Ideas for Cooking apples

RBrigzy
RBrigzy Posts: 152 Member
Hello,

I have a lot of cooking apples coming ripe in the garden.

So far I have been chopping them in half, then microwaving them in the skins for about 5 minutes, then the apple is mush and easy to separate. I then just serve as is with a few grapes to balance out the slightly sour flavor.

But there are loads of them! - I have children too - so need ideas on how to get through them without putting everyone off them for life!

Thanks
Richard
:)
«1

Replies

  • jenillawafer
    jenillawafer Posts: 426 Member
    I bake 'em

    Per Apple:

    1.5 tbs maple syrup
    1 tsp butter
    1 tsp lemon juice
    1/4 tsp cinnamon

    Slice apples and put in an oven-safe bowl. I keep the skin on.
    Pour mixture over and bake at 350 for 20-30 min.

    I like to serve mine with vanilla pudding. Yum! Had it for breakfast this morning actually.
  • askeates
    askeates Posts: 1,490 Member
    My kids absolutely love cinnamon apples... peel and chop, put in a skillet with either cooking spray (low fat) or a TBS of real butter (our fav option, and you don't need more than that), cinnamon and a touch of sugar (to taste) and let simmer on low for a while... serve warm over grilled pork chops, or use as a stuffing pork chops, or add some oats to the top and throw in the oven for a bit. They eat them like that all the time!
  • Acg67
    Acg67 Posts: 12,142 Member
    Apple Pie

    Apple turnovers

    Carbonated Apples

    Candy Apples

    Pork tenderloin stuffed with apples, breadcrumbs and pancetta
  • rachface1234
    rachface1234 Posts: 227 Member
    For a pretty dessert!:

    Line cupcake tins with small circle of pie dough, thinly slice apples and layer them like a little rose (little apple "petals), put a pecan or walnut piece in center, sprinkle with cinnamon, maple syrup, orange or lemon juice, and maybe a lil brown sugar. Bake, serve over ice cream, :)
  • ami5000psu
    ami5000psu Posts: 391 Member
    I like to chop them into chunks (not too small), add some extra firm tofu, cinnamon, maple syrup, and raisins and then cook it all on the stove for a little while until the apples are soft. It's delicious.
  • BooBoo1264
    BooBoo1264 Posts: 164
    There is a healthy slow cooker apple sauce recipe on Pinterest that looks mighty Yummy!
  • MB_Positif
    MB_Positif Posts: 8,897 Member
    Our local grocery store has a great Organic Chicken Apple Sausage. I take it out of the casings and cook it in a little bit of butter with slices of apple & onion with cinnamon and either a little bit of maple syrup or honey.

    I generally serve it with some Quinoa with cinnamon and a bit of syrup or honey too. Sometimes I add some dried cranberries or walnuts.
  • I have a similar issue, I make apple butter, apples in oatmeal, apple muffins, apple crumbles, apple sauce, apple chips in the dehydrator.I hope to get a juicer sometime to make apple juice. Hope this helps.
  • aries7298
    aries7298 Posts: 225 Member
    I like to chop them into chunks (not too small), add some extra firm tofu, cinnamon, maple syrup, and raisins and then cook it all on the stove for a little while until the apples are soft. It's delicious.


    This sounds AWESOME!!!!
  • aries7298
    aries7298 Posts: 225 Member
    I peel them, cut them ready for fillings (pies, etc) then freeze them.... then I always have some for whatever is on the menu. :happy:
  • askeates
    askeates Posts: 1,490 Member
    I peel them, cut them ready for fillings (pies, etc) then freeze them.... then I always have some for whatever is on the menu. :happy:

    Why does this not surprise me... I need to go raid your freezer soon :laugh:
  • UsedToBeHusky
    UsedToBeHusky Posts: 15,228 Member
    I make a cheesecake which involves turning them into pie filling and pouring a cheesecake filling on top.
  • majica8
    majica8 Posts: 210 Member
    Apple crumble :D or apple and blackberry crumble if you have blackberries. Apple and most berries will make a nice crumble
  • sharonfoustmills
    sharonfoustmills Posts: 519 Member
    good problem to have, if I had that problem I'd make apple butter and can some apples for winter
  • Apple walnut salad

    Homemade apple sauce

    Homemade salsa with apple chunks

    Bottomless apple pie

    Baked apple chunks with brown rice and tomatoes

    Fresh pressed apple cider, or juice

    Apple stuffed pork loin or whole chicken

    Apple stuffing
  • RBrigzy
    RBrigzy Posts: 152 Member
    I peel them, cut them ready for fillings (pies, etc) then freeze them.... then I always have some for whatever is on the menu. :happy:
    Ooo .. do they un-thaw ok? or should I cook then freeze?
  • RBrigzy
    RBrigzy Posts: 152 Member
    Thanks so much for all these great ideas!

    I am going to work my way through them one by one !

    :):)
  • icklistpiklist
    icklistpiklist Posts: 64 Member
    Apple chutney i use this recipe http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/spicedapplechutney_7720
    And then give it away for Christmas presents!
  • runningjen74
    runningjen74 Posts: 312 Member
    Okay, it only uses one, but it's not as obvious. Apple and celery soup. 1 cooking apple, 1 head of celery, and rest as normal (I fry off 1 onion/carrot/herbs/spices as I'm feeling it on the day), add in chopped up peeled apple and chopped celery + stock, simmer and blend.

    I've heard of apple and parsnip, but not tried it yet. - I would follow a similar approach.
  • RBrigzy
    RBrigzy Posts: 152 Member
    Okay, it only uses one, but it's not as obvious. Apple and celery soup. 1 cooking apple, 1 head of celery, and rest as normal (I fry off 1 onion/carrot/herbs/spices as I'm feeling it on the day), add in chopped up peeled apple and chopped celery + stock, simmer and blend.

    I've heard of apple and parsnip, but not tried it yet. - I would follow a similar approach.

    I can make soup - so this I have to try - I hadn't thought of using them in savory dishes.
  • Alpina483
    Alpina483 Posts: 246 Member
    I hadn't thought of using them in savory dishes.

    No? they go well with all the meats I tried. Personal discovery of the month - chicken breast, if you cook it with apples, it is all nice and juicy and yummy, not dry and boring as when you cook it alone.
  • RBrigzy
    RBrigzy Posts: 152 Member
    I hadn't thought of using them in savory dishes.

    No? they go well with all the meats I tried. Personal discovery of the month - chicken breast, if you cook it with apples, it is all nice and juicy and yummy, not dry and boring as when you cook it alone.

    I have a small chicken for tonight - to either roast whole or I could split and bake surrounded with apple slices - wont the apple burn though, do I need to add water ?
  • ailbheoconnell
    ailbheoconnell Posts: 48 Member
    apple crumble.

    peel apples and cut into chunks into a greased dish. add brown sugar (100g per 800g of fruit) or sweetener, or honey or that half empty pot of any flavoured jam you forgot about. mix them about. the fruit should be just covered in something sweet, not drowned. in a food processor blitz some cold butter with flour (chuck in some oats if you like it rustic) until fine breadcrumb texture. if you don't have a food processor or don't mind a few mins work rub the butter into the flour with your COLD fingertips. add a few handfuls of sugar and bung in it on top of the apples, spread fairly evenly. bake at about 170 celsius until the fruit is bubbling like hot jam at the sides and the top is a caramel colour. oh so good.
    serve with custard.
    Rough measurements to fill a dish about 12 inches by 9 inches by three inches high, are 700-800g fruit, enough sweet stuff to coat it (equivalent 100 g sugar) , about 150g dry stuff (flour with oats, seeds or whatever) to 75g butter, and 75g sugar mixed in. should be just enough to hide the fruit.
    plenty of recipes for the crumble topping online if you're trying to count cals
  • kennie2
    kennie2 Posts: 1,170 Member
    i like them baked with honey. simple and easy
    and yeah like someone said, apple a rhubarb or apple and blackberry crumbles are sooo good!
  • aries7298
    aries7298 Posts: 225 Member
    I peel them, cut them ready for fillings (pies, etc) then freeze them.... then I always have some for whatever is on the menu. :happy:
    Ooo .. do they un-thaw ok? or should I cook then freeze?

    they un-thaw good...... in most cases I cook them anyway..... if you're worried about the excess juices, you could always thaw them in a strainer and could even save the juice/water for syrups or reserve them to add for thickener... YUM... :drinker:
  • RBrigzy
    RBrigzy Posts: 152 Member
    Ok here goes - cooking LIVE!

    I made a "Chicken Apple Hot Pot" - based on your ideas

    Here it is before it goes in the oven!

    chickenapplehotpot.jpg

    What I did:

    Stripped a raw chicken of as much meat as I could - chopped it up into chunks.
    (I get 3 chickens for a tenner in Tesco)

    10 x cooking apples, cored and sliced - various shapes & sizes- but biggest about tennis ball sized.
    l x chopped large onion
    chicken stock I had in the freezer
    chicken stock cube
    sprinkling of cinamon
    generous glug of cider vinegar

    Thnnking of cooking slowly about 150 for two hours.

    The bones & remains I have set to simmer in pressure cooker to later make stock & chicken and apple soup - as your ideas :)

    Will post results later !

    :)
  • ailbheoconnell
    ailbheoconnell Posts: 48 Member
    Just seeing your chicken apple hot pot reminded me of a pork recipe I used before, it is AMAZING!! Has full fat cream in it but you could probably substitute creme fraiche or something else creamy, so long as it didn't split. Maybe light Philadelphia??

    anyway, here it is. I would say to leave out the apple juice and add in some peeled, diced apples, they will break down in the cooking and also thicken the sauce a bit so you wouldn't have to reduce it in the end.
    Really tasty served with mashed potatoes.

    Lakeshore Pork; Avoca Cafe cookbook

    1.3kg/3lb diced leg of pork, well trimmed - fillet is even better
    Seasoned flour - flour, salt, pepper,mustard powder and brown sugar
    olive oil
    600ml/1 pint apple juice
    300ml/half a pint of chicken stock
    2 tablespoons of Lakeshore or any other wholegrain mustard
    30ml/ half a pint of cream

    Toss the pork in the seasoned flour then brown it in the olive oil in batches.Place in a flameproof casserole dish and cover with the apple juice and stock. Add the mustard and bring to the boil, then transfer to an oven preheated to 180C/350F/gas 4 for 40 minutes. Remove from the oven, stir in the cream and return to the oven for 10 minutes.
    If the sauce is too thin, remove the meat and keep warm. Put the casserole dish over a medium heat and simmer until the sauce reduces and thickens. Return the meat to the pan.
  • sandobr1
    sandobr1 Posts: 319 Member
    I will look today for a recipe for apple, pork, onion kabobs, I think it had an apricot glaze. Bookmarking hopefully I can remember and find the cookbook. I used to make this a few times a summer, kind of forgot about it until this post.
  • Camera_BagintheUK
    Camera_BagintheUK Posts: 707 Member
    Chutney!

    Here's my favourite recipe:

    1kg ripe tomatoes, peeled and chopped
    200g onions
    100g raisins or sultanas
    250g apples cored and chopped small
    300g brown sugar
    225 ml malt vinegar
    2 tsp salt
    1/2 tsp ground allspice
    1/2 tsp ground ginger
    1/2 tsp ground black pepper
    1/2 tsp cayenne pepper

    Chuck the lot in a big saucepan or jam pan, heat it to dissolve the sugar then boil for 1hr or longer if necessary, till it's thick and pulpy - it ought to leave a clear trail at least for a second, when you draw a spoon across the bottom of the pan.

    Pot it in sterilised jam pots (I put mine upside down in the oven on a low heat while the chutney's boiling).

    This makes a couple of pounds of chutney - I usually prepare more jars than I think I'll need.

    This one's spicy and a bit red. You can google apple chutney recipes for variations.

    Then you can eat your apples with cheese or cold meat all year round!Or you can save money on Christmas presents - I cut circles of Christmas wrapping paper, and tie round the tops, with a little bell and a label. :smile:
  • Alliwan
    Alliwan Posts: 1,245 Member
    we picked two bushels at my husbands cousin's house. We've canned 10 jars of apple sauce and 15 jars of pie ready apples (cinnamon and sugar already added, just pour over a crust and bake ready).

    My mil makes a good 'cobbler' that is putting sugar, flour and milk in the bottom of a pot, adding the apples on top and baking, its good for peaches (which we've canned 36 jars of that too) or apples or cherries.

    apple crisps with oatmeal topping is good.
    Cut them into oatmeal
    mix them with other fruits into a crisp

    I have a whole cookbook on just apples, so if you need more ideas, mail me and ill send you some recipies.