MENU

The Taste of Fall: Apple-Water

When I was a child, my mother would make applesauce with the four of us children.  We’d take turns cranking the food mill and separating the skins from the rest of the apple.  Once all the boiled apples had been scooped from the pot with a slotted spoon, there would be water, deliciously flavored with the taste of apple.  More dilute than apple-juice, but tasting more of cider, my mother would pour the warm liquid into four shot glasses and we’d share it between us.

More than anything else, the taste of apple water represents fall for me.  Cider you can buy all year round, nowadays.  But apple-water?  Only comes with homemade applesauce.

The other weekend we processed four burners worth of apples, my mother’s way.  Mom never took the skins off or took out the cores.  You just quartered the apples, and then boiled/steamed them until they were “fork soft.”  Michael and I did the same, and the apartment was roasting with the heat coming out of the kitchen.

Apples a-boil for applesauce and applebutter

We decided to add an extra step to our process.  When we spooned the apples out of the pot, we let them rest in a strainer with some cheesecloth for a couple minutes before moving them into the food mill.  At the end, we took the rest of the liquid and also ran it through the cheesecloth.  In addition to making applesauce that was a bit firmer in consistency (perfect for reducing down into applebutter!), we had the most lovely batch of apple-water.

When I say lovely, it was the nicest rose color, slightly opaque and delicious smelling.  I poured myself a nice tall glass, and went to sit out on the porch.  It made such a picture I had to share it with all of you.

Apple Water, a lovely rose color.

The Benefits of Doing Something Yourself

Picking herbs at an open farm day at our
farm share, Spiral Path Farms.

Michael and I have promised ourselves that this is the last week of apple processing.  Really.  We’d promised ourselves that it was going to be the last 2 weeks ago, but I was tempted by a crate of apples for $25 (it worked out to be less than $1 per lb, which is a great price in these parts!) and have been drying apples for camping and snacking.  Michael on the other hand found a few coworkers who wanted to buy apple butter off of him, and Michael was only too willing to sell jars to them.  So he, also, is replenishing the stock of canned things.  At the end of this, we will have processed more than 150 lbs of apples… quite frankly, it probably was more.  And after we finish the apples?  We’re going to try our hand at cheese and yogurt.

A couple of our friends have questioned our sanity, spending so much time canning and preserving when things are much cheaper and less time-consuming if you buy them at the grocery store.  However, when I talk about canning and such with knitters and crocheters, I receive far less of that attitude.  I think knitters and crocheters “get it” far more than others.  Why?  Because we all see the benefits to doing things ourselves.  So for those of you stumped by the stitchers, canners, or other DIY people out there, here’s a list of reasons why we love taking the time to do it ourselves.

Our apple peeler, slicer and corer.  I love it.
  • You know what is in it.  When you are canning fruits and vegetables, you have control of every little thing you put in the jar.  It can be exactly the way you want it.  The same thing with knitting and crocheting.  You have control over the yarn and it’s contents, the pattern, fit, style and feel of the fabric.  Either way, you can make intentional choices about what goes into the final product.
  • You know where it’s come from.  In the same way you have control over what you create, you have control over the object’s origins.  For food, that means I can choose the freshest, best ingredients.  If I want organic, I can procure organic food.  If you make your own sweater, you can choose what yarn you want, and you can make informed choices about how it is sourced.  Since you are the one making the garment, you know it was made in ethical conditions.  If you want to support the local economy, you can choose yarn that is made entirely in the United States (Like Shepherd’s Wool) or a local dyer (like Dragonfly Fibers, for me).
  • I find a meditative quality to making my own things.  The repetition of stitch stacking upon stitch.  The motion as I crank applesauce through our food mill.  There is a thoughtfulness and deliberateness to doing the same thing over and over, where it acquires more meaning because there’s more thought and deliberation put into each step.  Or maybe it’s just me.  I’ve always liked repetitive tasks.
  • There’s satisfaction in doing something yourself.  On our fridge, we have a magnet that reads, “I eat Local, because I CAN.”  It’s both a reminder and a boast.  We eat local, because we can and preserve.  We also eat local because we are fortunate enough to have access to local produce. Either way, it’s a boast, because when it comes down to it, there’s something really satisfying when you pop open the top to something you canned yourself and you make a meal out it.  I get the same feeling when I knit or crochet.  There’s something incredibly satisfying about having someone compliment something you made and being able to say, “Thank you. I made it.”  The socks that I made myself are warmer, even if it’s only my imagination.  The food that I can myself is tastier, even if it’s just because I remember making it.
What, aside from stitching, do you find satisfaction doing on your own?  Let me know on Twitter, Facebook or in the comments below!

Do you know why October is my very favorite Month?

I’ve always been a fall girl, a northern girl, a Yankee.  My favorite fruit is the apple, my favorite tree the sugar maple, and I live for fall foliage.  I like when the weather turns, the nights turn cool, and you put the extra blankets on your bed.  I love when school starts: new backpacks and notepaper and new pens.

October is when Halloween happens: perhaps the best holiday in the US calendar, where you can anything you want to be and you aren’t teased for it.  I love crunching on roasted pumpkin seeds and eating all the types of gourds that come into season now: spaghetti squash, butternut, pumpkin, yum!

Fall is when I pull out my hand knit or crochet socks, sweaters and blankets, and get to cuddle into them.

I start thinking about October sometime at the end of August, and spend most of September trying to persuade people it’s almost October.

This last weekend we went apple picking – already the second venture out of the season.  The first week we spent most of the time making apple sauce, this week we are making apple butter.

an apple, shiny on the tree
This is the fifth fall that we’ve been processing apples (I’ve been doing it many years before then, with my family), and we’ve got it down to a science.  Apples are merely quartered and put into the pot whole, and boiled.  When we run the soft apples through the food mill, the stems, woody bits, and seeds are worked out.

For the apples we dry in the dehydrator we have this nifty machine, pictured above.  Sometimes I’ll just do an extra few apples because it’s so much fun to crank it. 

When we are really going at the applesauce making, we have all four burners going, and nearly every big stockpot in the house.  Pictured above, we have the three burners boiling the apples and the one burner boiling the already canned applesauce.  It’s a good thing the weather is turning cool, because the kitchen gets quite hot!
For me, the smell of apples cooking, and the smell of allspice, cloves and cinnamon altogether embodies fall.
Do you love Fall? Do you have some favorite fall traditions?  I’d love to hear about it on twitter or facebook.

Apple Butter and Orchards

It seems that apple picking, apple butter, apple sauce, and canning are in the air.  In my blog reader alone I had sever people telling of their weekend orchard adventures.  But most eerie was Laura Nelkin talking about making apple butter just as I came back from stirring my own in the crockpot.

Our recipes are a little different, but the idea is the same – taking the fruits of the harvest and preserving them for the year to come.

My family lives in the Hudson Valley area of New York, and before that, we came from Massachusetts, where when I went to school, learning about Johnny Appleseed was part of the preschool, 1st and 2nd grade curriculum (it might have also had something to do with the fact that he was born in Leominster, MA, where I lived when I was young).  Apple picking is nearly a cultural thing in both those parts.  On apple picking days the four of us children would eat a light breakfast (As my mother knew we’d be eating apples in the orchard until we were practically sick) and then go picking.  In a good orchard picking wouldn’t take very long, so then we’d go run in the maize maze, eat cider doughnuts and become awful hellions.  The ride home would be sticky-faced children that had subsided into an exhausted post-applepicking haze.

Those types of memories stay with you, and when I found out Michael had never went apple picking it was clear that had to change.  He had to be educated – seeing as he thought apples were “okay” and he’d really only had red delicious and granny smith (both of which are really not representative of the best of apples).

We now go picking each year.

Last year we went picking and accidentally got just over 100 lbs of apples.  We were processing for DAYS.

This year we were much more reasonable – 50 lbs for canning, 10 lbs for eating.  It’s going to be a fun next few days.

Our Apple Butter Recipe:
To make 8 cups of apple butter:

Core and quarter 48 apples, skins on.
Boil until they can be poked with a fork.
Run through food mill, skins on (if using red apples, it gives the sauce a lovely pink color).  We normally run it through the coarse setting, and then again through the finest setting.
Add desired amount of sugar (approx 2 cps) and apple pie spice (well, actually, Michael has his own mix, but seeing as it’s won prizes at the Montgomery County Fair, he’s not sharing, even with me)
Put in crockpot and cook on high, stirring every 1/2 hour to full hour.  Cook all day, until it’s reduced by 1/2.
Can it in mason jars.

Enjoy all year.

Quilting Update

It’s been a while since I last talked about Michael’s Train Quilt, aside from an odd mention here or there.  I’ve been in the process of machine quilting it, which turned out to be more of a project than I anticipated.  I thought I was going to freeform quilt it, but it became very clear very early on that it wasn’t going to work well.  So then, after much deliberation, I ended up basting it with spray-on basting, pinning it in places, and just running random lines across the quilt.  It looked really bad when I first started.  The more lines I get going across it, the better it is starting to look.  I’m hoping I might get the quilting done this weekend.

By Lucy Knisley

Then I can think about doing the binding, god help me.

The point is, I’m close.  Very close.

And it got me thinking.  While I don’t think I really like sewing or quilting as a hobby, and while there is a lot to learn from sewing a garment that can apply to knitting – I’m thinking about doing another quilt.

Bear with me.  I’ve always really liked apple posters that show all the different varieties of apples.  Like this, this or this.  Then, earlier this week I saw a picture by Lucy Knisley, pictured at right.

Now let me say – I think the best art inspires you yourself.  It might mean it creates some strong emotion in you, but it also might just mean that it speaks to you and inspires you yourself.  This is what happened to me.

And I thought to myself, “That’s nice.”  Then, “She got the Red Delicious wrong.  And I prefer calling a Crispin and Mutzu.  I can’t believe she didn’t include Pink Lady or Winesap or Johnathan.”

Which just shows you how much of an apple snob I am.  But then I thought – I wish I could paint like that.  I’d make a better poster.  And then I realized that it’d make the perfect little/not so little quilt.  I could take white or cream squares, draw out the apples.  Color them with crayon, iron them, and then embroider on them.  It’d be so cool.  And then I could make it into a quilt.

So I’m thinking I gotta get my apple mojo going.

What apples would you have to include on an apple quilt?