
Sometime early last month, I went out to Linvilla Orchards in Media, PA with a friend to pick apples. I came home with an overflowing half bushel box, awash in good intentions. However, life got in the way and I let the apples sit for longer than I would have liked. They got a bit mealy as the sugars turned to starch and so the only treatment for them was to turn them into applesauce and apple butter (two things I love, so I wasn't particularly sad).
Years ago, when I first started making applesauce, I would labor over the apples, peeling, coring and chopping them into fine pieces. These days, my technique is a little more slapdash. I do still core the apples and I chop the quarters into smaller bits. But I skip the peeling part altogether, which saves an amazing amount of time and hand cramping.
Instead, I cook the apples down (with lots of cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger and lemon zest) with the peels still attached. When I'm able to mash an apple piece with the back of a wooden spoon, I take the whole mess off the stove and run the apples through a Foley Food Mill. It purees the apples into a nice, even sauce that still has some good mouth feel and gets rid of the peels at the same time. It's really easy to boot. If you make a lot of applesauce (or stewed tomatoes or peaches) this tool will become an invaluable addition to your kitchen gadgetry.

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11-05-2008 @12:59AM bug said... Oh yeah.. I love my Foley Food Mill. I don't even core the apples, I cut them in half, each half into 3 wedges, cook down, and run them through the food mill, it removes the peels, seeds, etc., with no fuss.
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11-06-2008 @3:37PM Rt said... 'Ol Jacques (Pepin)swore by a food mill, tho he did not promote one brand over another. Julia Child seemed to prefer more recent inventions but eschewed single purpose devices (peelers).
I you search for a peeler on the slashfood site you get a revealing result.
Knife skills were once valued. It would seem that following a recipe is now the most important thing.
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