This has truly been a wacky year for food production at the farm. Some things that normally grow in abundance have floundered and some things that have never produced before have done well. Apples were among the crops that did relatively well this year.
We have seven young apple trees of various varieties that we have planted in the past six years, three of which we planted in April of 2011 before we even closed on the property. Each year the apple trees have had had at least some blossoms in the spring but they never developed into more than a few apples. Last fall, as an experiment, I put a small amount of wood ash around the base of three of the trees. This spring nearly all of the trees blossomed heavily so I am not certain how much effect the wood ash had.
In May, when the apple trees were in full bloom, we had several mornings of heavy frost. Since the frost damaged asparagus, rhubarb and grape leaves, I am still stumped that our apple trees were unaffected.
Our honey bees were more that happy to do their part in our apple production, flying from blossom to blossom and tree to tree collecting pollen from one blossom and redistributing a portion of it on the next blossom while they collected their pollen from that one.

Being our first apple crop we didn’t know what to expect and it seems that our apples fell victim to bugs, worms and disease. Then to add insult to injury the crows decided to make our apples part of their diet.
A couple weeks ago when my husband was tired of watching our apples being destroyed he decided to pick what might still be good before the crows got anymore. He first brought home a bag of red apples and since I was busy that day, probably cleaning garlic, I put them in the refrigerator and half forgot about them. A couple days later he brought home these golden delicious.
He had been talking about dehydrating apples or making apple chips for a few weeks so I decided to use the useable part of these apple to make chips.
When I peeled the apples I was pleasantly surprised to see that the blemishes, which I have not positively identified but might be apple scab, were only skin deep. Once I removed the peel there was no evidence of disease.
I peeled, cored and sliced the apples. I placed the slices in a single layer on my dehydrator trays. Each tray held about four apples.
I filled up all nine trays and realized I had peeled way too many apples. So I needed to come up with a semi-quick or easy way to use the other half of those apples. Since fruit pies are a favorite dessert here and pie filling freezes well I decided to make apple pie filling.
I know that golden delicious apples are not necessarily a cooking apple so I was happy to find a recipe for pie filling that just called for apples instead of “cooking apples” or a specific variety of apples. Not that it would have mattered because I often change up recipes, substituting what I have on hand for what is called for in the recipe. Sometimes it turns out really well and sometimes not so good. The apple pie filling is in the freezer for now but I am certain that we will enjoy the apple pie that it makes.
The apple chips on the other hand are disappearing quickly. They make a nice snack.
When I took them out of the dehydrator, after about 18 hours, I packaged each tray of apple chips in a sealable plastic sandwich bag. This way I know that the package contains about four apples or four servings. Then I put the bags in jars for storage. It is important to know an approximate serving size because these apple chips are so good that it could be easy to get carried away and eat way too many. I warned my husband that eating a whole bag at one time was not a good idea, and that you need to make sure you drink enough water when eating dried fruit. He told me that this was a lesson he learned as a kid – the hard way.
A few days ago when I was looking for a side dish to go with the stuffed green peppers I made for dinner, I came across the “half forgotten” bag of apples in the refrigerator.

I decided to cook up some apple sauce. I didn’t need a recipe for this because I have cooked and canned apple sauce many times in the past. Although many of these apples had bites taken out of them (crows) and a few had worms in them, I was able to cut away enough of the bad parts and cook up a wonderful dish of apple sauce. To make apple sauce, after I peeled, cored and cut away any bad parts, I put the apples in a pan with a small amount of water. I brought it to a boil then turned it to low and let it simmer until the apples were very soft. I then mashed the apples with a potato masher. I then continue to let is simmer and thicken up a little. There was no need to add sweetener. I put it in a bowl and chilled it before dinner and it made the perfect side dish.
Over the next few months we will be researching natural options for controlling disease and insects on the apple trees with hopes of growing even better crops in the future, and who knows we might even build a scarecrow or two. https://www.todayshomeowner.com/scarecrows-in-the-garden/
We have two producing apple trees in the back yard. We live in a city so we can’t have as many trees as we would wish. Those two trees last year produced more apples than we could eat in a year, so I made apple sauce, I blanched and froze some for pies, and I made apple butter. First time I ever made apple butter actually and I was surprised just how easy it is. Now if I could just find someone else to peel and core these fruit, life would be perfect!
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The prep work is usually the hardest part of preserving. I have been making dehydrated garlic this past week and peeling takes forever.
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Those are lovely granny smith apples.. and what a brilliant idea of preserving them.. I haven’t tried making one.. I should give it a try..
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The dried apples are soo good. You really should try it. 🙂
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I have a small dehydrator which I used for figs few months ago. A friend gave us many figs and don’t know what to do with them, so i dehydrated them. I also tried some herbs. But I like using most of my herbs fresh. I might have to cut the apples really thin to speed up the drying up process.
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Nice crop there, congratulations! Having established fruit trees on your property is so wonderful!
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Thank you, it is wonderful indeed! Thanks for visiting.
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Congratulations on the apple crop. I have an amazing recipe for an apple pumpkin muffin
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You will have to send it to me.
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I love apple chips! I’d probably have to portion them out as well if I was doing my own so as not to overdo it.
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