What is the A to Z Challenge? It’s blogging a letter of the alphabet every day the month of April (with Sundays off for good behavior.) It begins April First with the letter A and ends April 30 with the letter Z.
I found out about this challenge from my friend Vanessa at Coffee and a Keyboard. Since I am technology challenged, I haven't figured out how to easily copy the blogs with links to this site, so if you want to see who else is participating, check in with my friend action and suspense author, Stephen Tremp at his blog. Before I participate in the next one, I'll have to ask Stephen or my chum Ellen at Confessions of an Overworked Mom how to make this work. She's amazing when it comes to blogging.
Some bloggers choose a theme. My only theme is going to be to promise that whatever I write about will not be 100% book related. It's long been my goal to make this a blog about family products, but limited time hasn't allowed me to reach out to many sponsors. Hopefully this will help move things along.
Today's post is for the letter:
A is for apples. This is our family's favorite fruit. We each eat at least one apple a day--usually Gala, Granny Smith, or McIntosh. According to Produce Pete, the McIntosh is America's most famous apple. I honestly hadn't eaten anything other than a McIntosh until I was an adult.
One of our girls, the Lil Diva (9), likes her apples after they've sat out on the counter a bit. The other, the Lil Princess (7), refuses to eat apples unless they are cold and rock solid from the fridge. The two girls and their father will eat the skin, but I prefer a naked apple. Each fall I buy a 1/2 peck and make homemade applesauce. I was told adding brown sugar and cinnamon to the recipe is the French way to make it. That's possible, as I never saw it made any other way growing up.
Here's a recipe for applesauce from my Betty Crocker's 40th Anniversary Edition Cookbook. I received this book as an engagement present.
4 medium cooking apples, pared and each cut into fourths
1/2 cup water
1/4 cup packed brown sugar or 3 to 4 tablespoons granulated sugar
1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/8 teaspoon ground nutmeg
Heat apples and water to boiling over medium heat, stirring occasionally; reduce heat. Simmer uncovered 5 to 10 minutes, stirring occasionally to break up apples, until tender. Stir in remaining ingredients. Heat to boiling. Boil and stir one minute.
I often double or triple the recipe depending upon how many apples I use, but I go light on the nutmeg because it can be an overpowering spice in large doses.
They also have a microwave recipe, but there is nothing like the smell of apples cooking on the stove. It's not the same in the microwave.
What kind of apples do you eat? Does fall mean harvest time and apple picking in your area? Do you use apples in unusual ways in your recipes?
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7 comments:
Hello and welcome to the a to z challenge. Just a suggestion...might want to move this "A" post to the top so people don't assume you forgot and move on.
Edge of Your Seat Romance
Thanks for the suggestion, but I like to give my authors the top spot.
I have this cookbook!!! Great A post!
http://fredasvoice.blogspot.com/2011/04/is-for-april.html
It's a great book. I use it all the time. I have tons of cookbooks, but find I use the same 2 or 3 most often.
Oohhhhh, great post, Cheryl! I'm glad to see you participating in the challenge and am excited to see yet another facet of your life. Very cool. I love apples too. My fav has to be honeycrisp.
Thanks for the recipe too!! Sounds yummy.
Thanks for stopping by Vanessa. It's all your fault I'm participating, so if I get behind in my other work I'm coming looking for you. LOL!
My mom used to put those little cinnamon candies in her applesauce, when she canned it. Made the applesauce turn pink and gave it that slight spicy taste.
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