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Homemade Applesauce Recipe (Fall Favorite!)

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Wellness Mama » Blog » Recipes » Homemade Applesauce Recipe (Fall Favorite!)

 
I have fond memories of making my homemade applesauce recipe with the kids every year. We no longer live in an area with apple trees (too hot down here!) but I still love making my own. Unlike some canning adventures, I feel like homemade applesauce is well worth the effort. Plus it makes the house smell great!

A word of caution though … your family will never want to eat store-bought applesauce again. Mine won’t!

Easy Recipe For the Best Applesauce

There’s truly no comparison between homemade and watery, store-bought applesauce. The apple flavor from homemade is so much better. And I’m skipping over the vices of store-bought applesauce with added sweeteners entirely…

While it’s easy to whip up a small batch as needed, we usually make a larger amount for canning. If you want the short and sweet version, I’ve included directions for how to make applesauce in the Instant Pot. It tastes amazing with a little bit of apple pie spice seasoning and fresh lemon juice. My kids can’t get enough of it!

How to Can Homemade Applesauce

Here’s what we do…

Step 1: Make a Plan to Can

Making and canning applesauce probably works best on the weekend if you have littles underfoot. We usually pick a good fall weekend and make it a family event. (Extra hands make light work and all!)

Head out to the farmer’s market or apple orchard together and make a day of it. The kids get to take in the sights and sounds (and tastes!), and you can score decently priced organic local produce.

Step 2: Estimate Quantity

How much to make will vary by family, but it’s an important step to consider. Nothing kills the joy of cooking from scratch and canning like taking on too much at one time. (Ask me how I know…)

In my experience, one bushel of apples yields roughly 15-16 quart jars of applesauce. I usually go for 2 bushels to last our family of 7 for about 6 months.

Some equivalents that are helpful to remember:

  • 21 lbs of apples = about 7 quarts of processed applesauce (one water bath canner full)
  • 1 bushel = 40 lbs of apples

Of course, it doesn’t hurt to buy extra for snacking, baking, or dehydrating. We love to make seasonal dishes with them like apple cinnamon muffins, apple pork chops, apple cider, apple butter, and side dishes like shaved apple kale salad.

Step 3: Buy Apples (Preferably Local and Organic)

Making homemade applesauce may not save time, but it does save money. The first year I tried making applesauce I was able to get a bushel of organic apples from our CSA for only $20. (A crazy good deal!)

organic apples used for applesauce

Step 4: Wash and Prep

Although I make sure to get pesticide-free and wax-free apples, I still recommend soaking them in vinegar. I fill up the sink with vinegar and water and let them soak. This removes any dirt or debris from harvesting. After soaking, rinse well with clean water.

You can use a peeler to remove the apple skins, but I prefer to leave them on. Cut the apples into quarters and remove the cores before cooking. (If you have a KitchenAid, these attachments easily slice and core for you).

slicing apples for applesauce

Step 5: Cook Until Soft and Blend

You can use a slow cooker, an Instant Pot, or just a large pot on the stovetop to cook applesauce. Simmer the apples covered and on medium heat with a little water (less than a cup of water) in the bottom of the pot. I usually add a few tablespoons of cinnamon to each pot full of apples.

Since I leave the apple skins on, once they’re soft I use an immersion blender to blend them smooth right in the pot. A large blender, food mill, or food processor works too. The point is to get the skins blended in so they’re not even noticeable. You can blend the sauce to your desired consistency and make smooth or chunky applesauce.

apples in crockpot for applesauce

Step 6: Freeze, Can, or Just Eat It!

At this point, the applesauce is ready to eat! This is a great time to dish out some warm applesauce to any kitchen helpers before canning. If you’re new to canning, this helpful FAQ is a good place to start.

Here’s to a new fall tradition. I hope you love it as much as we do!

canned homemade applesauce
Homemade_Applesauce_Recipe

Homemade Applesauce Recipe

Make your own applesauce with this simple homemade method. The applesauce can be canned or frozen.
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 8 hours
Total Time 10 hours 30 minutes
Calories 178kcal
Author Katie Wells

Servings

28 cups

Ingredients

  • 21 pounds apples (adjust amount up or down as desired)
  • 2 TBSP cinnamon (adjust amount up or down as desired)
  • ¾ cup water

Instructions

  • Soak the apples in vinegar and water in the kitchen sink for a few hours to remove any dirt or residue. Rinse well after soaking or there will be a slight pickle taste to your applesauce. This step isn’t as necessary with organic apples, but is still a good way to clean them.
  • Peel apples if desired. Quarter and core the washed apples.
  • Put all the apples in a Crock-Pot or large pot on the stove with 3/4 cup of water and cinnamon to taste. I usually add a few tablespoons of cinnamon for each pot full of apples.
  • Cook the apples on medium heat until soft. Time varies, but expect at least a few hours. The house will smell great all day as they cook!
  • When the apples are soft and skins are starting to fall off, turn off the heat and let the apples cool until slightly warm. Use a blender, food mill, or immersion blender (not hand mixer) to puree the apples until smooth.
  • If storing fresh, pour into clean quart jars, top with lid, and store in the refrigerator.

Hot Water Bath Canning

  • Reheat the now smooth applesauce to boiling and then turn off the heat. Immediately put into very clean jars and can according to your canner instructions.

Nutrition

Nutrition Facts
Homemade Applesauce Recipe
Amount Per Serving (1 cup)
Calories 178 Calories from Fat 9
% Daily Value*
Fat 1g2%
Saturated Fat 0.1g1%
Polyunsaturated Fat 0.2g
Monounsaturated Fat 0.03g
Sodium 4mg0%
Potassium 366mg10%
Carbohydrates 47g16%
Fiber 8g33%
Sugar 35g39%
Protein 1g2%
Vitamin A 185IU4%
Vitamin C 16mg19%
Calcium 26mg3%
Iron 0.5mg3%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Notes

This recipe makes roughly 7 quarts of applesauce. One bushel of apples makes about 15 quarts of applesauce. You can easily adapt this recipe to smaller or larger batches.

 

The Best Types of Apples for Applesauce

The key is to ask an organic farmer for “seconds” (the not-so-pretty apples with small defects in appearance). This is no problem for applesauce since the apples are cooked down and blended anyway. It makes the process much more affordable. We get different kinds of apples each year depending on what’s available from local farmers. That also depends on which apple trees grow well in your local climate.

In the past, we’ve regularly used McIntosh, Jonathan, Gala, Fuji, and Ida Red. The key is to use 3 or more varieties and mix them together. When you combine tart apples like Granny Smith apples with sweet apples, like Pink Lady, Honeycrisp, or Golden Delicious you get a better flavor.

Homemade_Applesauce_Recipe_(2)

Insant Pot Applesauce Recipe

This quick and easy recipe uses the Instant Pot for an even faster version. I like to do this when I don’t have a ton of apples to can, but still want homemade applesauce.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Calories 128kcal
Author Katie Wells

Servings

6 servings

Equipment

Ingredients

  • 8 apples (using a variety of types is key for flavor)
  • ½ cup water
  • 1 TBSP lemon juice (about half a small lemon, juiced)
  • ½ tsp ground cinnamon (optional, to taste)
  • ½ tsp apple pie spice (optional, to taste)

Instructions

  • Soak the apples in vinegar and water in the kitchen sink for a couple of hours to remove any dirt or chemical residue. Rinse well after soaking or there will be a slight pickle taste to your applesauce. This step isn’t as necessary with organic apples, but is still a good way to clean them.
  • Peel the apples if desired. Core and chop them into quarters.
  • Add the apples, water, lemon juice, and 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon/apple pie spice into the Instant Pot.
  • Seal the lid and set the Instant Pot to pressure cook on high for 5 minutes.
  • Do a natural pressure release for 10 minutes, then quick release the remaining pressure.
  • Use an immersion blender or mash with a potato masher or fork to your desired texture.

Nutrition

Nutrition Facts
Insant Pot Applesauce Recipe
Amount Per Serving (1 serving)
Calories 128 Calories from Fat 4
% Daily Value*
Fat 0.4g1%
Saturated Fat 0.1g1%
Polyunsaturated Fat 0.1g
Monounsaturated Fat 0.02g
Sodium 4mg0%
Potassium 264mg8%
Carbohydrates 34g11%
Fiber 6g25%
Sugar 25g28%
Protein 1g2%
Vitamin A 132IU3%
Vitamin C 12mg15%
Calcium 18mg2%
Iron 0.3mg2%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Notes

Serve warm or store in the fridge in an airtight container for up to a week.

Like this recipe? Check out my new cookbook, or get all my recipes (over 500!) in a personalized weekly meal planner here!

Ever made applesauce? How did it turn out?

Homemade organic applesauce recipe

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Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

52 responses to “Homemade Applesauce Recipe (Fall Favorite!)”

  1. Connie Sylvester Avatar
    Connie Sylvester

    Just wondering if conventional apples would be ok to use if I peel them first?

  2. Becky Avatar

    This is my family’s 3rd week trying to be healthier. I LOVE the recipes on wellnessmama and am so grateful to have found this great site. When you are switching from processed foods to fresh, homemade whole foods, it’s quite a challenge but with the help of your site, we get to have tasty, great replacement recipes to use instead of what is sold in the stores, and we know we are eating healthier in the process! Thank you so much!

  3. M. J. Avatar

    5 stars
    We eat very little applesauce, so when my grandsons were very young I just washed and cored an apple or two, cut into chunks, put in the food processor, and gave it a whirl. A little added cinnamon and ginger, and it’s a great, fast side.

  4. Herman Rutner Avatar
    Herman Rutner

    My German recipe for a family of one is to start with one Apple, best Cortlands, for flavor and rapid cooking. Best tree ripened from farmers market. Scrub under cold water with a brush, put in a deep pyrex glass dish, poke holes in apple skin with a knife all around to vent steam, cover loosely with plate. Microwave for 1-2 min until soft, sprinkle on cinnamon, pumpkin spice, brown sugar as needed. Mix and continue until fully soft. Mash and enjoy. I prefer to leave in the core if not moldy. Cortlands, ideally from NYState,also are my favorite uncooked eating apples.

  5. Sara Avatar

    5 stars
    Hi Katie!
    We make apple sauce all the time.
    We use a mix of gala and green organic apples. We peel them, core them, cut them into quarters.
    Put them in pot with water to cover and cook till soft! If u like smooth u just blend it with a hand blender.
    It freezes beautifully and is delicious! We don’t put in any sweetener…

    Homemade apple sauce is a great snack!

  6. Vince Avatar

    5 stars
    The thing I love most is that you can scale the recipe up or down. So, you could create relatively little apple sauce if you wanted, or put the time in to create a large batch.

  7. Susan Avatar

    Just wondering. For a more all natural applesauce (my son doesn’t care for cinnamon), can the cinnamon just be omitted? Or does it have to be replaced with something?

  8. franceska Avatar

    4 stars
    Canning has become a necessity in our large household and applesauce is a staple. I use it to make apple butter, Apple bread, Apple cake and other delicious treats (including great gifts). The only thing that I didn’t see listed is lemon juice. With apples, we must use lemon juice as it preserves the color and assures the acidity for preserving. If you freeze or put in fridge we don’t need to add lemon juice (according to Ball preserving).

  9. Laura Avatar

    Where do you find non gmo vitamon C powder not from China that you can use for canning?

    1. Rebecca Avatar

      There’s a brand on amazon called NutriBiotic. I’m curious what brand she uses though.

  10. Noor Avatar

    5 stars
    I have a pressure cooker. Can I use it in a pressure cooker?
    Do I still have to soak with water and vinegar even if I do not use the peel?

  11. Terry Avatar

    Hi I have made apple sauce and dont use Vit-c tho I read only store in Fridge
    1 week and Yours says up to a Month .
    Id hate to have it Ferment and All so
    Ill have to experiment ,
    I have a Neat way of creating my sauce
    Were i steam cook apples as result i have not only apple sauce tho also end up with Apple Juice , it is great , and this i fell into doing because i have apple trees and had so many again and got tired of making apple chips and the apples were sitting around getting softer n softer so i didnt want to toss them so I core them slice in 3rds , all face down in steamer and when done i peal skin or like yellow apples have thinner skins so harder to hold an peal to clean apple from skins so most stay together , one big thing im so excited about is the water that is used to steam ends up apple flavored so i add lil cinnamon and Tastes like way better then store bought and I know what i Got . Thanks for sharing all that you do …also the sad part of cooking and nutrient is it kills the Nutrients over 110°
    No way around it ,

  12. Chelsea Avatar

    Hello! To start, I have been a silent follower of your site for years; your posts have been quite enlightening and guiding for me on a healthy-lifestyle for my family. So, thank you.
    I have a LOT of North Carolina apples (Florida gal here) and am experimenting with a variety of uses. I’ve never canned applesauce and am not a very schooled canner, but I’ve got the supplies so plan to give this a try.
    My question is: Have you a use for the peels and cores? I have seen apple juice, apple jelly, Apple cider vinegar recipes out there. All but the latter include sugars; I’d like to proceed with as little sweetener as possible. I would love to know your thoughts!
    Thank you,
    C

  13. Lenah Avatar

    My apple sauce taste like pickelish or lemony, I soaked them in vinegar over night and rinsed, put in crockpots with plain 1/4c water and cooked for 20hts, blended and I added 2T cinnimon, just now, but still tastes sour… What can I do, o have second batch in crockpots now a d a whole mother sink full ready to go, o usually put brown sugar in apple sauce but trying to stay away from sugars, any advice on how to save this?! And all my other apples?!!

4.89 from 9 votes (4 ratings without comment)

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