Recipe – How to Can Apple Pie Filling

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Learning how to can apple pie filling means you never have to buy apples out of season, when they cost an arm and a leg, and it also means you can have pie whenever you want. Which makes it one of my favorite pantry staples.

Nothing says fall like a good crisp apple. I love the way an apple fits perfectly in the palm of my hand. The way they perfume the air, promising delectable delights. And it means I get to can up a new batch of homemade apple pie filling in my pressure canner.

My father-in-law adores apple pie and it’s my responsibility privilege to provide the apple pies for Thanksgiving and Christmas dinner.

My favorite apple in pies and applesauce is the Gravenstein. I planted my own this year, but will have to wait a few years for a large crop. Thankfully, my parents have an ancient one in their field. .

Resources for How to Can Apple Pie Filling

My original apple pie filling recipe used cornstarch, but the cornstarch does break down after time, and is no longer approved for canning due to safety issues. The jars I use for Christmas baking were fine, but by the time I hit spring, they were a mushy runny mess.  They still worked, but the crusts were a bit soggy in the pies.

I’ve now been using ClearJell® both because it’s the only approved canning thickener, and because it truly does create a superior end product! Plus, there’s too much precious time and work to waste on a recipe that’s not safe and doesn’t hold up.

Here’s the version I did this year using the Clear Jell®. It makes 4 quarts or 7 pints of apple pie filling.

Want a canning apple pie filling without clear jel recipe? Simply omit the ClearJell and instead, when you open the jar to bake your pie, add thickener of your choice to the pie filling just as if you were using fresh apples, bake, and enjoy!

Canned Apple Pie Filling Recipe

(Adapted from Ball Complete Book of Home Preserving )

12 cups sliced, peeled, and cored apples

2 and 3/4 cups raw sugar

3/4 cup Clear Jel.

1 teaspoon cinnamon

1/2 teaspoon nutmeg

1/2 teaspoon ginger

3 and 3/4 cups water

1/2 cup lemon juice

Place peeled, cored, and sliced apples in boiling water for 1 minute, working 6 cups of apples at a time. Blanching keeps apples from becoming mushy when canning. With a slotted spoon, place apples in a bowl and cover.

In a large stainless steel pot, combing sugar, ClearJel®, spices, and water. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat (don’t use a hard boil), stirring constantly, and cook until it thickens and bubbles. Add lemon juice and boil for 1 minute, constantly stirring.

Remove from heat and fold in apples. Ladle apple pie filling into warm prepared jars, a canning funnel makes this way easier, let me tell you. Wide mouth work best for this recipe, but narrow can be used.

Leave 1 inch headspace, run a spatula down the inside of the jars to remove air bubbles. Wipe rim with a damp clean towel. Center lid and screw bands down until tight. Place jars filled with apple pie filling in  a hot water bath for 25 minutes.

Turn off heat, remove lid, and let sit for 5 minutes. Using a jar lifter, carefully remove hot jars to a towel and allow to cool without moving over night. Check seals, remove bands, wipe down outside of jar and store in out of direct sunlight for up to 1 year.

Altitude adjustment: If you’re 1,000 to 3,000 feet above sea level, increase processing time by 5 minutes (30 minutes total), 3,001 to 6,000 feet above sea level, increase processing time by 10 minutes (35 minutes total).

 

I have to confess, I licked the side of the syrup pot before washing. We have to taste test right? It was soooo good. When ready to bake your pie, pour one quart apple pie filling into pastry lined pie plate (my grandmother’s flaky pastry recipe that takes less than 15 minutes to make)

Place your top crust, cut slits for steam escape, crimp edges, and bake at 400 degrees for 50 minutes.

What’s your favorite apple or dessert?

Update: I used to pressure can this but without being able to find a tested time for pressure canning, only water bath process my pie filling now.

 

How to Can Apple Pie Filling Recipe

Easy apple pie filling canning recipe for delicious pies all  year long!

  • Author: Melissa Norris
  • Prep Time: 20 minutes
  • Cook Time: 25 minutes
  • Total Time: 45 minutes
  • Yield: 4 Quarts
  • Method: Canning
  • Cuisine: American

Ingredients

12 cups sliced, peeled, and cored apples

2 and 3/4 cups raw sugar

3/4 cup Clear Jel.

1 teaspoon cinnamon

1/2 teaspoon nutmeg

1/2 teaspoon ginger

3 and 3/4 cups water

1/2 cup lemon juice

Instructions

Place peeled, cored, and sliced apples in boiling water for 1 minute, working 6 cups of apples at a time. Blanching keeps apples from becoming mushy when canning. With a slotted spoon, place apples in a bowl and cover.

In a large stainless steel pot, combing sugar, ClearJel®, spices, and water. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat (don’t use a hard boil), stirring constantly, and cook until it thickens and bubbles. Add lemon juice and boil for 1 minute, constantly stirring.

Remove from heat and fold in apples. Ladle apple pie filling into warm prepared jars. Wide mouth work best for this recipe, but narrow can be used.

Leave 1 inch headspace, run a spatula down the inside of the jars to remove air bubbles. Wipe rim with a damp clean towel. Center lid and screw bands down until tight. Place jars filled with apple pie filling in  a hot water bath for 25 minutes.

Turn off heat, remove lid, and let sit for 5 minutes. Using a jar lifter, carefully remove hot jars to a towel and allow to cool without moving over night. Check seals, remove bands, wipe down outside of jar and store in out of direct sunlight for up to 1 year.

Notes

Altitude adjustment: If you’re 1,000 to 3,000 feet above sea level, increase processing time by 5 minutes (30 minutes total), 3,001 to 6,000 feet above sea level, increase processing time by 10 minutes (35 minutes total).

 

Psst… did you check out my Apple Pie Jam Recipe? It’s low sugar but you’d never know because it tastes amazing!

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With more than 10.000 recipes under her belt, no wonder Nancy is the content manager of The Prepper's Daily Food topic. She embarked long ago on a mission to learn everything there is to know about cooking. She discovered her passion for cooking while spending the summer's over at her grandparents. Their ways fascinated Nancy and cooking something out of nothing, like her granny use to say, became one of her daily routines. After 21 years of culinary experience, she decided to drop her fancy chef career life. The price her family had to pay was too big. Nancy is now taking advantage of the internet and works from home, helping and teaching common people like us to cook for ourselves with as little we have. Just like she learned from her grandparents. I want those who cannot afford to eat out not even once a week, to feel they don't need to. Because they can make one of my quick recipes and feel better about their lives, even if only for some hours. From simple recipes to ancient remedies based on plants, from the garden to the kitchen table, canning and storing, Nancy covers it all.

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