Canning Apples for Food Storage
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Canning apples is a great way to preserve the fresh flavor to enjoy throughout the year. Learn how to home can plain apples slices, quarters, or chunks for your food storage shelves.
Although apples can be stored in a root cellar or cool location for a long time, having peeled, cored, and sliced apples ready to go can be a time saver in the kitchen. Canned apples can be enjoyed right out of the jar, or added to your favorite baked, simmered, or fried recipes.
Tips for Canning Apples
The best apples for canning are freshly harvested, local apples. Apples found out of season in the stores have been kept in storage, which affects the freshness, crispness, and juiciness.
Types of Apples for Canning
Choose crisp apple varieties that hold up well when cooked. Baking apples such as Braeburn, Cortland, Fuji, Honey gold, Gala, Granny Smith, Pink Lady, and Honeycrisp are good choices. Consider mixing several varieties for flavor.
Slightly damaged or softer apple varieties, such as Jonagolds, Macouns, McIntosh, Golden Delicious, and Red Delicious can be turned into canned applesauce.
Select fresh, firm apples with no bruises or insect damage that have a strong apple aroma. If you are aiming for a full canner load, that would be about 17 1/2 pounds for a load of 7 quarts, and about 13 1/2 pounds for a canner load of 9 pint sized jars depending on the size of your apple pieces.
Decide on the Jar Size
Think about how you will use canned apples. I like canning apples in a mix of quarts and pints. You can fit about 3 pounds of apples into a quart-sized jar. That is just the right amount to make an apple pie, apple crisps, and for most baked recipes, while the pints can be used for snacking.
The processing time is the same for pint and quart sized jars, so feel free to mix jar sizes in the same canner load.
Select a Preserving Liquid
Canning fruit in a sugar syrup helps to maintain flavor and shape. You can preserve apples in a sugar syrup, honey syrup, apple juice, white grape juice, or even plain water.
This recipe uses a very light sugar syrup, but feel free to substitute any of these options:
Syrup for 9 Pint Sized Jars:
- Very Light: 6 1/2 cups water and 3/4 cups sugar
- Light: 5 3/4 cups water and 1 1/2 cups sugar
- Medium: 5 1/4 cups water and 2 1/4 cups sugar
- Heavy: 5 cups water and 3 1/4 cups sugar
- Light Honey: 7 cups water and 1/2 cups mild honey
Syrup for 7 Quart Sized Jars:
- Very Light: 10 1/2 cups water and 1 1/4 cups sugar
- Light: 9 cups water and 2 1/4 cups sugar
- Medium: 8 1/4 cups sugar and 3 3/4 cups sugar
- Heavy: 7 3/4 cups sugar and 5 1/4 cups sugar
- Light Honey: 11 cups water and 1 cup honey
Steps to Canning Apples
In this canning recipe, apples are peeled, cored, cut into chunks, slices, quarters, or halves, and preserved into shelf stable jars using a water bath canner.
If you are new to canning or haven’t canned in a while, it may be helpful to review this article on water bath canning at the National Center for Home Food Preservation website.
This canning recipe can be found in the USDA Complete Guide to Home Canning and So Easy to Preserve books, and at the NCHFP website. A more detailed and printable recipe can be found at the bottom of this article, but these are the general steps for canning apples in pint-sized jars. See the notes in the recipe for quarts.
Step 1: Gather Your Canning Supplies
You will need the following canning and kitchen equipment:
- Water bath canner with canning rack
- 9 pint sized canning jars
- Canning lids and bands (new lids for each jar, bands can be reused)
- Canning tools: jar lifter, canning ladle, funnel, and bubble popper
- Kitchen scale
- Plus basic kitchen supplies such as a large saucepot, large prep bowl, kitchen towels, large slotted spoon, tongs, peeler, knife, and cutting board.
Step 2: Prepare the Canning Jars
Wash the jars, lids, and canning equipment in hot, soapy water and rinse well. Check the jars for nicks and cracks. Eliminate any jars that are damaged as these will break in the canner. Set the lids, bands, and tools aside to air-dry until you are ready to use them.
Place the canning rack into the water bath canner, set the jars upright in the canner, and add water to cover the jars. Bring the canner to a simmer (180˚F) for 10 minutes, and keep hot until you are ready to fill them.
Step 3: Make the syrup
Add the sugar and water to the large saucepan and bring to a boil over medium-high heat to dissolve sugar, keep warm.
Step 4: Prepare the Lemon Water
To help prevent the peeled apples from browning, dip the pieces in a lemon water bath or an ascorbic acid mixture, such as Fruit-Fresh (follow the instructions on the container).
For a lemon water bath, fill a large bowl with about a gallon of cold water and juice from one lemon or 1/2 cup of bottled lemon juice.
Step 5: Prepare the Apples
Wash the apples well under clean, running water. Peel, core, and cut into halves, quarters, chunks, or slices. Add the apple pieces to the prepared lemon bath as you work.
Step 6: Simmer the Apples in the Syrup
Drain the apples and add them to the sugar-syrup pot. Cover the pot, raise the heat, and bring it to a boil. Once it is boiling, reduce the heat and simmer the apples for about 5 minutes.
Partially cooking the apples in the syrup helps draw the air out of the fruit so it will be less likely to float in the jar or absorb extra liquid when processed.
Step 7: Can the Apples
Spread a kitchen towel on the counter. Use the jar lifter to remove a hot jar from the canner, drain, and place on the towel. Keep the remaining jars in the canner, so they stay warm.
Use tongs and pack the hot apples into the jar. Use the canning funnel and ladle to pour the hot syrup over the apples maintaining a 1/2-inch headspace. To help prevent siphoning, make sure that the apples are covered with the liquid while allowing for adequate headspace.
Wipe the rim of the jar with a damp towel to remove residue. Center a lid on the top, place the band over the lid, and screw it on until fingertip tight. Place the jar back into the canner, and repeat with the rest of the jars.
Adjust the water level so it is covering the jars by two inches, bring the canner to a boil, and process in a boiling water canner for the times indicated in the recipe below. Let the jars cool completely, and then test the seals, label, date, and store in a cool, dark location. Canned foods are best if eaten within a year and are safe as long as lids remain sealed.
Canning Apples for Food Storage
Ingredients
- 13 1/2 pounds baking apples
- 6 1/2 cups water
- 3/4 cup sugar
- 1/2 cup bottled lemon juice (optional to prevent browning)
Instructions
Prepare the canning equipment:
- Wash your jars, lids, screw bands, and canning tools in hot soapy water. Rinse thoroughly to remove all suds. Set aside to air dry on a clean kitchen towel.
- Place the canning rack into water bath canner, place jars in the canner, and add water to cover. Bring the canner to a simmer (180˚F) for 10 minutes, and keep hot until you are ready to fill them.
Make the syrup:
- Add the sugar and water to the large saucepan and bring to a boil over medium-high heat to dissolve sugar, keep warm.
Prepare the apples:
- Fill a large bowl with about a gallon of cold water and lemon juice if using (or use Fruit Fresh – follow directions on package).
- Wash the apples well under clean, running water. Peel, core, and cut the apples into halves, quarters, or slices. Add the apple pieces to the bowl of water as you work.
Heat the apples in the syrup:
- Drain the apples and add them to the sugar-syrup pot. Cover the pot, raise the heat, and bring the pot to a boil, and boil for 5 minutes. Reduce the heat to low and fill the jars.
Can the apples:
- Spread a towel on the counter. Use your jar lifter to remove a warm jar from canner, drain the water into the canner, and place on the towel. Keep the rest of the jars in the canner so they stay hot.
- Use your canning funnel and ladle, to fill the warm jars with hot apples and top off with the syrup leaving 1/2-inch headspace.
- Run you bubble popper through the apples to release air bubbles, and wipe jar rim with a clean, damp kitchen towel.
- Place a lid on the jar, and screw the metal band down fingertip tight. Place the jar back into the canner, and repeat with the remaining jars.
- Once all the jars are in canner, adjust the water level to two inches above the tops.
- Cover the canner and bring to boil over high heat. Once water boils vigorously, process pints and quarts for 20 minutes at altitudes of less than 1,000 ft. Adjust processing time for your altitude if necessary. (see notes below)
- When processing time is complete, turn off the heat and allow the canner to cool down and settle for about 5 minutes.
- Lay a dry towel on the counter. Remove the cover by tilting lid away from you so that steam does not burn your face.
- Use the jar lifter to remove the jars from canner and place on the towel. Keep upright, and don't tighten bands or check the seals yet. Let the jars sit undisturbed for 12 to 24-hours to cool.
- After the jars have cooled for at least 12 hours, check to be sure lids have sealed by pushing on the center of the lid. The lid should not pop up. If the lid flexes up and down, it did not seal. Refrigerate jar and use up within a few days.
- Remove the screw on bands and wash the jars. Label, date, and store your jars in a cool, dark place and use within 12-18 months. Yields about 9 pint of apples.
Notes
Nutrition
Canning Resources and Further Reading:
- Syrups for Canning Fruit – National Center for Home Food Preserving
- Frequently Asked Canning Questions – National Center for Home Food Preserving
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Do I HAVE to precook the apples or can I put them in the jars Rae and cover to 1 inch with boiling water and then process them in the canner? I’m thinking that is how my grandmother did it 50+ years ago.
Marilyn, Yes, cook the apples as instructed in the recipe. The recipe has been tested and deemed safe as written. Cooking the apples drives out some of the air in the fruit, and the processing time is based on hot apples in hot jars. It is best to follow updated canning recipes that have been scientifically tested for safe home canning.
Are you weighing the 17.5 lbs of apples prior coring and peeling? Thank you
Krissann, Yes, weigh the apples first, and then prepare them as described in the recipe.
I followed the instructions exactly however they turned mushy and I used fresh Honey Crisp apples (this occurred when I used the 5 minutes of boiling the apples in the syrup) I then boiled some for approximately 1 minute and they were firmer, Am I able to cook the apples for a shorter period without affecting the end result negatively.
Tanya, Cooking the apples for less time is ok. You just want to heat the apples and drive out some of the air. You can test the timing using a few pieces before adding all your prepared apples to the syrup. You will get the best results from fresh, firm, and slightly under-ripe apples. However, even if they break down, they are still ok to can.
I used a mix of macintosh, gala, and ginger gold. My apples turned to mush during the five minutes of boiling in the syrup, and I only got four quarts. Part of the problem could be that it took a long time to get the apples to boil. Very weary and discouraged.
Barbe, Unfortunately, some apples do not hold up to heat as well as others. But, as long as you followed the recipe, your jars are safe for storing.
Do you have to peel the apples? We like the peel on in our baked goods.
Tracy, Yes, the apples need to be peeled. The recipe was tested and deemed safe using peeled apples. The skins could harbor bacteria or affect heat penetration.
Worked great! Just a note that we measured out 21 pounds of apples and it yielded much more than 7 quarts (we got an extra 4 and a half pints). We used a Kitchen-aid slicer attachment to peel, core, and slice the apples.
Sally, Yes, you are correct! The 21 pounds is what the USDA recipe suggested, but when I tested the recipe, I had leftovers too. I just double checked my notes and found I noted 17 1/2 pounds of apples to fill 7 quart sized jars. Thanks for your comment, I have corrected the amount in the article.
Are these apples okay to drain and proceed with pie recipes?
J, Yes, that is a great way to used home canned apples.
Worked perfectly. I liked being able to pick the consistency of the syrup.
This was so helpful as I hadn’t scanned apples for several years and I had forgotten how long to leave them in the canner!
Superb instructions! This is in the area of my expertise, and I have feared for the future of food preservation, given some of the directions I have read. Not these! These I will use to refresh my memory when Apple canning season comes around again — and again —and again!! Than you so very much!