet side [though nothing wrong with a bit of
sweetness  in life, eh?]


#92 of 130 by edina on Fri Sep 21 15:22:33 2007:

That's why you serve it with ice cream, to cut the sweetness.


#93 of 130 by cmcgee on Fri Sep 21 16:05:38 2007:

Heads up on the annual Grex Walk to the Dexter Cider Mill, with lunch at
the Lighthouse Cafe.  

See Grexwalk item in Agora.




#94 of 130 by denise on Fri Sep 21 17:17:36 2007:

So sad that the Cider Mill trip has to be on a Saturday. :-(  I'll have
to  go on my own some day down the road...  Let me know his the Sat.
trip  goes!


#95 of 130 by denise on Mon Oct 20 22:17:39 2008:

Has anyone done anything special with this year's crop of apples yet?
Any good recipes for apple crisp or anything else simple?  I'm going to
be copying the crock pot applesauce recipe; I haven't made any yet this
year... I'll have to try finding some of that apple brandy; I never did
find any last fall. I know Mary said it's expensive, but the finished
product does taste sooo much nicer than without it...


#96 of 130 by denise on Mon Oct 20 22:20:51 2008:

And what kind of apples do y'all like to eat and/or cook with?  

I recall using different types of apples in the various batches of apple
sauce that I made last year; some I liked better than the others, I just
don't remember which was which!  

With lunch, I had a honey crisp apple; these are juicy and really good,
as far as I'm concerned--at least for eating plain. Dunno how they are
for cooking.


#97 of 130 by keesan on Mon Oct 20 23:15:14 2008:

We just went apple picking on Eisenhower Blvd near some major intersection.
Found two good trees but the air is really awful there.  We stuck it out long
enough to get windfalls and also picked rose hips and wild grapes on some
highway overpass with trucks roaring by.  We just eat them, or if there are
a lot with rotten parts, we dry them or make and freeze applesauce.  We cut
up apples into our oatmeal, or sometimes cook with cabbage and onions, or even
microwave them with nuts (this year hickory instead of black walnut) and anise
and coriander (ground up).  Macs are mushy with touch skins and relatively
tasteless.  What else is for sale in stores?


#98 of 130 by mary on Tue Oct 21 12:33:18 2008:

In my seasonal cooking fall means soups and applesauce.  My plan is to go 
to Farmer's Market tomorrow and get a huge bag of mixed apple seconds and 
make up a batch this weekend.  I used the last container of last year's 
batch just about a month ago.  Then I'll cook-up some curried butternut 
squash soup (again, with apples) and pronounce it autumn. ;-)

I'm planning to attend the Grex BOD meeting tonight and I'll bring along a 
dose of Calvados for you to try this recipe.  You really don't want to buy 
a bottle until you know you like it.


#99 of 130 by mary on Tue Oct 21 12:34:34 2008:

Actually, I think it's "Farmers' Market", but who cares?


#100 of 130 by denise on Tue Oct 21 14:42:00 2008:

Mary, I've tried the applesauce both ways and I definitely prefer it
*with* our secret ingredient... :-)


#101 of 130 by denise on Tue Oct 21 14:46:13 2008:

Speaking of the Farmer's Market, what are their hours on Wednesdays? I
have an appt. late Wed. mornings; perhaps I'll be able to check out
their apple selection in the afternoon. 

Does anyone know if the Ypsilanti Farmer's Market still happening on
Tuesday afternoons? I know they don't have it all year; I just don't
know when it'll end for this year.  [Does the Saturday one go all year?]


#102 of 130 by denise on Wed Oct 6 01:28:27 2010:

It's apple-picking time... So what are your favorite apple varieties for
 eating? for cooking/baking?  And what/where are your favorite orchards 
these days?


#103 of 130 by denise on Wed Oct 6 01:31:08 2010:

For the past 2-3 years, my favorite apple for eating is Honey Crisp. Am 
not sure which varieties are best for the crock pot applesauce, though.
I  do need to keep better track of what works and what doesn't when I
make  each batch...


#104 of 130 by jadecat on Wed Oct 6 01:41:23 2010:

I agree with Denise, my favorite eating apples are Honey Crisp. :)


#105 of 130 by keesan on Wed Oct 6 02:00:33 2010:

Our favorite apples are in a parking lot but this has been a bad year for
local apples and there may not be any.  No apricots either.  Good year for
pears and cherries.


#106 of 130 by slynne on Wed Oct 6 15:01:24 2010:

Oh man. I bought some Honey Crisp apples at the Farmer's Market last
week and they are seriously the best apples I have ever eaten. I have
the last one in my lunch today. Unfortunately, I don't have to time to
hit the Farmer's Market today or Saturday but hopefully the ones next
week will be just as good. 


#107 of 130 by denise on Wed Oct 6 18:27:38 2010:

Kroger's has some Honey Crisp apples; this week's ad says they're 
$1.69/pound, IIRC.


#108 of 130 by omni on Wed Oct 6 21:55:09 2010:

I like Jonagold, Jonamac, and Macs. 


#109 of 130 by denise on Sun Oct 10 22:44:22 2010:

I have some applesauce cooking away in the crockpot; the house sure
smells  good!  I started it later than I had hoped to so I started it on
high but  turned it down to low after several hours.  Will check the
status of it  soon; I'm getting hungry! Will have to try it with my
dinner.  

And before my next batch, I need to find me a bottle of Calvados.


#110 of 130 by mary on Sun Oct 10 23:16:25 2010:

I'm right behind you with plans to make up a batch soon.  First, I need to 
get to Farmers Market for a big bag of mixed seconds and then wait for a 
cold day.  But I'm aroma envious at this point. ;-)


#111 of 130 by keesan on Sun Oct 10 23:54:43 2010:

Applesauce does not need much cooking (it is not apple butter).


#112 of 130 by denise on Mon Oct 11 01:40:22 2010:

I think I had the crockpot on high for too long [over 3 hours], the 
applesauce cooked down to a somewhat smaller amount than I remember it 
doing in the past. :-(

I haven't been to the Farmer's Market in quite some time, so I've never 
tried a mixed bag of apples. Well, I did use up a couple apples my SIL 
gave me, I forget what kind they were. The rest of this batch were 
Macintosh apples.


#113 of 130 by keesan on Mon Oct 11 12:55:15 2010:

You made apple butter.  20 minutes or less might have been enough for apple
sauce, at lower temperature.  You just need to break down the cell walls. 
I assume you cored and peeled them first.


#114 of 130 by denise on Mon Oct 11 13:25:19 2010:

I did core the apples and then chopped them up without peeling them. It 
works out fine without peeling the apples.


#115 of 130 by keesan on Mon Oct 11 13:49:55 2010:

Next time keep an eye on them and when things turn liquid turn it off.
Stirring every few minutes would help too.


#116 of 130 by mary on Mon Oct 11 14:34:45 2010:

Your applesauce will thicken after cooling due to the natural pectin in 
the apples.  Sometimes I peel the apples and sometimes I don't.  I always 
make it in the crockpot, cooking it for 8 - 10 hours.  I'm often reluctant 
to turn it off because of the aroma it lends the house. After 8 hours I 
get applesauce that's at the soft & chunky stage.  How soft and how chunky 
is the result of how many granny smiths were in the mix as they stay 
intact far longer than any other variety, I've found.  If I leave it on 
overnight (24 hours total on low) I get applebutter.  


#117 of 130 by slynne on Mon Oct 11 16:38:05 2010:

Do you just throw a bunch of apples in the crock pot or do you add water
too? 


#118 of 130 by denise on Mon Oct 11 17:33:18 2010:

Periodically stirring crockpot applesauce will reduce the overall volume
 of applesauce; I found that out the first time I tried this recipe
[where  I stirred it every couple hours].

I love that aroma, too, Mary. I wish it would last longer than it does!

Lynne, the recipe is an easy one; the only part that takes time is 
chopping up the apples [I don't peel them beforehand]. The only other 
ingredients are cinnamon, brown sugar, lemon juice, and if you have it, 
calvados. The actual recipe, iirc, is in resp:1 . I have to adjust my 
amounts since my crockpot is only 3 quarts.


#119 of 130 by slynne on Mon Oct 11 17:49:12 2010:

Thanks denise! Do you know if the sugar is in the recipe for any reason
other than flavor. I am avoiding sugar and would like to make it either
without sugar altogether if I had a sweet variety of apple or with an
artificial sweetener. That is kind of the point for me since I don't
really enjoy cooking. I do like apple sauce though but all the store
bought kinds seem to have a lot of added sugar. 


#120 of 130 by mary on Mon Oct 11 18:18:26 2010:

Answering for Denise, if that's okay.  I think the brown sugar yields a 
bit of flavor, but only a bit when you think of how many portions this 
recipe makes.  So, if I were avoiding added sugar I'd not hesitate to 
leave it out.  If the end product is a little too tart then add your 
favorite artificial sweetener to taste.  I'd not cook the applesauce with 
artificial sweetener as they tend to break down and get bitter with heat.


#121 of 130 by keesan on Mon Oct 11 19:28:42 2010:

We never add sugar to fruit (other than when we made self-preserving jam).


#122 of 130 by slynne on Mon Oct 11 20:11:15 2010:

Thanks mary. I haven't yet cooked with artificial sweeteners but have
heard that Splenda can hold up to it. I think I'll try some without the
sugar but with sweet apples and see how it goes :) 


#123 of 130 by denise on Mon Oct 11 20:50:42 2010:

Do let us know how it turns out, Lynne. There's not a lot of sugar in
the  recipe but still would be nice if it worked without it.


#124 of 130 by slynne on Mon Oct 11 21:35:21 2010:

We'll see. I would say that there is about a 50/50 chance that I'll make
it this weekend. I might just decide to eat the apples whole and raw as
I like them that way too and it is easier ;) 


#125 of 130 by edina on Mon Oct 11 22:27:54 2010:

While I'm not making applesauce, I will say that muscavado brown sugar 
is pretty awesome and a little goes a long way, so you get more bang 
for your sweetening buck...


#126 of 130 by mary on Mon Oct 11 22:44:35 2010:

One more thing on the applesauce - it freezes beautifully.

I've been playing around with Agave syrup as a substitute for granulated 
sugar and honey.  It's calorie equivalent but I've heard it falls lower on 
the glycemic index.  Mostly, I like the flavor, which is closer to that of 
maple syrup or molasses.  Really like it on swiss-style oatmeal.


#127 of 130 by slynne on Tue Oct 12 01:17:31 2010:

I just bought some Agave syrup and have found that even though it is
equivalent to sugar in terms of calories, it isn't in terms of
sweetness. I've so far only tried it in my tea but find I can get away
with using about 2/3 as much as I used sugar or honey. I also have heard
that it falls lower on the glycemic index which is why I thought to try
it too. 


#128 of 130 by keesan on Tue Oct 12 01:55:31 2010:

Licorice makes things taste sweet without adding calories.  So do artichokes.


#129 of 130 by denise on Sat Oct 12 14:43:49 2013:

So it's apple season again. My favorite apple these past few years have 
been the Honeycrisp apple... It's been a couple years since I've made
the  applesauce that Mary posted early in this item but hope to at some
point  after I get more settled after my move last week. My crockpot is
fairly  small which is just as well since my fridge/freezer is on the
smaller  side, too.

So what kinds of things have people been doing these past 2-3 years or 
plan on doing this fall?


#130 of 130 by keesan on Sun Oct 13 22:39:23 2013:

I have been picking up the green/yellow crunchy apples that fall off our
neighbor's tree and drying them.  They are tart enough to make excellent dried
apples once you cut out the bruised and buggy spots.  Doing the same with our
Seckel pears, and a few plums and peaches.  The very ripe pears make pear
sauce, the very green ones cooked pears, and I freeze both.  We will have pear
candy for a couple of years from this year's bumper crop.


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