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Dehydrating Apples For Snacks

Hello friends,

My parents dropped by our home one day in early March, and brought with them a 10 L bucket full of golden delicious apples off their tree for us. As it's also currently apple harvesting season in our garden, I added them to our growing pile of homegrown apples, and started thinking about what to do with them all.

Our apples trees are the varieties Ballerina Waltz, and Ballerina Flamenco, highly compact, columnar apple trees ideal for small spaces. These apple varieties are bred to be no more than 40 cm wide, and up to 4 metres tall, with all the branches being completely covered in apples in autumn, making them perfect for urban gardens, and also for hedges. I really do recommend Ballerina apple trees if you don't have the space for fully grown apple trees, and they come in different varieties, so you can pick which apple types you'll be harvesting and eating.

Ballerina Waltz is a crisp and juicy variety with a slight tang, suitable for eating fresh, dehydrating, and cooking.

Ballerina Flamenco are eating apples, which also make a lovely apple jelly. 

After some thought I wrote a small list of apple making possibilities, and got to work, first of all making dehydrated apples for snacks. I filled a bowl with water, and added the juice of a couple of lemons (from our lemon tree), to stop the apples from turning brown while I processed them.

Once the some of the apples were all cut and soaked in lemon juice water, they were patted dry before placing on dehydrator trays. They were put in our dehydrator and dried at 60˚C for 5 hours, with them being flipped over halfway through.

The dried apple slices were then tested for dryness, before being stored in a plastic container.

Dehydrated apples are great snacks, whether at home, or for when you're going on a walk and you need a little pick me up. The three different types of apples I dried all taste very different, with the Golden Delicious apples being super sweet, the Flamenco apples being nicely balanced between sweet and tart, and the Waltz apples being quite tart. It makes for a nice mix, and it's a pleasant surprise as the apples are eaten.

Unfortunately we didn't use up all the apples sitting in the 10L bucket, so hubby made a huge batch of apple pie filling with some cinnamon, and I've stored it away in our chest freezer to use over the coming autumn and winter months.

Have a wonderful day

Julie-Ann

Want to discuss my post? Feel free to chat with me on Instagram or Mastodon or Bluesky, and now also Facebook.

The Artsy Housewife's Abalonia's Apple Tree Cross Stitch Project

Hello friends,

I hinted in a blog post a little while ago that I had started a second cross stitch project for stitching over the autumn season. Back in November for my birthday we visited Art and Frame in Christchurch, a picture framer, who also specialises in cross stitch supplies and patterns.

Since it was a significant birthday, and my family had given me money to celebrate it, I splurged and bought a cross stitch pattern, Abalonia's Apple Tree by The Artsy Housewife. I also bought most of the specialty threads needed for the project from Art and Frame as well.

Some of the specialty threads and the fabric weren't available in New Zealand, so I ordered them from 123 Stitch in the USA, and waited for them to slowly arrive by mail. I ordered a fat quarter of Fiber on a Whim 18 count Aida in the colour Old Gold, which was the smallest size available, and when it arrived I cut the fabric in half, as I only needed half of the fabric for the project. The other half of the fabric will be used in another project later this year.

As you can see from the floss toss on the fabric, the colours used in the project are very autumnal.

And I've already started cross stitching Abalonia's Apple Tree...

I'm really loving stitching with the specialty threads from Classic Colorworks and Weeks Dye Works, and Sampler Threads, and the colours go great with the Old Gold aida from Fiber on a Whim. I'm about half way through the project now, and hope to have the project finished this autumn.

Have a wonderful day

Julie-Ann

Want to discuss my post? Feel free to chat with me on Instagram or Mastodon or Bluesky.

Our First Apple Harvest

Hello friends,

Back in the winter of 2024 I planted two apple trees, Ballerina Waltz, and Ballerina Flamenco. I chose those two apple trees after a garden consultant suggested the Ballerina apple varieties, as they grow narrow and tall, and have an abundance of fruit, which make them perfect for smaller gardens.

Ballerina Waltz is a tart eating, cooking, and dehydrating apple, and Ballerina Flamenco is a sweet eating apple. Between both trees, we would have enough apples for hubby and I to eat fresh, and we could also use them for cooking and dehydrating when we have excess produce.

In spring they both flowered for the first time, but only Ballerina Waltz set fruit, and we've been impatiently waiting for them to ripen ever since.

By the time we got to March, only two apples remained. They slowly turned red, and over the last couple of weeks I periodically tested them to see if they were ripe.

And finally, the first apple was ready. When I tilted the apple upward, and it snapped off the tree.

I very excitedly took our first apple inside and showed it to hubby. We cut it open, and the seeds inside were a nice brown colour, showing that the apple was ripe via a another method. 

The Ballerina Waltz apple was indeed sweet but tart, but it was also nice and crunchy and juicy. It also wasn't so tart that hubby refused to eat it. A couple of days later the second apple was ready to eat, and we once again cut it in half so that we could share it.

We are very happy with our purchase, and over the coming years when we'll get bigger and bigger harvests. If you are wanting an apple tree, but just don't have the space in your backyard for a full sized apple tree, I really do recommend the Ballerina apple varieties. They now have a bigger selection of varieties, so you can choose one (or more) depending on the type of apple you are interested in.

Have a wonderful day

Julie-Ann

Want to discuss my post? Feel free to chat with me on Instagram or Mastodon or Bluesky.

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