Receta Grandma’s Apple Butter
As we near the holidays, my thoughts often go back to my grandmothers. They were in some senses polar opposites but both strong and determined women.
My paternal grandmother (henceforth referred to as “Grandma”) was the quintessential farm wife. She had a rough life growing up, having eight brothers and sisters. Their family tried to survive on my great-grandfather’s teaching salary, but they didn’t have anything. Grandma, the oldest daughter, was fostered off to live with her grandparents, about two hours away from her family. I never heard her complain about her youth, but she did not talk often of this time. She finished high school while living with her grandparents and then found help as a “hired girl.” In her twenties, she married my grandfather and they rented land to farm and live on.
Grandma was a strong woman of pioneer stock. (Her grandparents had “made the run” into Oklahoma, albeit a late one.) She was used to making do with what they had. She was a great cook and I remember her making special birthday meals for us growing up. I also remember her making us some really special clothing—like a “Pollyanna” dress that she had hand-smocked.
She never had the opportunity to go to college, but she was one of the smartest women I ever knew. She amazed me once during my college days by reciting half of Macbeth to me, the smug English major. She also whipped my sister and me at Trivial Pursuit.
Grandma and Grandpa in the mid-70s. (Yes, this is a real polaroid. No effects added.)
My maternal grandmother (henceforth referred to as “Grandmother” because that is the way she always signed her notes) was a career woman and a farmer’s wife. Grandmother was born in 1907. After high school, she attended Oklahoma A&M to receive a “lifetime” teaching degree. Her sister also attended Oklahoma A&M and together, not knowing a soul, they took teaching jobs in two separate towns in far western Oklahoma. They were both courted and married local boys. (I like to imagine the gossip about these two young ladies, heading to the wilds of the Panhandle without a care in the world. Brave souls, both.) She also served as a school principal and later a school board member.
Another one not to complain, she also had a hard life in the harsh environment of the western part of our state. She battled some form or another of cancer most of her adult life. (My uncle told me she had a cancerous spot removed from her hand when she was twenty.) She battled breast cancer (in the sixties where she had to endure a double-mastectomy and Cobalt treatment), bladder cancer and lymphoma. She lived well into her eighties despite these conditions.
Her husband, my grandfather, was not expected to live past the age of thirty and was even taken to the Mayo Clinic. (None of us are really sure what the condition was to merit this trek from Oklahoma to Minnesota in the 1940s). In the 1970s, he had open heart surgery which affected him greatly. After the surgery, he was destined to take dialysis treatments three days a week which caused my grandmother to drive him on a 120 mile round trip about every other day.
Again, she was not one to complain.
Grandmother and Granddad on their 40th wedding anniversary.
I really didn’t want to make this post maudlin at all, but nostalgic. Both grandmothers were easily led to tell stories of the Depression and how they coped. Grandmother once told me how they fed the students in the one room school that she ran. Each child brought something the family could spare—a couple of potatoes, a wild rabbit, a home-canned jar of something—and it all went into a pot on top of the wood stove in the school. That was lunch and it might be all a child had to eat that day.
I remember Grandmother always with a crochet hook in her hand. I remember Sunday dinners and holiday meals when we were all together as a family with uncles, aunts and really cool older cousins. Grandmother was set in her ways and you did not want to be the one caught that was tasked with cleaning out her refrigerator or cleaning her kitchen. As a young adult during the Depression, she threw nothing (and I mean nothing) away.
Woe be it if you interrupted her “programs” in the afternoon,too.
Well, let’s get to the recipe for today.
When we bought the bushel of Jonathans on our KC trip, I vowed to make apple butter.
As family tradition has it, this is my Grandma’s famous apple butter recipe but I had to go to the recipe book of compiled recipes from Grandmother’s kitchen to find it. A phone call to mom confirmed that it was a favorite of both families.
I’ve updated the directions here a bit.
Grandma’s Apple Butter
- 16 c. apple pulp
- 1 c. vinegar
- 8 c. sugar
- 4 t. cinnamon
Core and slice apples, but do not peel. Place apples in a large kettle and add just enough water to cover the bottom of the pan. Simmer apples until soft and mushy.
Press the mixture through a sieve or chinois . Continue apples if needed until you have 16 cups of pulp.)
After you get 16 cups of apple pulp, add all ingredients to a large kettle. Bring to a boil stirring often and then reduce heat to a simmer. Cook until mixture is smooth and “remains a smooth mass when a little is cooled on a plate.” (I found about two hours worked well). Stir frequently to prevent sticking. The mixture will darken to a light mahogany color.
During the final hour of cooking, prepare and sterilize jars and lids. Also start heating a canner for the water bath.
Pour hot butter into sterilized hot jars and place on lids. Screw on rings and then water bath for 10 minutes. Remove lid from canner and let set for 5 minutes before removing.
You can see how the color just gets deeper and deeper as you cook it down.
I started out with two full pots (with 8 cups of apples in each) and then combined them into one pot after about an hour of cook time.
I ended up cooking this batch about two hours.
As it cooked one Sunday afternoon, The Hubs wandered in the kitchen. He commented that it smelled just like his Grandma’s kitchen, too. This must have been every grandma’s apple butter.
We canned up a huge batch of 9+ pints of dark mahogany apple butter.
Family from all sides is already calling for dibs on jars.
Stay tuned for some recipes that use apple butter (for sure)!
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