

Pennsylvania Dutch Apple Butter, 1 pt for 2 TB
Ingredients
3/4 cup unsweetened apple cider or juice
1/3 cup sugar
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
6 medium apples, peeled and quartered (3 pounds)
Directions
Place the apple juice, sugar, cinnamon and cloves in a blender; cover and process until blended. Adding 3-4 apple pieces at a time, cover and process until smooth.
Pour into a saucepan. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat; cover and cook over low heat for 1 hour, stirring occasionally.
Uncover and cook 1 to 1-1/2 hours longer or until thickened. Store in airtight containers in the refrigerator. Yield: 2 cups.
Nutritional Analysis: One serving (2 tablespoons) equals 66 calories, trace fat (trace saturated fat), 0 cholesterol, 1 mg sodium, 17 g carbohydrate, 2 g fiber, trace protein.
Diabetic Exchanges: 1 fruit.
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Made April 1st. I scored today at the grocery store - 6 cameo apples (almost exactly 3 lbs) for 99 cents. Today was the day to try my hand at this recipe!!
My blender had a hard time chopping all the apples, so I ended up removing some of the mix into the sauce pan until I could get all the apples blended in. The final yield was 2 pints plus about 4 oz.
The mix was pretty thick as it was, so I'm not sure at what point "heat until thickened" is. I took it off the heat when it started forming small peaks. The end result tastes a lot like applesauce. I'm not sure what the difference is between applesauce and apple butter, but I do like the flavor. I mentioned it on facebook, and my sister in law made this comment:
Actually, the difference is cooking time and spices. Apple butter is almost always fairly heavily flavored with cinnamon and maybe cloves and such, and is also cooked down to a much thicker texture. You can either do it on the stovetop (which requires a lot of extra stirring so it doesn't scorch), or you can put it in a big pan in the oven and cook it a low heat, stirring on occasion.
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