Introduction: Strawberry Applesauce
If you have some apples and strawberries, you can easily make up a batch of tasty strawberry applesauce! I had a couple apples I overboiled when attempting to remove the wax on the skin (for caramel apples) and thought I would try making applesauce! It was really easy to do and the results were very tasty.
Instructable 315
Step 1: Ingredients and Supplies
This will make a small batch of applesauce, about 2 cups/16oz. You can multiply it to make as much as you want and change the ratio to fit your tastes.
Ingredients:
- 2 Apples - I'm using granny smith because it's what I had, they were ones I boiled a bit too much in an effort to remove the wax
- 1 heaping cup of cut strawberries - I might have gone a little overboard, but I wanted it strawberry-y (for me this was about 7 strawberries but they vary in size so much this is hard to judge)
- 1/2c Water - I was worried this was too much but after I was done and it cooled it was fairly thick
- 2 Tbsp Sugar (optional) - it will probably be sweet enough without it, but it's an option if you like sweeter applesauce
Supplies:
- Knife and Cutting Board
- Pot / Saucepan
- Immersion/Hand Blender or Blender
- Resealable Container to store applesauce - I had this nice 16oz jar with lid that held the amount I made perfectly
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Step 2: Fruit Prep
Start by peeling and cutting up your apples. The smaller they are the faster they should soften.
Remove the stem and cut up the strawberries. You won't need these very small.
Step 3: Cook
Combine your apples, strawberries, water, and sugar (if you are using it) in a sauce pan.
Cook them on medium heat until they soften. I tested by stabbing them with a fork. I'd say this could be around 15 minutes, but just make sure to stir them and check them once in a while.
Step 4: Blend
When the fruit is soft enough (you shouldn't have to worry about the strawberries, concentrate on the apples) remove them from the heat and let them cool a bit.
Once it is cool enough that you aren't worried about burning yourself, go ahead and blend it up until it is the consistency you like.
Now cool it and enjoy.
I've only made this once, but from my experience, it will be more watery now and when it cools it will thicken.
Step 5: Applesauce
Mine fit perfectly in this little jar. Look how nice it looks!
Because this is fresh and strawberries always want to mold with me I would guess this will keep for about a week. It's probably possible to eat beyond that but just keep an eye out for mold.
13 Comments
3 years ago
Hi, can this be done in a larger batch send frozen? Thanks
Reply 3 years ago
I haven't tried that with this but I don't see why not. I've cooked, blended, and froze pear sauce before so I would think you could do it with applesauce. Quality might go down when you dethaw though.
3 years ago
looks delicious :>
Reply 3 years ago
Thank you :)
3 years ago
I seal my applesauce jars in a hot water bath and they will keep for a bout 1 year (if they last that long). I can't see why this recipe shouldn't last as long if hot water bathed. IF I get surplus strawberries I(m going to try just to see - but I doubt it will last long enough to try.
Reply 3 years ago
I don't know a lot about preserving things like this but I don't see why you can't try :)
Reply 3 years ago
I intend to try but the grand-kids arrive just about jam making time so NOTHING lasts more than a few weeks. Other years I've had to hide stuff in the freezer to make sure I get enough to last the year out. :)
3 years ago
omg...GENIUS!!! I'm totally making this before summer ends. Thanks for sharing! <3
Reply 3 years ago
Thank you! I hope you enjoy it :)
3 years ago
Ooo I've never tried adding strawberries into my applesauce-- nice idea!
Reply 3 years ago
It is a very tasty addition :)
3 years ago
Looks yummy! Makes me want to whip up some homemade applesauce. :)
Reply 3 years ago
Thank you!