We have 2 apple trees of indeterminate variety. They set fruit very sporadically. This year one of them did.
I use a picking basket for the higher fruit.
My daughter culls the "drops" for good fruit.
A five gallon bucket will be enough for the apple butter.
I quarter the apples. I leave the skin on as that is where the pectin is.
The quartered apples get cooked until soft and mushy.
I run the apple mush through a fruit mill. This removes the skin. The mill gets attached to my stand mixer. The cooked mush is in the tall pot to the far right. The good strained fruit lands in the pot in the center. The skins are collected in the bowl on the left and dumped in the compost bin.
Add some spices and put on the stove to cook.
I cooked this down over 2 days. It turns dark brown and gets nice and thick. I added 5 cups of sugar to sweeten to taste.
Then I use a boiling water bath to preserve the apple butter.
This shows the apple butter, a pot of lids and bands to sterilize, the canning water bath and a tea kettle of extra hot water. I am using a jar grabber to pick up the jar and put in the water bath.
The canning pot holds 5 jars.
When all was said and done I got 9 pints from that 5 gallon bucket of apples.
It is yummy.
Phil
I use a picking basket for the higher fruit.
My daughter culls the "drops" for good fruit.
A five gallon bucket will be enough for the apple butter.
I quarter the apples. I leave the skin on as that is where the pectin is.
The quartered apples get cooked until soft and mushy.
I run the apple mush through a fruit mill. This removes the skin. The mill gets attached to my stand mixer. The cooked mush is in the tall pot to the far right. The good strained fruit lands in the pot in the center. The skins are collected in the bowl on the left and dumped in the compost bin.
Add some spices and put on the stove to cook.
I cooked this down over 2 days. It turns dark brown and gets nice and thick. I added 5 cups of sugar to sweeten to taste.
Then I use a boiling water bath to preserve the apple butter.
This shows the apple butter, a pot of lids and bands to sterilize, the canning water bath and a tea kettle of extra hot water. I am using a jar grabber to pick up the jar and put in the water bath.
The canning pot holds 5 jars.
When all was said and done I got 9 pints from that 5 gallon bucket of apples.
It is yummy.
Phil