This is a recipe for an Apple Sauce, one of the two sauces I chose to accompany a Slow-Roasted Crispy Pork Belly I also published today.
What sets this sauce apart from your run-of-the-mill, basic Apple Sauce recipes? Starting with a caramel rather than just mixing sugar into the sauce. The result is a distinctly deeper, richer flavour in return for very little extra effort!
This is a bonus recipe (along with Vermouth Jus, also a bonus recipe!) for a sauce to accompany Crispy Slow Roasted Pork Belly, the main recipe for today. The sauce is straightforward as they come, so I’m keeping it short and sweet!
Apple Sauce
Pork and apple are classic partners on the plate. Apple Sauce is the most popular expression of this pairing and with its sweet-tart flavours seemed a natural choice to team with the pork belly recipe that I also published today.
Most recipes you’ll see for Apple Sauce use a basic method of cooking apples with sugar and sometimes butter, then blitzing until smooth. Adding one extra step of melting the sugar first to form a caramel really takes this Apple Sauce up a notch. The undertones of caramel lend a richer, deeper and almost savoury character to the sauce that makes people stop and wonder,”What is that I can taste in there?” This small outlay of effort really makes all the difference to set your sauce apart, and it’s as easy as throwing sugar in a saucepan and leaving it to turn to caramel!
While I’ve used this sauce for Pork Belly, there’s plenty of wide-ranging and wonderful options for using Apple Sauce. Don’t limit yourself to savoury thinking though. You can spoon this good stuff over anything from pancakes to French Toast, dollop it onto Apple Cake, scones, or dunk muffins into it and smear on to toast!
What goes in Apple Sauce
Just five ingredients are needed for this Apple Sauce! For the apples, I like to use Gala apples. They have a mild, sweet flavour which I think works well for Apple Sauce. However you can really use any variety of apples you want here. Obviously bear in mind that the flavour of the apple you use will dominate the flavour of the sauce. If you like a touch of tart, go the Granny Smith! If you want extra-sweet, go for Red Delicious or Pink Lady!
How to make Apple Sauce
The key step here that sets this Apple Sauce apart from most other recipes is melting the sugar to form a caramel, which creates a beautiful flavour base for this sauce.
Peel, core and cut apples – I cut the apple into quarters then slice it fairly thinly. This size makes them easy to stir and cooks fairly quickly;
Place sugar in a saucepan over low heat;
Leave sugar until it melts into a caramel – Shake the pan occasionally as it melts. Don’t stir, as you risk crystallisation of the sugar. Once it starts melting on the edges, swirl the pot around to get the sugar melting evenly (so the edges don’t burn);
Add the vinegar and apples – Stir and cook apples around 10 minutes until very soft;
Add butter then blitz – Use a stick blender to blitz until the apple is completely pureed. If you have splattering issues, tilt the pan so the head of the stick blender is fully submerged; and
Done! You have made Apple Sauce – ready for infinite possibilities!
What to do with Apple Sauce
I am specifically sharing this recipe as a sauce for Crispy Slow Roasted Pork Belly which I also published today. I felt however Apple Sauce alone left me wanting of a meaty, savoury accompaniment on the plate, so I also added Vermouth Jus which I’ve published as a separate recipe.
Pork belly + Vermouth Jus + this Apple Sauce is a magical combination. It oozes “fine dining” cachet both in looks and in the eating! Yes, it’s a bit of work to assemble but I promise the results are absolutely worth it!
Other uses for Apple Sauce
Roast pork belly aside, there’s many other sweet and savoury options for using this Apple Sauce. Hence the beauty of having this in your repertoire! Here are some ideas:
As a sauce for almost any pork dish, of course! Also traditional with festive duck and game bird dishes.
Great with smoky, fried bacon! Serve a dollop as a condiment alongside a breakfast fry-up. For the more adventurous (ie. not me!!), Apple Sauce is also classic with black pudding / boudin noir.
Serve a dollop with cake – try it with this Apple Cake or this one!
Topping for ice cream or rice pudding
Mix into granola
Great as a chutney on a cheese board with strong, salty cheeses like blue vein, cheddar, washed rind and so on
Enjoy! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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Apple Sauce
Ingredients
- 3 gala apples , peeled, quartered, cored, and sliced thinly (Note 1)
- 1/4 cup caster sugar / superfine sugar
- 2 tbsp sherry vinegar
- 50g / 3 ½ tbsp unsalted butter
- 1 pinch of salt
Instructions
- Place sugar in a medium saucepan over low heat. Shake pan to spread sugar. Leave for a few minutes until the edges start melting and turning golden, then swirl the pan to spread the caramel/sugar to encourage even melting (do not stir, sugar may crystallise).
- Once the sugar is all melted, add apple and vinegar. Mix, and cook for 8 – 10 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the apple is completely soft.
- Add the butter, stir it in until mostly melted. Blitz until smooth using a stick blender (tilt saucepan if needed to ensure head is completely submerged to avoid splattering).
- Serve with: Slow-roasted crispy pork belly or any pork dishes. Also great for sweet applications – see in post for more ideas!
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
Life of Dozer
He used to love eating apple peel!! Now he’ll only take the sauce 😂
John O'Connor says
Really good recipe. I love it.
Tiffany says
In the recipe it says to add the apples and the vinegar and cook for several minutes before adding the butter and salt, but the apples, vinegar, butter and salt all seem to go in at the same time in the video?
Janice says
Oh my goodness, sensational. So delicious
Sandra Geisert says
What does the vinegar add to the applesauce? I’ve only used apples and only as much sugar to slightly sweeten and lemon juice to maintain light color.
Danielle Shelbourne says
OMG Nagi, I could drink this! I made it to have with roast pork with crispy crackling (your foolproof recipe of course). I found myself sneaking spoonfuls before I served dinner. I swear it was lucky to make it to the table at all! Thank you for being someone I can absolutely rely on to produce amazing, foolproof recipes every, single, time! I truly appreciate everything you do to make the rest of us look like rockstars in the kitchen. 💕
Jenni says
Where’s the recipe for salted caramel sauce gone? I made it last year 2021, now can’t find it
James Morehead says
Hi, I just made this apple sauce and it was delicious! However, the texture and appearance was more akin to Mott’s than what you have in your video. I used an immersion blender. Any tips for the struggle? Thank you!
Greg says
Nagi you are a star, my son (11yo) and I discovered your recipes independently after having both ended up trying more and more of them. We’ve passed many of them on to family and friends. Keep it up :).
Kristen says
I had some excess apples (pink ladies) that I needed to use up and searched your page for recipes. Good grief!!! I’ve never tasted better!! I’m literally eating it with a spoon….can’t wait to try it on my roast pork…now, onto your apple muffin recipe….
Nagi says
Woo hoo Kristen!! I am happy that you liked it so much!! N x
Samantha says
Nagi! I tried to make this 4 times in a row before giving up! Every time my caramel seized at the step where i add the apples and vinegar, WHAT AM I DOING WRONG?!?
I tried taking it off the heat, leaving it on, adding the butter as well. Every time it seized and crystallised 🙁
What am I doing wrong?
Nagi says
Hi Samantha – even if the caramel seizes when you add the colder ingredients, if you keep stirring and keep it on the heat the sugar should melt again and you should be able to cook it to the correct consistency. Was the caramel fully dissolved and a deep golden colour when you added the apple? N x
Matthew says
This came out very bitter for me, and was sadly unusable. Which never had happened got me on rte. I’m not sure if it was just the gala were too bitter… Might try again with green apple
Leonie says
Today was a Recipe Tin Eats day. First up I made your blueberry baked cheesecake and the additional blueberry sauce. I made this apple sauce as well to go with our roast pork. All of your recipes are easy to follow and never disappoint me. Thanks Nagi 🌹
Carolyn says
Love all your recipes and have truly been inspired to try new things – slow cooked pork belly tonight. I’m making the apple sauce to go with it. Melted the sugar and thin put the vinegar in first before adding the sliced apply. The sugar immediately made toffee. Help – should I have added the apple first or have I overcooked the sugar?
I’m just going to keep going as I don’t have any more apples and see if the toffee melts (minutes one or two pieces which I couldn’t help eating).
Kathleen says
Awesome !! this hits all the senses. Crust perfect! I cooked 2. Made tacos with second one. the sauces were winners from all I cook for, I cook for vet’s an shut in’s.So happy I found your site. ThankU Nagi I’m a life R
NANY says
Hi dear Nagi. This looks yummy and i”d like to make this. What is sherry vinegar? Can I use red wine vinegar or balsamic instead? Or…? Love your blog and love Dozer <3 <3
Red says
Absolutely yummy and yes, it has a nice flavour kick to it
S P says
Delicious, thank you Nagi! For those asking the question about the butter/salt etc.. I added it with the apples and vinegar, worked perfectly.
Emma says
Hi Nagi, is there a sub for sherry vinegar? I have white, white wine, apple cider, rice wine. Thanks!
Nagi says
Hi Emma, the best sub would be red or apple cider here 🙂 N x
Emma says
Great, thanks for quickly getting back to me. I can continue with dinner prep – slow roast pork belly with apple sauce, roast carrots, roasted broccolini with tahini, and apple crumble. All your recipes! Looking forward to tonight 😊
Jo says
Another delicious recipe – my new go to for apple sauce. The only reason this is four stars rather than five is that it doesn’t scale very well – my partner doesn’t eat cooked apples, so I try to only make enough for me. It was really tricky trying to work out the proportions for one apple! Scaling doesn’t get there, and it probably makes a difference on the size of the apple, too – it would be good to have a cups or weight measurement to be sure that the proportions are correct.
Also, not sure if it was because of scaling, or something else, but the sugar didn’t ‘melt’ for about eight minutes, and only after I’d turned the heat up to medium high, and there wasn’t enough liquid to ‘swirl’ at all, so I ended up with one part not melted, and another part getting very dark; I added all of the other ingredients straight away at that point.
But the apple cooked so well that I didn’t need to blitz it, and it was a really good counterpoint to the pork belly – I’ll definitely make it again.
Kristen says
Perhaps make the standard quantity and freeze the excess into portions?
Jo says
It’s a good idea. Alas, we already have a freezer full of meals (usually Nagi’s amazing recipes), so I’m not allowed to freeze much more 😉
Melissa Page says
Beautiful sauce Nagi! But I couldn’t see where in the recipe to add the salt so I just added it at the end. Still tastes great