LOVE tabbouleh!
Ever tried roasted applesauce, karen? I tried a recipe once because it sounded like such an unusual approach to applesauce but now I'd never do it any other way. Tastes like apple pie without the fat and calories of a crust. I don't preserve it. I just do 6 apples at a time. Keeps my husband in applesauce for the top of his oatmeal for about as long as I want to keep an open jar. I do sometimes put it in smaller jars and freeze them tho.
I can also put a tablespoon or so of this in a little circle of pastry (puff pastry, filo dough, pie crust, whatever I've got on hand) and make little hand pies for my grandson. He loves them! [Reminds me: he's here today so I think I'll take a small jar out of the freezer and we'll do some of these]
This is Judy Roger's recipe. She of Zuni Chicken. I gather my own ingredients and use her method. Her timing doesn't work for me but I do the first roast as long as I need to and then put my foot on the gas until the edges of the soft apples get some serious browning. I also like to mix varieties so there's some apple in there that can at least hold some shape and, perhaps, still add some texture. I like it chunky!
Roasted Applesauce
Recipe By: Judy Roger's "Zuni Cafe Cookbook"
Yield: about 3 cups
This is my version of Judy Roger's brilliant take on applesauce. It may be why apples were put on Earth! The roasting adds so much flavor to this kitchen standard.
We top steel-cut oatmeal with it and I add it to waffles and baking. I keep it in the fridge all the time.
• 4 pounds apples, peeled, cored & quartered
• 2 - 3 tablespoon sugar (optional), I like brown sugar
• 1 pinch salt
• a few pats butter
• 1 splash vinegar
• cinnamon & nutmeg (optional), to taste
1. Preheat the oven to 375˚.
2. Arrange apples in a large buttered casserole in a shallow layer. Cover tightly with aluminum foil. Place them in the oven to roast for 20-45 minutes or until they begin to soften.
3. When they start to break down, remove the foil and raise the oven heat to 500˚. Pour off and reserved the exuded juices. Return the apples to the oven and roast, uncovered, for an additional 10 minutes or until you can see generous carmelization.
4. Meanwhile, prepare a generous sized bowl that will hold 2-3 times the volume of the apples with the butter, brown sugar, cinnamon and a pinch of salt and a splosh of really good and tasty vinegar.
5. Remove the apples from the oven and transfer them to the bowl. Be sure to scrape in any browned bits that stick to the roasting pan. That's exactly the roasty flavor you're going for! Stir and/or mash to break down to a chunky texture.
6. Store covered in the refrigerator. Keeps for a couple weeks and maybe longer.