Posts Tagged ‘Apple Farm’

All Day Apple Butter

Friday, March 29, 2013

Apple Butter March is the month that begins the transition between a cold blustery winter and the warm sparkle of spring. It’s a time when I clean the fridge and freezers, taking stock of the kitchen pantry and preparing for an end of winter stocking up trip. Bins full of chicken and duck and lamb are removed and counted, assessing our livestock needs for the coming spring and summer. Beef and pork are traded for or purchased from local growers when needed.

It’s a time when the wood pile dwindles, frost protection comes off delicate plants, down blankets are removed from the beds and replaced with lighter weight cotton covers.

It’s a time for moving patio furniture out into the garden, adorning it with plush cushions, waiting for an afternoon of lingering and laziness.

And, it was during this clean out and changing of seasons that I discovered a lone brown bag tucked way in the back of the fridge. With my new job and hours spent on work and farm projects sometimes things go astray and are forgotten about in the rush of the schedule. But, never fear, not much goes to waste on our homestead. That’s just the way we are…frugal to a fault—sometimes.

In this case I wasn’t resurrecting some decimated old piece of produce. Rather, slightly aged heirloom apples too ripe for fresh eating, but nonetheless good enough for cooking. There weren’t many, maybe half a dozen or so left over from an apple farm tour and tasting back when the warmth of summer was fading into the shadows and color of fall.

There were Heaven Scent, a small, dense, eating apple and a few Splendors, another larger, crisp eating apple, and a mystery apple, with dark skin and a slightly pinkish flesh. None were the best for pies or cobbler, but they were flavorful enough to make apple butter.

Fruit butters are kind of a misnomer because there isn’t any butter in them at all. They are highly cooked down spiced fruit that thickens as the moisture is evaporated away. The end result is smooth, spreadable, like room-temperature butter.

Almost any fruit can be made into a butter, but apple is the most common and popular followed by plum, pear and peach. A fall favorite is pumpkin butter that can be spread on bread or used in a variety of baked goods.

The advantage of fruit butters, especially for a small farm like mine, is that they can be made in small batches, using a small amount of fruit. They are also easy to make, use no pectin and use just half the sugar of regular jams or fruit preserves.

Conventional fruit butters tie you to a stove, stirring a bubbling pot for hours. Who has time for that! But, other methods, like the slow cooker, is more “fire and forget”, at least for most of the cooking process. This is the method I used.

Because I wasn’t using the amount of apples called for in the recipe I had to wing it on the spices. But, basically I…

  • Peeled, cored and chopped the apples, and added
  • Sugar
  • Ground anise
  • Ground cinnamon
  • Salt
  • Ground nutmeg
  • Ground ginger
  • Apple cider ( also left over from our tour)
  • Lemon juice

I placed all ingredients in the slow cooker, turned it on low and went about my farm work. By nightfall, I stirred everything well, hit it with my emersion blender, cracked the lid a bit and let it cook down more of the juices. The color was deep mahogany and the smell was nothing short of amazing.

After a few more hours of cooking, my butter was ready to can. Fruit butters are canned the same way you can jam, with a 10-minute water bath to seal the deal. Any butter that won’t fit in the jars can be stored in the fridge and used in the coming week.

When all was finished we ended up with 3 full jars of canned butter and small container for immediate eating. Now we can enjoy the flavors of fall on toast, English muffins, pancakes, waffles and even in quick breads and cakes.

It’s the perfect reminder of a season gone by. But, it’s also a reminder that that season will come again. All you have to do is wait for it.

 

Homemade Applesauce

Thursday, October 27, 2011

We have a tradition this time of October. My sister and I head up the coast, through a small wine region into a secluded valley at the foot of a mountain, kissed by the coastal fog. But, it’s not wine we are tasting. It is apples!

See Canyon is a microclimate that gets the right amount of cold nights; perfect for growing apples this far south. The air is cool and damp from the coastal fog, but that never deters us. We are on a mission you see; to taste apples that we would never be able to sample, even at the Farmer’s Markets.

The orchards are small, organic and each one as unique as the one before. Not like a commercial operation at all. These farms grow over 60 different varieties with names as enticing as Heaven Sent, Splendor, Caville Blanc and Mohawk. Some are great for fresh eating while others stand up well to baking.

Long tables covered with red checkered tablecloths served as tasting stations with more than a dozen varieties to sample. Not all varieties ripen at the same time, but this is still more than we would ever see at home. College students man the tables and are eager to slice off a chunk for us to eat. Some have red skins, some burgundy, some green and some mottled. There are even a few that are black. We had a light breakfast, saving ourselves for this very moment.

Apple farm apples are all different shapes and sizes. Not the uniform specimens found at chain supermarkets. These have dents and creases and bug holes and rough spots near the stem. These are real apples grown by real farmers. Picture perfect is not what it’s all about up here. Taste and texture is all that matters.

After discounting varieties we could get at home we tasted eight varieties that sounded interesting. They were all crispy and juicy, and snapped when we sunk our teeth into each slice. In the end, though, we settled on Heaven Sent, a small, tender, super sweet apple with great storage life, and Splendor, an unusually large, tender, pink apple that stays super crispy when stored in the fridge. We bought 10 pounds of each so we could divide them amongst our households.

The second part of our trip was about tasting this seasons’ apple cider. We can only grow a few varieties of apples on our farm because we don’t get very many chill hours. And, the varieties we do grow are better eating apples than cider apples, so cider hunting is a special treat. Or, should I say necessity?

After we made our way through all the farms and tasted cider from many different apples we bought 8 half-gallon jugs of a blended cider from Creekside Farms. That should keep us going all winter.

Once out of the valley we stopped at a local hotspot for chowder and bread before heading home. Our cider tasting day-trip is a fun fall tradition and the best part is we don’t have to worry about a hangover.

………………………………………………………………………………………………………..

Anytime I have apples that become too soft for fresh eating I make them into a chunky applesauce that’s great along side pork, in oatmeal or as a replacement for bananas in our favorite banana bread recipe. Here’s how I make it: Read the rest of the story »