Now I’ve been taught by mymother and grandmother that you should NEVER make apple butter or anything elseacidic in cast iron cookware or it will taste like metal. Most of the online research I’ve done seemsto suggest that my mom is right. But insome of the research I’ve done, other people say they only use a cast ironvessel to make their apple butter. Sincecooking things in cast iron adds iron content to whatever you’re cooking and I’ma little iron deficient, I thought I try my quick cooking apple butter in a castiron skillet to see how it might work out.
AppleButter
- 54 oz apple sauce unsweetened
- 2/3 cup molasses
- 1 tbsp cinnamon
- ¼ tsp nutmeg
- ¼ tsp ground cloves
- ¼ tsp ginger
- 1 cup of water (to rinse the apple sauce from the jars)
- sugar (to suit your tastes, I added ¾ cup)
Instructions
- Empty to applesauce into a stainless steel pot then rinse the jars with about ½ cup of water per jar and pour it into the pot with the applesauce.
- Cook the applesauce over a low heat stirring occasionally for about 45 minutes or until the applesauce has reduced and thickened to a consistency that resembles apple butter.
- Add all of the spices and molasses to the pan and stir until the ingredients are well combined. Taste the apple butter to determine how much sweeter you might like it and add sugar in ¼ cup increments until it has a sweetness that you’re happy with then simmer for an additional 10 minutes.
- To store the apple butter, I like to wash the apple sauce jars then when the apple butter is cool enough, spoon it into the jars. I also like to make some labels that include the date when the batch was made so that there’s no confusion.
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