Dulce de Manzana

From Eating Asturias, the Encyclopedia of Asturian Gastronomy
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Dulce de manzana

Caption text
Summary
Type Categories
Ingredient Category
Technique Category
Diet Categories
Origin Category
Time:2 hours, 30 minutes
Difficulty:Medium
Nutrition
Nutrition Facts
Serving Size - Servings in recipe -
Amount Per Serving
Calories -
% Daily Value*
Total Fat -
    Saturated Fat -
    Trans Fat -



Cholesterol -
Sodium -
Total Carbohydrate -
    Dietary Fiber -
    Sugars 1g
Protein -
Vitamin A - Folate -
Vitamin B1 - Vitamin B2 -
Vitamin B3 - Vitamin B5 -
Vitamin B6 - Vitamin B12 -
Vitamin C - Vitamin D -
Vitamin E - Vitamin K -
Calcium - Copper -
Iron - Magnesium -
Manganese - Phosphorus -
Potassium - Selenium -
Sodium - Zinc -
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily values may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Calories 2,000 2,500
Total Fat Less than 65g 80g
  Sat Fat Less than 20g 25g
Cholesterol Less than 300mg 300mg
Sodium Less than 2,400mg 2,400mg
Total Carbohydrate 300g 375g
  Dietary Fiber 25g 30g

One of the great benefits of living in Asturias is the abundance of apples in every hamlet, village, and town. Asturias has almost as many apple recipes as the States does (though the absence of a proper apple pie and the dearth of apple sauce are confounding to me).

I make this spread with a mix of whatever apples I collect from the older trees of unknown variety around my farm. You can make it at home with any apples you can buy at the store. For a more authentic flavor, use a tart apple like a Granny Smith.

Ingredients

  • 1 kg apples
  • 700 g sugar
  • juice and zest of 1 lemon
  • 100 ml water

Instructions

  1. Wash and core your apples, but do not peel them. We need all the pectin that the peels can provide to get this jelly to set right.
  2. Cut the apples into chunks and put them in a large, heavy bottomed pot.
  3. Add the juice and zest of one lemon and 100 ml of water.
  4. Cook over medium low heat, stirring occasionally, until the apples are very soft; approximately 30 minutes.
  5. Pass the apples through a blender (or use an immersion blender) to make a very fine puree.
  6. Return them to the pot along with the 700 g of sugar, and lower the heat.
  7. Cook gently, stirring very frequently to keep it from scorching, until a spoon stuck into the pot will stand up on its own (approximately 90 minutes)
  8. Pour the apple mixture into glass or heavy plastic containers to let cool

Notes

  • Dulce de manzana is a necessity for an Asturian cheese plate, and pairs particularly well with strong blue cheeses.
  • It is also excellent smeared on some good bread, for breakfast or a snack