• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Jenmenke

Road Warrior

  • Road Warriors
  • Garden
  • Food
  • Babble
  • Home
You are here: Home / Garden / Apple Madness, Part One. Ugly-But-Useable-Apples Recipes.

Apple Madness, Part One. Ugly-But-Useable-Apples Recipes.

October 21, 2009

Ugly But Useable Apples

Ugh.

Ugh.

I wish I could be more upbeat about this whole harvest thing, but MAN. I’m ridiculously SICK of it. How do orchard people stay happy? How does anyone stay happy? It’s just one thing after another thing after another… it’s never over. I’m never done!

aah. I digress. Again.

Not only do I sit and think “Oh my gosh, I’ve got to deal with those _______.” (fill in the blank with apples, peppers, eggplant, kale plants, beets, carrots, parsnips, etc.) But then I think “Oh my gosh, I’ve got to get that apple post up on the blog.” And then I wonder “What the hell am I even doing this stupid blog for?” For which I do not have an answer.

Aside from my petulance about all the harvest things I have yet to do, I am really, really excited smug about this pairing of apple recipes.

First, know this: I grow organic apples.

Second, know this: I grow organic apples because it is the easiest way to grow apples. You basically do nothing, versus spraying chemicals on the apples every two weeks. I can’t be counted on to do anything “every two weeks.”

Third, know this: my organic apples are very ugly and hard to give away.

Fourth, know this: I hate to waste garden food and therefore I have a lot of ugly apples. Very tasty, ugly apples. Hence this combo of recipes.

Backstory
We had two hard freezes before September was over. Normally we have a few frosts, things wind down slowly and the apples are about the last garden item to be harvested, along with carrots and parsnips. This year however, our first frost was not a frost, but a freeze. The apples were mostly OK that night (26), but a week later the temps dipped down to 20. Not 25, but 20! So I spent the day picking all the apples and sorting them into 3 piles: compost, really ugly but useable, and maybe-I-can-eat-this-apple-fresh piles.

I use the “Really Ugly but Useable” apples for pies and sauce. I basically just cut away everything gross and use what I can. Last year, I was making tons of pies to freeze. I had a bucket of peels and cores under the sink in the compost bucket. I think I might have even emptied some coffee ground on top of them. Then I read something about boiling the peels and cores to get juice that you use for apple jelly. Honestly! That’s like making food from garbage!

So I brushed the coffee grounds off the browned peels and cores and dumped them in a pan with some water and started boiling. I got only 1 pint of jelly out of it, but oh MAN, it was so insanely good! In my opinion, it’s way better than my raspberry jam that everyone seems to want. The jelly was too runny last year, but I didn’t care. This year, I was hoping I could do it better.

So here is my process. And if I may be allowed to say so, it’s brilliant. I don’t know how many other people have ugly apples, but if you do, please don’t throw them away: try this!

Apple Sauce and Apple Jelly

The ugliest useable apples go into the Sauce/Jelly pile (this is a very complicated pile system) while the prettier ones go into the Pie/Jelly pile (that’s Apples Part Two, coming soon). Just for the record, my apples are a mixture of Honey Crisp, Haralson and two mystery varieties.

I take an apple, and cut it in half, then quarters, and assess the situation:

Would your child eat this apple?

if looks OK, I cut the core out and put that in the jelly pot. The quarters go into the Sauce Pot.

1) Learn to Focus your camera. 2) Put this apple in the Sauce Pot cuz it's fine.

If it looks über yucky, I use what I can.

Yucky Apple: Just cut off the bad parts and assess

Nice bright pieces go into the Sauce Pot.

Sauce Pot Apples

Mottled brownish pieces (trails from the Apple Magot Fly) go into the Jelly Pot.

Jelly Pot Apples

I do confess that we often just eat the less disgusting brownish ones. They are only trails of worms long gone. You can hardly see some of them. Just so you know: I like to think I’m preparing my family for some apocalypse that will take place some time in the future. My kids are going to be way more immune to gross food than yours will be.

Brown Apple Maggot Fly Tunnels. Go ahead. Eat it. It's Fine!

I work my way thru the pile (which isn’t disappearing nearly fast enough). And yes, that’s a trash can and yes, it’s kind of dirty…

Are you KIDDING ME? I still have all these Ugly But Useable Sauce Apples?!

The pectin for the jelly comes from the peels and the seeds, so you need those for the jelly. The peels stay on the sauce apples because I will put those thru the food mill and they make the sauce pink, which is very pretty. I could leave the cores on the sauce apples as well, but they are helpful for the jelly and it’s easy enough to just cut those out. Is this as confusing as I think it is? It shouldn’t be…

Oh my gosh I have a terrible headache… But I still have 42% battery left on my laptop, so I must press on!

I basically just keep going until one or the other pots fill up. Then I add about 1 cup of water to the sauce apples and turn on low and cover. I almost cover the Jelly Apples with water and add a whole bunch of ROSEMARY (my favorite flavor). Do not skip this step. If you don’t have any, go buy some. Seriously.

Rosemary! My Favorite! A MUST for Apple Jelly!

Add 1/2 cup of fresh squeezed (not!) lemon juice. (I’ll squeeze up to 1/4 cup. More than that, and I use this stuff, kindly given to me by my friend Chris when I complained that real lemon juice — as opposed to RealLemon brand yucko — didn’t exist. She got this at CostCo.

This upscale, organic Lemon Juice still tastes not fresh. Oh Well.

Stir it up and turn on low, cover and cook till apples are soft, at least an hour.

Just cover jelly apples with water and add rosemary.

Once soft and tender, line a strainer with several layers of cheese cloth (or use a jelly bag, whatever the Hell that is, if you happen to have one. I do not.) set over a large bowl and pour in. Do NOT push or force apples thru.

Jelly apples strain thru cheese cloth for several hours

This mixture needs to sit a good long time, preferably overnight in a cool place. I’m thinking that maybe it’ll be cool enough on my porch tonight. Ya think?

Meanwhile enjoy the October 3rd snow...

Meanwhile, the Sauce Apples should be soft and ready to process. Put the Sauce apples thru a food mill to get rid of the peels and any seeds.

Sauce apples go thru a food mill.

I put the food mill right back over the pot they cooked in because once you are done processing them, turn the heat back up, add 1/4 c lemon juice for about 4 lbs of cut apples and sugar to taste. I added about 1/2 cup. I also add about 1 teaspoon of cinnamon because we like that. Bring to a simmer and ladle into clean, hot sterilized canning jars.

Once again, learn to focus camera as you fill sauce jars.Be sure to wipe jar rims or they won't seal!

Heat process (steam or boil) 10 minutes for 1/2 pint jars.

10 minutes for 1/2 pints.

You are now done for the day, go to bed feeling like a superstar. Tomorrow, though, it all begins again, so sleep well.

In the morning (or several hours later), put the juice from the strained apple rosemary mash into a measuring cup.

Beautiful Apple juice really for jelly making! (the next day)

I have just over 4 cups, so that means I need to add 4 cups of sugar. Put it into a big-ass pot, because the jelly needs to be cooked at a full rolling, foamy boil.

Rolling Boil to 220 degrees F

It took me about 20 minutes to reach the magic temperature of 220 degrees F. Be sure to skim off as much of the foam as possible because it makes a bigger difference for clear jellies. I don’t worry about it too much with my jam, but you can see it below, suspended in my jelly. As soon as it reaches 220, turn off the heat and ladle into hot, sterilized 1/2 pint jars, wipe the rims and seal. Heat process for 10 minutes. Refrigerate any jars that don’t seal.

Apple Rosemary Jelly (with bits of foam suspended in jar, dammit!)

See the foam? Really ticked me off, I have to say. But then, just another reason to keep it for myself.

I am just too damn good.

Apple Sauce and Apple Jelly. Leave it on your counter to admire for a couple days, then trudge it out to the garage or basement or where ever you store that type of thing.

No wait. This is just too damn good!

And this year, It’s the PERFECT consistency! So happy.

Filed Under: Garden, Food Tagged With: ugly apples, hard frost, harvesting, recipe, Rosemary, no pectin, Honey Crisp, Apples, Haralson, organic apples, apple jelly, apple sauce, apple maggot fly, wormy apples

Previous Post: « Bulletproof Baguettes
Next Post: Plant your Garlic Now! Quick, before New Moon Comes Out! »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. p. claire pertalion says

    January 21, 2012 at 6:39 pm

    this is how i make it, much like applesauce…..i peel and core my apples, then chop them into quarters or so. i put them in a big pot and start dumping things in there that i think will make it taste good. cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves, ginger what ever. i do not add sugar, the apples are sweet enough, if i do, it is maple syrup. i have been know to also dump a glass of wine in there if i am drinking some while making it. then you cook it, for a long time. until it gets thick and dark, dark like a roux. during this time, the apples get soft enough for me to use my stick blender to puree the apples. that is what needs to cook down, get dark and thicker. i test the thickness by taking a spoonful out, put it on a plate and see how much it runs. think that once the jar is opened, it will be refrigerated, so that will thicken it also. when you are happy with it, start the canning.

  2. jenmenke says

    January 22, 2012 at 9:42 pm

    p. claire explained it better than I ever could have. When I made it (this year for the first time) I simply kept cooking my applesauce until it was über thick. But, as p. claire said, once it goes into the fridge it gets thicker. And mine got way too thick. Mine is apple glue.

  3. p. claire pertalion says

    January 22, 2012 at 11:42 pm

    oh my gosh, that is great, apple glue. i am sure it tastes just fine, which is all that matters. i am terrible at having exact recipes. i am a firm believer that if you don’t like it, throw it out and start again. when i toss food, the local critters love it. thank goodness i live in the country. that is tons of fun, with something that didn’t come out right…..launching it far into the woods.

  4. Lori Brennert says

    October 6, 2012 at 11:53 am

    Hi,

    This recipe was great, I too have “ugly” apples and did not know what to do with them all. We have a vacation property with apple trees in Washington state but live in Canada so I cannot take the apples home. I hated to see them all going to waste so this was perfect. I made one batch of jelly per your recipe, the second batch I added a bunch of blackberries to the pot, it is delicious and a beautiful colour, looks a lot like grape jelly.
    I was wondering though if you have ever tried making jelly with less sugar? I have made blackberry and raspberry jam with less sugar and just boiled it longer but am not sure that this would work with jelly. I don’t like the taste pectin adds to things so don’t want to use it. I have never tried gelatin, what do you think?

  5. Laverne says

    February 28, 2015 at 8:07 am

    Hi admin, your page is incredible i know very useful tool
    for every site admin (for content creation and SEO).
    Just type in google for:
    Stoonkel’s Rewriter

  6. NancyAnn says

    July 22, 2020 at 3:47 pm

    Well, I found your reason for blogging! For my enjoyment! Northern California here…I’ve got an apple tree fully loaded and because many started dropping to the floor, husband decided to harvest a bushel! I now have ugly apples that are definitely not juicy enough to enjoy…so, will attempt a jelly! Thanks for the instructions, smiles and inspiration!
    NancyAnn

« Older Comments

Trackbacks

  1. Good to the core. | bunkers down. says:
    October 25, 2013 at 9:08 am

    […] found the original, fabulous recipe here and I will forever be indebted to the […]

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Primary Sidebar

Read in CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER!

  • Big Bend National Park (6)
  • Alaska Road Warriors (46)

Search jenmenke.com

About Me

Jen menke

I’m a mostly-retired, pretend graphics and web developer (but don’t judge my skillz by THIS site!). We sold our dream home in Watertown, MN and downsized to a “Villa” in Excelsior, MN and built a home in our dream location of Eagle, CO and now split our time between the two states. It is truly a dichotomous life of absentee gardening and getting together with friends & family while in MN and playing hard and hermitting while in CO. I’ve let the blog go but a trip to Alaska has me resurrecting the Road Warriors series. My beloved brother is my biggest fan and I am doing this just for him.

Latest Reads:

Jennie's bookshelf: read

Trail of Broken Wings
2 of 5 stars
Trail of Broken Wings
by Sejal Badani
Started out strong and dwindled off for me. I wasn't enamored of the writing and -- maybe it's just me -- but the secrets!? I understand that you have to be willing to swallow a fair amount of incredulity when enjoying a lot of fiction, ...
The Girl on the Train
3 of 5 stars
The Girl on the Train
by Paula Hawkins
Audible book. Good, mindless listen. Pretty good action and twists. Not as good as all the hype, in my opinion, but I did enjoy. --Not enough to choose for my bookclub though: it would have been carved up by those English-teaching wolves...
I'm a Stranger Here Myself: Notes on Returning to America after Twenty Years Away
4 of 5 stars
I'm a Stranger Here Myself: Notes on Returning to America after Twenty Years Away
by Bill Bryson
Not my favorite Bryson book. However, it's been several years since I last read one and I was -- once again -- astounded by his writing style and voice. I just love him. I think this book is mostly compiled from columns he wrote over a c...

goodreads.com
  • Road Warriors
  • Garden
  • Food
  • Babble
  • Home

Copyright © 2025