*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 65439 ***
_APPLES in appealing ways_
_Leaflet No. 312
U. S. Department of Agriculture_
_Bureau of Human Nutrition and Home Economics_
_APPLES in appealing ways_
Almost everyone enjoys apples. And there are so many ways to use apples
that a family need never tire of them.
This leaflet is designed to supplement the better-known apple recipes
given in many cook books. You will find here some new apple adventures
and some variations on favorite ways of using the fruit. Recipes calling
for applesauce and apple juice are included.
All recipes have been developed or adjusted by research methods, to
arrive at up-to-date, dependable directions.
Nutritionally speaking
Many families eat apples liberally, for apples regularly take top or
second rank among the country’s most widely used fruits.
Eaten in generous quantities, especially raw, apples can provide some
vitamin C. The food value, however, varies considerably, depending on
such factors as variety, storage conditions—temperature and length of
keeping—and finally the way the fruit is kept and served at home.
A small or medium-size apple makes a very pleasant low-calorie dessert
in many homes.
Choose your apples
To get the most in apple enjoyment, look for a variety that suits family
taste and the uses you have in mind.
Many varieties are good for all purposes—general cooking, baking whole,
eating raw. Tart, firm apples are generally best liked for cooking;
sweeter apples, for eating raw. (See table on pages 4 and 5 for
descriptions of 12 well-known varieties.)
Early summer apples are likely to be juicy, tart, and quick-cooking ...
especially good in applesauce and pies.
Don’t forget that apples that are tart and firm when picked in autumn
become less crisp and snappy if stored through the winter.
In some areas, windfalls and culls are sold at bargain rates. To make
sure you have a real bargain, stop, look, and consider how you will use
the fruit. Bruises and skin breaks mean waste, and apples damaged this
way are poor risks for home canning. Best uses for them are in jelly,
apple butter, or cider.
Skin russeting ordinarily does not affect apple quality.
If apples are to be bought in large quantity, it is better to buy a few
at first, to try out, to see whether they have the flavor and texture
you want.
Store for good keeping
Apples are noted for good keeping qualities, but it takes a little care
to hold them at their best in home storage.
_Short storage_ (a few days to 2 weeks): Keep firm apples in a cool
place, 60° to 70° F. Keep mellow-ripe apples in the refrigerator.
_Longer storage_ (up to several months): If you have plenty of cool- or
cold-storage space, where temperature remains the same and the air is
rather moist, you can probably save money by storing autumn-picked
apples in quantity at home.
Sort carefully to remove apples with bruises and skin breaks. Use these
promptly. Divide the sound apples into half-bushel lots and store at 32°
F. If you cannot provide this kind of storage, use your coldest storage
space, where there is no danger of the fruit freezing.
_Most recipes in this leaflet provide four servings; a few provide
more._
KNOW YOUR APPLES: TWELVE OF THE WIDELY MARKETED VARIETIES
VARIETY SEASON SIZE AND DESCRIPTION USE
Baldwin November Medium to large. Partially red Raw and
to May to dull solid red. Juicy, general
moderately tart, hard, crisp. cooking.
Red Delicious October to Medium to large. Deep red, five Raw.
April knobs on blossom end. Sweet,
firm, tender, fragrant.
Golden Delicious October to Medium to large. Yellow. Sweet, Raw and
March firm, crisp, tender. general
cooking.
Grimes Golden October to Small to medium. Yellow with Raw and
February small dark specks. Moderately general
juicy, slightly tart, firm, cooking.
crisp, tender, fragrant.
Jonathan October to Small to medium. Deep red. Raw and
February Juicy, moderately tart, tender, general
crisp, fragrant. cooking.
McIntosh October to Medium. Bright deep red striped Raw and
March with carmine. Juicy, moderately general
tart, tender, crisp, fragrant. cooking.
Northern Spy October to Large. Bright striped red. Raw and
March Juicy, moderately tart, firm, general
crisp, tender, fragrant. cooking.
Rome Beauty November Large. Yellow mingled with red. General
to May Juicy, slightly tart, firm, cooking,
rather crisp. baking whole.
Stayman November Medium to large. Dull striped Raw, general
to April red. Juicy, tart, firm, crisp. cooking,
baking whole.
Winesap January to Small to medium. Deep bright Raw, general
May red with small scattered white cooking,
dots. Juicy, slightly tart, baking whole.
hard, crisp, fragrant.
Yellow Newtown February Medium. Yellow. Juicy, Raw and
to June moderately tart, hard, crisp. general
cooking.
York Imperial October to Medium to large. Light or Raw and
April purplish red over yellow. general
Lopsided shape, usually. cooking.
Slightly tart, hard, crisp.
APPLES IN THE MAIN COURSE
Baked acorn squash with apples
To give a sharper flavor to the mild acorn....
2 small acorn squashes
¼ cup brown sugar
3 cups chopped apple
Nutmeg
½ teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons table fat
Cut squash in halves and scoop out seeds.
Place squash in a baking dish; fill centers with apple.
Pour a little water into the dish. Cover and bake at 350° F. (moderate
oven) 30 minutes, or until partly done.
Sprinkle with salt, sugar, and nutmeg, and dot with fat.
Bake uncovered about 45 minutes, or until the squash is soft.
Four servings.
Apple fritters
Fritters are special, and especially good with any lean meat—cold sliced
or hot ...
1 cup sifted flour
1 egg, beaten
½ teaspoon salt
½ cup milk
1½ teaspoons baking powder
1 tablespoon melted fat
1 cup thinly sliced apples
1 tablespoon sugar
Fat for deep-fat frying
Sift together flour, salt, baking powder, and sugar.
Combine egg, milk, and fat. Add to the dry ingredients all at once,
stirring only enough to moisten.
Stir in the apples.
Drop by spoonfuls into hot fat (350°-375°F.) and cook until browned.
Serve with sirup or sprinkle with confectioners’ sugar.
Eight small fritters.
Apple stuffing
One way to bring together the ever-popular pork and apple team....
¼ cup diced salt pork
½ cup chopped onion
¼ cup chopped parsley
5 medium-size tart apples, diced
½ cup sugar
2 cups soft bread cubes
Cook salt pork in a fry pan until crisp, and remove from fat. Cook onion
and parsley in the fat for a few minutes.
Place apples in the pan, sprinkle with sugar. Cover and cook until
tender, then continue cooking uncovered a few minutes until apples are
candied.
Add salt pork and bread cubes; heat through.
Yield: 3 cups stuffing.
_Ways to use apple stuffing...._
Pile hot stuffing between two sections of spareribs, skewer them
together, and bake. Or use to stuff a boned shoulder of fresh pork.
One-half of this recipe will stuff four large pork chops, with enough
left over to cook on top of the chops.
Apple relish
Easy to make ... no cooking....
1 cup finely chopped unpared apples
1 cup finely shredded cabbage
½ cup finely chopped celery
1 tablespoon chopped green pepper
⅓ cup sugar
3 tablespoons vinegar
½ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon ginger
¼ teaspoon mustard
Dash of cayenne pepper
1 tablespoon chopped canned pimiento
Mix apples, cabbage, celery, and green pepper.
Combine sugar, vinegar, spices, and pimiento. Add to apples and
vegetables and mix lightly but thoroughly.
Yield: 2 cups.
APPLES IN SALAD AND DRESSING
When something firm and crisp is wanted in salad, along with fruity
flavor, apples are just the thing. They make likable combinations with
more salad foods than most people ever try. Salads in this section
include meat, cheese, fruits, and vegetables—even the onion, for onion
lovers.
Don’t let apples darken. Raw apple when cut often darkens from exposure
to air. Some nuts also make raw apple darken, especially if the fruit
has come in contact with iron in a knife blade or chopper.
So, when cutting apples for salad, protect them from darkening by mixing
the pieces with fruit juice—lemon, orange, grapefruit, or
pineapple—before adding other ingredients. Or, mix with salad dressing
at once, for a protective coating.
Some like it tart. To give a sharper tang to a salad, especially if
apples are mild in flavor, use a tart oil dressing, lemon juice, or a
sour cream dressing.
Jellied Waldorf salad
Mix diced tart apples, chopped celery, and nuts. Fold into a partially
thickened gelatin mixture. For 2 cups of the apple mixture, use 1
package of gelatin dessert powder and 2 cups of water. Chill until firm.
Fruit salad with onion
Core unpared apples and slice in thin cross sections. Arrange on salad
greens with orange slices and onion rings. Serve with a clear, tart oil
dressing.
Apple slaw
Moisten equal amounts of chopped apples and finely shredded cabbage with
sour-cream dressing.
_Variations_. If desired, season the dressing with a little horseradish,
or add coarsely ground peanut butter.
Main dish salads with apple
Mix 1 cup diced or sliced raw apple with ½ cup celery and 1 cup of any
of the following: Flaked tuna fish (7-oz. can); chopped cooked pork,
ham, veal, chicken, turkey; diced cheese. Moisten with tart french
dressing or mayonnaise and serve in lettuce cups. Four servings.
_For a jellied salad._ Fold the above ingredients—except the
dressing—into a partially thickened gelatin mixture made from a package
of lemon or lime gelatin dessert powder and 2 cups of water. Chill.
Serve with the dressing. Jellied this way, the recipe makes 6 servings.
Dessert salad
Sprinkle diced apples with lemon juice. Add chopped dates, raisins, or
grapes. Mix with marshmallows or cream cheese cut in small cubes.
Apple juice salad dressing
For fruit salads....
¼ cup sugar
2 tablespoons cornstarch
¼ teaspoon salt
Juice 1 lemon
1 cup apple juice
1 egg, well beaten
1 3-ounce package cream cheese
Mix dry ingredients, add fruit juices, and blend. Cook over hot water 20
minutes, stirring frequently.
Slowly stir into egg. Return to heat and cook 5 minutes, stirring
constantly. Cool slightly.
Mash cream cheese with fork; beat into cooked mixture. Chill.
Yield: 1 cup.
APPLES IN BREAD
Applesauce bran muffins
Softer than most bran muffins....
1¼ cups sifted flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
½ teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons sugar
1 cup bran
1 egg, beaten
⅓ cup milk
⅔ cup applesauce
¼ cup melted fat
Sift together flour, baking power, salt, and sugar. Mix in bran.
Combine egg, milk, applesauce, and fat. Add to the dry ingredients all
at once, stirring only enough to moisten.
Fill greased muffin pans two-thirds full. Bake at 400° F. (hot oven)
about 20 minutes.
Makes about 12 medium-size muffins.
Applesauce whole-wheat muffins. Use same recipe, replacing bran with 1
cup whole-wheat flour and using 1 cup applesauce. Do not try to sift
this flour.
For a different flavor. Add 1 teaspoon grated orange rind to the milk.
Apple griddlecakes
Brighten any breakfast or supper....
1½ cups sifted flour
1½ teaspoons baking powder
¾ teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon sugar
1 egg, beaten
1 cup milk
2 tablespoons melted fat
2 cups very finely chopped apples
Sift dry ingredients together.
Combine the egg, milk, and fat. Add gradually to the dry ingredients;
stir only until batter is smooth. Fold in apples.
Drop by spoonfuls onto a hot greased griddle. Cook slowly until the
surface is covered with bubbles, turn, and cook until the bottom is
well-browned.
Makes about 18 medium-size griddlecakes.
APPLES IN COOKIES
A piece of cut apple in the cookie jar is a familiar device to keep
cookies from drying out quickly. These applesauce cookies have the
moisture and fruit flavor built in.
Applesauce drop cookies
½ cup fat
1 cup sugar
1 egg
1¾ cups sifted flour
½ teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon soda
½ teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon cinnamon
½ teaspoon cloves
½ teaspoon nutmeg
½ cup seedless raisins
1 cup quick-cooking rolled oats
1 cup applesauce
Cream together fat and sugar; stir in the egg.
Sift together flour, baking powder, soda, salt, cinnamon, cloves,
nutmeg. Mix in raisins and rolled oats. Add to creamed mixture in three
portions alternately with applesauce in two portions. Beat well.
Drop dough by teaspoonfuls onto greased baking sheets. Bake at 375° F.
(moderate oven) about 15 minutes.
Makes about 3 dozen cookies.
Applesauce refrigerator cookies
¾ cup fat
1 cup sugar
1 egg
2½ cups sifted flour
½ teaspoon soda
¼ teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon cinnamon
¼ teaspoon cloves
½ cup chopped nuts
½ cup applesauce
Cream together fat and sugar; stir in the egg.
Sift together flour, soda, salt, cinnamon, and cloves. Mix in nuts. Add
to creamed mixture in three portions alternately with the applesauce in
two portions.
Form into rolls; wrap in waxed paper and chill in refrigerator.
Slice thinly. Bake on greased baking sheets at 375° F. (moderate oven)
10 to 15 minutes.
Makes about 5 dozen cookies.
Chocolate applesauce bars
2 squares (2 ounces) unsweetened chocolate
½ cup fat
1 cup sugar
2 eggs, slightly beaten
1 cup applesauce
1¼ cups sifted flour
½ teaspoon baking powder
½ teaspoon soda
½ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon cloves
¼ teaspoon nutmeg
½ teaspoon cinnamon
½ cup chopped nut meats
Melt chocolate and fat together over hot water. Cool slightly.
Blend in sugar, eggs, and applesauce.
Sift together the flour, baking powder, soda, salt, and spices. Add to
first mixture.
Stir in the nut meats.
Spread the batter in two greased 8-inch square pans. Bake at 350° F.
(moderate oven) 30 to 40 minutes.
Cool in pan; then cut into 3 dozen small bars.
APPLES IN DESSERTS
When it comes to desserts, apples are in their glory, and the cook can
always find a way to prepare them that fits right in with her plans. She
can make desserts with apples raw or cooked, applesauce, juice, or
canned slices. Apple desserts can be hot or cold ... quick to fix, or
time-consuming but well worth it.
Recipes given here provide examples of the many ways of topping off the
meal with apples.
Baked apples
Core apples without cutting through the blossom end. Pare apples
one-third of the way down.
Place apples in a baking dish. Sprinkle the holes lightly with salt, and
add 1 tablespoon sugar to each apple. Top with table fat and sprinkle
sugar over pared portion of apples.
Pour enough water in bottom of dish to keep apples from sticking.
Bake uncovered at 400° F. (hot oven) about 1 hour, or until apples are
tender.
_For variety_
1. Fill the apples with chopped fresh cranberries and bake.
2. Fill centers with crushed pineapple. After baking, top apples with
marshmallows and return to oven for a few minutes.
3. Serve with a topping of cream cheese softened with cream and beaten
until fluffy.
Apple-cheese dessert
5 cups apple slices (pared)
1 tablespoon lemon juice
¾ cup sugar
¼ teaspoon cinnamon
½ cup sifted flour
¼ teaspoon salt
¼ cup table fat
⅔ cup grated cheese
Fill pie pan or shallow baking dish with apples; sprinkle with lemon
juice and ¼ cup of the sugar.
Mix cinnamon, flour, salt, and the other ½ cup sugar. Cut in fat until
mixture is granular. Stir in cheese. Spread over apples.
Bake at 350° F. (moderate oven) until apples are tender—about 40
minutes.
Cool before cutting to serve.
Serve with plain cream or ice cream, if desired.
Six servings.
Dessert apple slices
Slice pared apple quarters. Put slices into pan and add enough water to
half cover apples. Add a few grains of salt and 2 to 4 tablespoons of
sugar for each apple used. Put the cover on and cook gently until apples
are tender—20 to 30 minutes. Serve chilled, plain or with cream. Or,
bake some of the drained slices in custard (p. 15).
Apple pie
6 medium-size tart apples, quartered
¾ to 1 cup sugar
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons table fat
Pastry for 9-inch pie
Pare, core, and slice the apples. Line a piepan with pastry. Place a
layer of apples over the bottom; sprinkle with a mixture of the sugar,
cinnamon, and salt. Dot with fat. Repeat until all ingredients are used.
Cover with pastry that has a few slits in the center so steam can
escape; seal edges.
Bake at 425° F. (hot oven) 40 to 50 minutes, or until apples are tender
and crust is well-browned.
French apple pie. Mix 1 cup seedless raisins with the apples and reduce
the sugar to ½ cup. To frost, mix ½ cup confectioners’ sugar with 2
teaspoons water and spread over top crust of cooled pie.
Apple tapioca
2 medium-size apples
½ cup sugar
¼ teaspoon salt
2 cups water
2 tablespoons quick-cooking tapioca
Nutmeg, if desired
Pare and slice apples.
Add sugar and salt to the water; put over heat and stir until sugar is
dissolved.
Add apples and cover the pan. Cook slowly until apples are just
tender—about 15 minutes.
Carefully stir in tapioca, and continue cooking a few minutes until
tapioca is transparent.
Sprinkle with nutmeg and serve with plain or whipped cream.
Red apple tapioca. Add ¼ cup red cinnamon candies to water and stir
until dissolved before adding apples. Omit nutmeg.
Four servings.
Apple custard
1 cup dessert apple slices (p. 13) or canned apple slices, drained
3 tablespoons sugar
¼ teaspoon salt
2 eggs, beaten
1½ cups hot milk
Nutmeg
Arrange apples in bottom of four custard cups. Combine sugar, salt, and
eggs. Add milk slowly. Pour over apples, sprinkle with nutmeg. Set cups
in a pan of hot water.
Bake at 325° F. (slow oven) until the custard is set—30 to 40 minutes.
Four servings.
Applesauce puff
4 slices bread or plain cake
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
1½ cups applesauce
1 teaspoon cinnamon
⅓ cup brown sugar
1 egg
1 cup milk
¼ teaspoon salt
Spread bread or cake slices with butter or margarine, and arrange in the
bottom of a greased baking dish.
Cover with applesauce; sprinkle with cinnamon and about half the sugar.
Beat together egg, milk, salt, and rest of sugar. Omit sugar in this
mixture if cake is used. Pour over mixture in baking dish.
Set in pan of hot water and bake at 350° F. (moderate oven) about 40
minutes.
Four servings.
Frozen applesauce cream
1 cup applesauce
1 cup thin cream
⅓ cup sugar
¼ cup lemon juice
Combine ingredients, stirring until sugar is dissolved.
Pour into freezing tray and freeze at the coldest refrigerator
temperature until firm.
Turn into chilled bowl and beat smooth. Return quickly to tray; freeze.
Four servings.
Applesauce Bavarian cream
1 tablespoon gelatin
¼ cup cold water
¾ cup applesauce
2 tablespoons lemon juice
½ teaspoon grated lemon rind
¼ cup sugar
¼ teaspoon each cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg
¼ teaspoon salt
1 egg white
½ cup heavy cream, whipped
½ cup crushed ginger snaps
Sprinkle gelatin on water and soak for a few minutes.
Heat applesauce, lemon juice, and lemon rind with half the sugar.
Dissolve gelatin in hot applesauce. Add spices. Chill until partly set.
Add salt to egg white and beat until stiff. Add rest of sugar slowly,
beating until glossy.
Fold egg white mixture, cream, and half of the crumbs into gelatin
mixture. Pour into mold.
Chill until firm.
Before serving, sprinkle with rest of the crumbs.
Four servings.
Applesauce gelatin dessert
3 cups applesauce
½ cup (1 box) gelatin dessert powder (any fruit flavor)
32 small vanilla wafers
½ cup heavy cream
1 tablespoon sugar
Heat applesauce slowly, stirring frequently. Stir dessert powder into
hot applesauce; stir until dissolved. Chill until partly set.
Place a layer of wafers in bottom of 8-inch square pan.
Pour in applesauce mixture, and cover with another layer of wafers.
Chill until firm.
Top with sweetened whipped cream just before serving.
Nine servings.
Applesauce chiffon pie
1 tablespoon gelatin
¼ cup cold water
3 eggs, separated
1½ cups applesauce
⅛ teaspoon ginger
¼ teaspoon cinnamon
½ cup milk
1 tablespoon lemon juice
½ teaspoon grated lemon rind
½ cup sugar
¼ teaspoon salt
9-inch baked pastry shell, or graham cracker shell
Nutmeg if desired
Sprinkle gelatin on water; soak a few minutes.
Beat egg yolks slightly, and add the applesauce, ginger, cinnamon, milk,
lemon juice and rind, and half the sugar.
Cook over boiling water, stirring constantly, 20 to 25 minutes.
Add gelatin to the hot mixture; stir until dissolved. Cool until thick
but not set.
Add salt to egg whites and beat until stiff. Add rest of sugar slowly,
beating constantly. Blend with the thickened gelatin mixture.
Pour into the shell and sprinkle with nutmeg, if desired. Chill until
firm.
Applesauce
Wash, quarter, and core apples.
Cook until soft with a small amount of water in a covered pan. Put
apples through a sieve or food press. Add a few grains of salt, and
sweeten to taste while still hot.
Quick applesauce. Pare quartered and cored apples. Cook as above. When
apples are tender, crush pieces with a potato masher or stir until
smooth. Add salt and sweeten as above.
For variety. Sweeten the sauce with brown sugar or honey. Or, cook a few
whole cloves or a piece of stick cinnamon or a few raisins with the
apples. Remove cinnamon before serving.
If the apples are very mild, cook 1 to 2 teaspoons of lemon juice with
them.
Apple juice cake
½ cup fat
½ teaspoon vanilla
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
2 cups sifted cake flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
½ teaspoon soda
½ teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon cinnamon
¼ teaspoon cloves
½ teaspoon nutmeg
¾ cup apple juice
Cream fat, vanilla, and sugar together until light and fluffy. Add the
eggs one at a time, beating each one in well.
Sift together flour, baking powder, soda, salt, cinnamon, cloves, and
nutmeg.
Add to creamed mixture in three portions alternately with apple juice in
two portions.
Turn batter into two greased 8-inch round layer pans.
Bake at 375° F. (moderate oven) 25 to 30 minutes.
_Variation._ Add 1 cup of raisins to the batter.
Fluffy apple juice frosting
1 cup sugar
½ cup apple juice
Pinch of salt
1 tablespoon lemon juice
2 egg whites, stiffly beaten
Mix sugar, apple juice, salt, and lemon juice. Cook until the sirup
forms a soft ball (234° to 240° F.) when a little of it is dropped into
a cup of very cold water.
Pour very slowly over stiffly beaten egg whites, beating constantly.
Continue beating until mixture stands in soft peaks.
Spread between layers and over top and sides of cake.
_Variations._ When frosting is ready to spread, stir in ½ cup chopped
pecans or hazelnuts, or shredded almonds.
For a more festive cake, sprinkle ¼ cup pink-tinted shredded coconut
over the top after frosting is spread.
APPLE SNACKS
As a snack, or a fruity appetizer for tea, use apple slices spread with
a topping. Applewiches they are sometimes called, especially when a
second apple slice is placed over the topping.
To prepare the slices, core the apple and cut thick rounds, leaving the
colorful peel on. Toppings include—
Soft sharp cheese ... cream cheese with strawberry jam or chopped nuts
... peanut butter and mayonnaise ... sliced ham, chicken, or turkey, or
any of these meats ground and mixed with mayonnaise.
INDEX TO RECIPES
Page
Apples in the main course 6
Baked acorn squash with apples 6
Apple fritters 6
Apple stuffing 7
Apple relish 7
Apples in salad and dressing 8
Jellied Waldorf salad 8
Fruit salad with onion 8
Apple slaw 8
Main dish salads with apple 9
Dessert salad 9
Apple juice salad dressing 9
Apples in bread 10
Applesauce bran muffins 10
Applesauce whole-wheat muffins 10
Apple griddlecakes 10
Apples in cookies 11
Applesauce drop cookies 11
Applesauce refrigerator cookies 11
Chocolate applesauce bars 12
Apples in desserts 12
Baked apples 12
Apple-cheese dessert 13
Dessert apple slices 13
Apple pie 14
French apple pie 14
Apple tapioca 14
Red apple tapioca 14
Apple custard 15
Applesauce puff 15
Frozen applesauce cream 15
Applesauce Bavarian cream 16
Applesauce gelatin dessert 16
Applesauce chiffon pie 17
Applesauce 17
Apple juice cake 18
Fluffy apple juice frosting 18
Apple snacks 19
BUREAU OF HUMAN NUTRITION AND HOME ECONOMICS
Agricultural Research Administration
U. S. Department of Agriculture. September 1951
Prepared by Mary T. Swickard
This leaflet supersedes the unnumbered publication, Apple Recipes.
U. S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1951
For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing
Office
Washington 25, D. C.—Price 10 cents
Transcriber’s Notes
—Silently corrected a few typos.
—Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
is public-domain in the country of publication.
—In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
_underscores_.
*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 65439 ***
Apples in Appealing Ways [1951]
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Excerpt
_Leaflet No. 312
U. S. Department of Agriculture_
Almost everyone enjoys apples. And there are so many ways to use apples
that a family need never tire of them.
This leaflet is designed to supplement the better-known apple recipes
given in many cook books. You will find here some new apple adventures
and some variations on favorite ways of using the fruit. Recipes calling
for applesauce and apple juice are included.
All recipes have been developed or adjusted by...
Read the Full Text
— End of Apples in Appealing Ways [1951] —
Book Information
- Title
- Apples in Appealing Ways [1951]
- Author(s)
- Swickard, Mary T.
- Language
- English
- Type
- Text
- Release Date
- May 24, 2021
- Word Count
- 3,842 words
- Library of Congress Classification
- TX
- Bookshelves
- Browsing: Cooking & Drinking
- Rights
- Public domain in the USA.