Chuck Zumbrun

Tales from Skunk Hill

Apple Butter

My little apple trees, after getting caught by a late frost last spring, are bearing apples with a vengeance this year.

Laden Apple Trees
Laden Apple Trees

There were a few apples that had dropped off the trees, and several branches that were getting ready to break from the weight of all the apples. I picked those to save the branches and ended up with about 7 pounds of apples. Owen watched the picking with a thoughtful eye.

Pensive Owen
Thoughtful Owen

So what to do with 7 pounds of apples? I love apple butter, but my only experience with apple butter has been in making huge batches in a cast iron kettle over a wood fire. Stirring 7 pounds of apples all day didn’t seem like a winning proposition to me. I did a quick on-line search and sure enough, there are endless slow cooker recipes on-line for apple butter.

The apples filled up our little slow cooker.

Pressed Down, Running Over
Pressed Down, Running Over

After cooking for 10 hours it looked like this.

IMG_20130815_171513_324

Wow! Looks like apple butter! I was shocked, I figured it would just be pale, like apple sauce.

Here’s the recipe, just in case you have 6 pounds of apples you’re wondering what to do with.

Apple Butter
Makes enough for you and some to give away

6 1/2 pounds apples – peeled, cored and sliced
1 cup granulated sugar
1 cup light brown sugar, lightly packed
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
A dash of ground cloves
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

Put the apples in a big bowl. In another bowl, combine sugars, cinnamon, nutmeg cloves and salt. Pour the mixture over the apples and mix well.

Put it all in a slow cooker and cook covered on low for 8 hours.

Stir the vanilla in.

Cook another 2 hours uncovered.

Let it cool and freeze or can.

Now. I don’t like spicy apple butter. The recipe above is about a third of the spice most recipes recommend and I’d do it with even less next time. Likewise with the sugars, my apples were really tart and that amount of sugar was about right. I’d probably start with less sugar next time and add more if needed at the end.

It’s time to make waffles! Waffles and apple butter, mmmm!

6 responses to “Apple Butter”

  1. Mom Avatar
    Mom

    Do you remember making apple butter using Gary Wright’s recipe that used 30 gallons of cider and bushels of apples? The men stirred and the women brought food for the crowd that worked from dawn to evening. When it was done,we had 7 gallons of apple butter to divide among 7 couples and a pint of unsweetened for Everett Jones. We sure did things the hard way, but it was home grown fun.

  2. Missy Avatar
    Missy

    Wow, that sounds like a major undertaking. How did you have something big enough to hold all that? (That question is for your mom.)

  3. chuck Avatar
    chuck

    Yes, I remember that. When I was looking at these apples I thought, “making apple butter would be fun,” but the thought of standing by a fire stirring 3 pints of apple butter all day seemed a bit much. That’s why I was so happy to discover the slow cooker recipe.

    Missy, we used a cast iron butchering kettle back in the day. It’s still sitting in the shed at home. I don’t know what it holds, but I’d expect Mom is right, you could put 30 gallons of cider plus apples in it.

    I had waffles for breakfast this morning with apple butter. It was delicious!

  4. Missy Avatar
    Missy

    Way to rub in that you have fresh apple butter. 🙂

    I am trying to imagine that kettle. Wonder if it’s like the kettle they used to use at the Johnny Appleseed Festival to make parched corn.
    Don’t blame you for going the slow cooker route.

  5. anne Avatar
    anne

    What a great idea to make apple butter in the crock pot! Glad to know I can over come my childhood conditioning of what is proper quantities.

  6.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    Chuck, everyone is telling me I can’t make apple butter in a cast iron butchering kettle but you said as a child you did

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