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Easy No-Waste Applesauce, Skins On and Unsweetened

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If you find yourself with more apples on your hands than you can eat before they head south, make this disappearing applesauce to ensure no fruit goes to waste. You’ll save money, keep food out of landfill where it emits planet-heating methane and you’ll eat something tasty!

I made the batch pictured in this post with discounted, not-so-pretty, local apples from the farmers’ market that cost 60 percent less than their “pretty” counterparts. Sometimes I can’t tell the difference between the two. Subjectively pretty or not, they all taste amazing.

I didn’t sweeten this and, except for one rough-skinned apple, didn’t peel the apples. After cooking, I puréed in the skins with an immersion blender. But peel the apples if you prefer. Had I bought non-organic or shiny waxed apples typically found in grocery stores (the FDA says this edible wax is safe), I’d have peeled them and composted the skins.

Applesauce ingredients

Good apple varieties for applesauce

Contenders include:

I used a combination of sweet and sweet-tart apples. If you use tart only, you may prefer to sweeten this applesauce.

Avoid mealy, flavorless varieties such as store-bought Red Delicious apples. Industrial agriculture has bred the flavor out of these in favor of a more profitable, thick-skinned apple that can withstand shipping over long distances. The farmer we buy apples from grows an old-fashioned, actually delicious, Red Delicious apple.

Ready to cook
This yielded six cups but by the time I took a picture of it stored in jars, we had eaten two cups

Applesauce serving ideas

Sourdough discard vegan chocolate cake with applesauce substituted in for half of the oil

Make vinegar with the apple cores (and peels if you peeled)

I stashed the cores and the peel of that one apple had I peeled in the freezer. Once I have amassed a large enough pile of apple scraps, I’ll ferment a batch of apple scrap vinegar. The microbes necessary for the fermentation survive their stint on ice. This vinegar differs from apple cider vinegar and isn’t as strong but it is good stuff and essentially free. Go here for more info and the instructions.

A strong batch of apple scrap vinegar made with apple peels and cores
A potato masher is mashing cooked apple chunks down into chunky applesauce
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Easy, Quick, Unsweetened Applesauce

Course Snack
Prep Time 20 minutes

Ingredients

  • 10 cups bite-size pieces of apples about 10 or 11 medium apples, peeled if desired
  • 2 tablespoons lemon juice juice of 1 lemon
  • 1 small cinnamon stick
  • ½ cup water

Instructions

  • Combine the apples pieces, lemon juice, water and cinnamon stick in a medium-size pot. Bring to a boil and turn down to medium-low heat. Simmer until fork tender, 10 to 20 minutes, depending on the apple variety. Stir occasionally during cooking.
  • Remove the cinnamon stick and mash the apples with a potato masher. If you left the skins on, purée the sauce to incorporate the peels or run it through a food mill to remove them.
  • Store the applesauce in clean jars in the refrigerator. It will keep for up to a week. Or freeze for longer-term storage.

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