Easiest Apple & Plum Sauce
- 5 pounds Italian Prune Plums
- 5 pounds Firm, Fresh Apples, (Tokyo Rose Etc.)
- 5 pieces Vitamin C Pills
- * I picked 5 pounds of each type of fruit because it is more manageable than the 10 pounds of each that I normally make. My 5 kids love this stuff in their lunches. Really, any 50/50 weight ratio works.
- Wash all the fruit.
- Halve and pit the plums. Throw plum halves into a large heavy-bottomed stock pot.
- Quarter the apples . Throw (seeds, stems and all) into the stock pot.
- Crush the 5 vitamin C pills (use good ones with no additives, the ones from the health food store). Add crushed Vitamin C to the pot (prevents browning).
- Cook, covered on low until the apples are tender and 'mashable.' Stir occasionally to prevent burning. (This should take about 30 to 45 minutes.)
- Set up your food mill over a large bowl. Mill the warm fruit in batches and the best applesauce in history will come out the bottom. Really amazing sauce.
- It keeps (covered) in the fridge for 4 to 5 days, so it could be a week's worth of snacks, without any canning.
- To can or preserve it (the abridged instructions):
- Place the still warm apple & plum sauce back in the stock pot. Carefully bring to a boil. Stir a lot, because it can burn.
- Ladle into hot, sterilized jars, cap with 2-piece lids. Process in a hot water bath.
- For pints, process at a rolling boil for 15 minutes (use the Ball Blue Book Canning times table if you live in the mountains).
- For quarts, process for 25 minutes.
- (Why so long? Two reasons: the first, I add no sugar, so it isn't there to act as an extra preservative; and the second, applesauce is dense, so you have to make certain it is heated through.)
- Canning results: I did 10 pounds of each fruit and yielded 7 quarts canned plus another quart for the fridge.
italian prune plums, fresh apples, vitamin
Taken from tastykitchen.com/recipes/canning/easiest-apple-plum-sauce/ (may not work)