Last year, I dusted off my slow cooker and made my first batch of apple butter. While it tasted incredible, I realized (after the fact) that I cooked the apples way too long. I was left with a mere cup of apple butter from 5 pounds of apples. That sure was some thick, concentrated apple butter, let me tell you!
This time around, I did things differently. Mainly, I cooked it for a fraction of the time. Not only was it much, much faster, but I was left with five cups of creamy apple butter.
It’s also naked. Minimal spices, no sweetener. The blonde roast of apple butters! Most apple butter recipes call for 2-4 cups of sugar, but I wanted to make a batch without any sugar. Yes, sugar does help increase the shelf-life and also thicken, but my version seemed to turn out fine.
For this method, you only need a few ingredients:
1) Sweet + tart apples. For the best-tasting apple butter, use an equal mixture of sweet and tart apples. I used Granny Smith, Sunrise, Fuji, Honeycrisp, and Mac apples. Use any varieties you wish, the more the better. Each time you make apple butter, it will taste a bit different depending on the apples you use. Of course, local, in-season apples will make your apple butter even better (say that 5 times fast). I used 5.5 pounds of apples, but feel free to make a smaller batch if preferred (cooking time may vary).
2) Cinnamon. I used about 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon for this batch, but if you’d like a more flavourful and darker apple butter, add as much cinnamon as you prefer. You can also throw in cinnamon sticks as it cooks or try adding ground cloves, nutmeg, and ginger. Some people like to add a spice packet to the mixture. Just grab cheesecloth and add in whole spices and tie it with cooking string. It is very easy to remove this way.
3) Lemon Juice. I added a tiny bit of fresh lemon juice, to taste. This will help extend shelf-life a bit.
Notes:
You can also add apple juice or sweet apple cider, but I didn’t bother for this batch.
I don’t find it needs any added sweetener when I use around 50% sweet apples, but feel free to add sweetener if your taste buds prefer. I like it a bit tart, with a light sweetness. When we cook down the apples, it concentrates the sweetness, so it will taste better as it cooks. A little bit of maple syrup would go a long way here.
How I made it:
As always, I’m giving you chatty detailed steps, photos, and tips, but the actual process is very easy. I like to talk, what can I say.
1. Slice apples. There is no need to peel the apples. In fact, your apple butter is much healthier with the peel left on. Don’t worry, we’ll blend it all up and you won’t even know the peel is in there. Tip: If you have an apple slicer, now is the time to use it. I love this OXO divider. Or if you have a food mill, I hear you can cook the apples whole and then run it through the mill. You make the call.
2. Set slow cooker on HIGH for 4 hours with the lid on. During those 4 hours, give it several stirs as the apples tend to stick to the bottom. You can add some apple juice or cider to prevent sticking. If you’d rather cook it longer on a low heat, you can do that too.
3. Mash apples and turn off heat. After 4 hours, most of the apples are soft enough to mash up with a wooden spoon or potato masher. After mashing, we now have applesauce (with the peel of course).
4. Cool slightly and scoop into high-speed blender. This step results in super smooth apple butter. Plus, we want to pulverize the apple peel. With a big ladle, scoop the apple mixture into a blender. If you have a small blender you may have to do this in a few batches. It all just fit in my Vitamix. Make sure lid is secured tightly or explosions may occur…
5. Blend the mixture. Start on a low setting and go faster until you reach max speed. You may need to let some steam escape through the top hole if there is one. Puree mixture until super smooth and buttery. If it’s still chunky, keep blending.
It will look similar to this after blending – it’s like the silkiest apple “sauce” you’ve ever tasted, but not quite thick enough for a butter yet!
6. Pour the apple butter back into the slow cooker. Turn heat on high and cook down, uncovered, for another 45-75 minutes until it’s as thick as you desire. After 45 mins, I was left with 5 cups and the consistency was very similar to my pumpkin butter. Keep in mind it will thicken very slightly once chilled overnight.
7. When ready, add cinnamon to taste. I didn’t add much so the colour of my apple butter stayed very light. You can also stir in a tiny bit of lemon juice now too, but this is optional.
Swirl!
Easy Slow Cooker Naked Apple Butter
Yield
5 cups
Prep time
Cook time
Total time
Naked apple butter - no sweetener added and minimal spices. It's like the "Blonde Roast" of apple butters and so easy to make.
Ingredients
- an equal mixture of sweet and tart apples (I used 5.5 pounds total, but feel free to use less for a smaller batch)
- Ground cinnamon or other spices like nutmeg, ground cloves, etc, to taste
- tiny bit of fresh lemon juice, to taste (helps to preserve), optional
- Sweetener, like maple syrup, if desired
Directions
- Slice apples. There is no need to peel the apples. In fact, your apple butter is much healthier with the peel left on. Tip: If you have an apple slicer, now is the time to use it. I love my OXO apple slicer. Add apple slices to slow cooker.
- Set slow cooker on HIGH for 4 hours, covered with lid. During those 4 hours, give it a few stirs as the apples tend to stick to the bottom a bit. You can add some apple juice or cider to prevent sticking. If you’d rather cook it longer on a lower heat, you can do that too.
- Mash apples and turn off heat. After 4 hours, most of the apples are soft enough to mash up with a wooden spoon or potato masher. After mashing, we now have applesauce (with the peel of course)!
- Cool slightly and scoop into high-speed blender. With a big ladle, scoop the apple mixture into a blender. If you have a small blender you may have to do this in a few batches. Make sure lid is secured tightly.
- Blend the mixture. Start on a low setting and go faster until you reach max speed. You may need to let some steam escape through the top hole if there is one. Puree mixture until super smooth and buttery. If it’s still chunky, keep blending.
- Pour the apple butter back into the slow cooker. Turn heat on HIGH and cook down, uncovered, for another 45-90 minutes until it’s as thick as you desire. After 45 mins, I was left with 5 cups and the consistency was very similar to my pumpkin butter. Keep in mind it will thicken slightly once chilled overnight.
- When ready, add cinnamon to taste (or other spices if desired) and a very small amount of lemon juice if desired.
- Cool completely and store in an air-tight jar for up to 1 month in the fridge. Or you can try canning it as well
Tip:
Also, try my pumpkin butter recipe
Of course, the best thing about making apple butter (next to eating it) is experimenting with different flavours. Try adding cinnamon sticks, freshly ground nutmeg and ginger, or even other fruit & veggies like pumpkin or pears. Next on my list might be a pumpkin apple butter hybrid…or apple pear…or butternut squash & pumpkin…hmm.
Homemade butters also make fun host/hostess gifts. Make it a couple days in advance and spoon into Mason jars with a cute ribbon and tag. I like to either write out the recipe or simply write the URL to the recipe if there isn’t enough room. I brought a jar over to my friend’s place last night and it was quite a hit!
I’m not certain how long this will last in the fridge since this is my first batch made this way. I will be sure to update this post with how long it lasts for me. If it’s anything like my pumpkin butter, it will hopefully last for at least 3 weeks in an air-tight jar in the fridge. As for canning or freezing, I haven’t tried it myself. For you canning pros out there – do you think this can be canned? As always, I appreciate your thoughts below!
For many ways to enjoy apple butter, see my pumpkin butter list.
What kind of fruit/veggie butter should I try next?
Does anyone have thoughts on whether this would freeze well? 5 cups is kind of a lot for one person :)
Feel free to make less…you can use any amount of apples you want. I used 5.5 lbs but its not necessary to use that amount.
I hope someone comments about freezing it too…I’ve heard you can, but havent tried it.
Yep, you can freeze it. I don’t have the patience for my husband to teach me how to can things…so I go the quick route and just throw it in the freezer. Just be sure to let it cool before you put it in the freezer. I froze a lot of applesauce last year and I used the last jar in February and after 5 months it still tasted good!
Good to know, thanks!
This would be perfect for teacher gifts this Christmas! I wonder how it would turn out adding in some almond butter with the fruit. I can’t wait to give this a try and I bet your house smelled fabulous!
Did you try adding almond butter? I have some macadamia nut butter I was thinking about blending in.
This looks incredible! And its perfect timing because I went apple picking last week and have A TON… literally…of apples on hand right now! Perfect way to use some of them up before they go bad! But thats not likely because I am an apple fiend lol!
Hmmm? Butternut butter? Fun to say at least
Looks so yummy Angela!! Now I want to go apple picking first (are there even any available to go to around us this year?), and then make this deliciousness. That and pumpkin butter. Then maybe I’ll turn into butter myself – which wouldn’t be so bad, would it?!
What is the difference between apple sauce and apple butter? I’m not sure if it’s me being English (or just me being a bit thick!) but I tend to call any blended fruit a puree. Can someone help me out?? :-)
Hey Jo, Apple butter is cooked down much longer than applesauce. Essentially, it’s a condensed form of applesauce, in a way, and is much more thick. Does that help?
Yes, thank you that makes sense now. The word ‘butter’ sounds so much more rich and decadent, which I guess it is really :-) I need to get onto making me some ‘butters’!
Yes it does and it’s so fitting. If you compare it to aplesauce (which I did actually in a taste test) the apple butter was so much more rich and creamy. I meant to take a side by side photo. Oh well, next time!
Can I use an immersion blender if I don’t have a regular blender? My pops has been offering to buy me a VitaMix for some time but I haven’t taken him up on it, so my only bladed appliances are an immersion blender and a large food processor. But I have been craving apple butter and this looks so easy and good!
You probably could, but I would wait until it has cooled mostly. :)
Those immersion blenders are designed for blending soup while it’s still hot. No need to wait for cooling.
I’m in the process of making this right now and I just used my immersion blender to blend up the apples. I just made sure to mash them by hand really well first. Right now I have the lid off and it is thickening as we speak. I also added a small cinnamon stick while the apples were cooking and will add a little more ground cinnamon at the end. I will admit that I’ve already had a few taste tests and it is delicious!
looking forward to seeing some recipes using the butter soon I hope?!
I hope so too!
OH HECK YES! I’ve been wanting to make apple butter, but don’t have time to stand over the stove all day! WOOHOO!
Heh, blonde roast. I’m forwarding this to my best friend, who is obsessed with her new slow cooker.
Your apple butter looks delicious!
I bet pear would be great, too!
OH APRICOT BUTTER pleaseeeeeeee?
*faints*
oh yum, now that is a fruit I rarely use! Are they in season now? I dont even know.
Usually in season late Spring through Summer. :(
darn! Miss summer already. I’ll have to try it next year :)
Delicious!! Looks so wonderful. I will have to try this.
This is gorgeous! It’s so silky smooth. Just one more thing on my list of things I love about my Vitamix. :-) I’m excited to make this, because I dislike the high amount of added sugar usually in apple butter. Happy fall!
I need to make homemade apple butter — that looks so delicious, Angela. Thanks for sharing!
I made apple butter yesterday in the slow cooker. I canned it in a water bath when I was finished. The key with canning is clean jars, hot product (the apple butter) and the right acidity of the finished product. I placed the hot apple butter in the clean jars (250ml size) and removed the air, wiped the lid clean and put on the snap lid. Then I processed them in the canner for 10 minutes of boiling water. (the water will stop boiling when you first put the jars in start the timer when the water comes back to a boil) When you take them out wait 12 hours and make sure the lid has popped down. (My lids pop usually within the first 30 minutes but you aren’t supposed to disturb them when they first come out and after all that work I will listen to the book!) Then they are good for the shelf. Benardin claims they are good for 2 years if you use the lemon juice.
Thanks for the tips Jennifer! Apple butter must be in the air ;) I still have to try that recipe you sent me with the spice infused pumpkin seeds!
Oh, may I please have the recipe for the pumpkin seeds? I am a huge fan of anything pumpkin!
I LOVE the simplicity of this Ange! Because I’m a cinnamon junkie I think I’d have to up the quantity of it a bit, but other than that this sounds amazing!! Honeycrisp apples are my all-time fave and I can’t wait until it’s officially apple season. Do you think it would work over low heat on the stove, rather than a slow cooker? Great photos!
I cant see why it wouldnt work, I will have to try that next time!
Any idea if it can be done without a high-speed blender, or will this just result in “less-smooth” butter?
I recommend blending it (in any blender) if you can so the apple peels can pulverize. That being said, you could probably peel all the apples first if you dont want to blend it. It would be much less smooth but would still work. Also Ive heard some ppl use an immersion blender. Or you could try putting the apples in a food processor before cooking? let me know how it goes if you end up trying it out.
I left mine with peels and cooked them down and then blended them in the food processor and they cam out great.
I love that this doesn’t have any added sweetener. I bet it would be wonderful on toast in the morning!
yes and swirled in oatmeal (had that this morning) :)
I do love pumpkin butter but the apple is a nice change. Love how this recipe uses the slow cooker. Thanks for sharing!