Fruit preserving, canning, and pickling

Baked Apples.

473 · First Edition, 1896 · Report an issue

Ingredients

  • sour apples
  • one-half cup sugar
  • spice
  • one-fourth teaspoon cinnamon or nutmeg
  • a few drops lemon juice
  • few gratings rind of lemon
  • boiling water
  • cream

Method

  1. Wipe and core sour apples.
  2. Put in a baking-dish, and fill cavities with sugar and spice.
  3. Allow one-half cup sugar and one-fourth teaspoon cinnamon or nutmeg to eight apples.
  4. If nutmeg is used, a few drops lemon juice and few gratings from rind of lemon to each apple is an improvement.
  5. Cover bottom of dish with boiling water, and bake in a hot oven until soft, basting often with syrup in dish.
  6. Serve hot or cold with cream.
  7. Many prefer to pare apples before baking.
  8. When this is done, core before paring, that fruit may keep in shape.
  9. In the fall, when apples are at their best, do not add spices to apples, as their flavor cannot be improved; but towards spring they become somewhat tasteless, and spice is an improvement.

Kitchen Notes

  • Original calls for a hot oven — about 400°F.

Original 1896 Text

sour apples one-half cup sugar spice one-fourth teaspoon cinnamon or nutmeg a few drops lemon juice few gratings rind of lemon boiling water cream Wipe and core sour apples. Put in a baking-dish, and fill cavities with sugar and spice. Allow one-half cup sugar and one-fourth teaspoon cinnamon or nutmeg to eight apples. If nutmeg is used, a few drops lemon juice and few gratings from rind of lemon to each apple is an improvement. Cover bottom of dish with boiling water, and bake in a hot oven until soft, basting often with syrup in dish. Serve hot or cold with cream. Many prefer to pare apples before baking. When this is done, core before paring, that fruit may keep in shape. In the fall, when apples are at their best, do not add spices to apples, as their flavor cannot be improved; but towards spring they become somewhat tasteless, and spice is an improvement.