I have loads of windfall eating apples that are not fully mature and a bit scabby. Can I make them into apple sauce using an unpeeled method? They would be far too fiddly to peel, but I could core and quarter. Ideas anybuddy please?
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I think it would depend if they were the type of eating apples that go soft when you cook them. Some seem to retain their crispness no matter how long they are cooked. I use a metal sieve for rubbing fruit which is easier than a plastic one.
I bought one of these last year. I'd been dithering about getting one for a year or two. It's brilliant, I can peel, slice and core a carrier bag of apples in about 10 minutes. Odd shaped ones sometimes have a nick or two of peel left on, but who cares? I love it, even if it's only used for one month a year.
Location - Leicestershire - Chisit-land
Endless wonder.
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Originally posted by Florence Fennel View PostThanks Bren, do you think I could push them through a sieve? I haven't got a blender or a food processorLocation....East Midlands.
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It's taken me 2 hours. First I didn't peel them, then I chopped them, then I boiled them, then I smashed them all to bits It was the rubbing through the sieve that took me an hour and I now have two pound jars full of apple puree in the freezer and one small t*ware container in the fridge. I'm not sure whether it was worth it, but maybe I'll think differently when it's on a hot roast pork sandwich with plenty of cracklingGranny on the Game in Sheffield
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Too late for my afterthought then. I was going to suggest coring them and baking them in the oven. It occurred to me that cooked that way, you could scoop out the apple flesh with a spoon like you can with a regular baked apple and save having to do the sieving bit.Location - Leicestershire - Chisit-land
Endless wonder.
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Originally posted by Florence Fennel View PostIt's taken me 2 hours. First I didn't peel them, then I chopped them, then I boiled them, then I smashed them all to bits It was the rubbing through the sieve that took me an hour and I now have two pound jars full of apple puree in the freezer and one small t*ware container in the fridge. I'm not sure whether it was worth it, but maybe I'll think differently when it's on a hot roast pork sandwich with plenty of cracklingLocation....East Midlands.
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Originally posted by mothhawk View PostToo late for my afterthought then. I was going to suggest coring them and baking them in the oven. It occurred to me that cooked that way, you could scoop out the apple flesh with a spoon like you can with a regular baked apple and save having to do the sieving bit."Nicos, Queen of Gooooogle" and... GYO's own Miss Marple
Location....Normandy France
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I did think of that one MH, but there were so many scabby bits, both on the inside and out, that it woud have been just as, if not more, tedious. Done now, but I'm seriously thinking of getting one of those peeling contraptions. I really got near to the "one click" last year and regretted it when my friend at work gave me about 3 carrier bags full of apples.Granny on the Game in Sheffield
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