• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Major Grubbage

  • Recipes
  • Culinary Training
  • Blog
  • Newsworthy
  • Contests & Competitions
  • Frugality

Major Grubbage

Food, and Opinions with Major Attitude

  • Recipes
  • Culinary Training
  • Blog
  • Newsworthy
  • Contests & Competitions
  • Frugality

Cinnamon-Forward Old-Style Applesauce

November 28, 2025 · Major Grubbage · Leave a Comment

Jump to Recipe Print Recipe
Cinnamon-Forward Old-Style Applesauce

Cinnamon-Forward Old-Style Applesauce

A rustic, old-style applesauce with a pronounced yet balanced cinnamon aroma, gently infused from whole sticks and finished lightly sweetened for a warm, nostalgic flavor that’s fragrant rather than dessert-sweet.
Print Recipe Pin Recipe
Prep Time 15 minutes mins
Cook Time 35 minutes mins
Course: Condiments, Side Dish
Cuisine: American, Comfort Food
Ingredients Method

Ingredients
  

  • 6 Granny Smith + McIntosh is a classic balance if you can mix
  • 1/2 Cup Apple Cider water or 1/4 Cup Water and 1/4 Cup Apple Cider Vinegar can be substituted
  • 1 Large cinnamon stick or 2 smaller ones
  • 1/2 Tsp Ground cinnamon
  • 2 Tbsp Raw sugar or honey
  • 1 Pinch Salt
  • 1 Tsp Lemon juice this is optional and often omitted

Method
 

Prepare the apples
  1. Peel, core, and cut into large chunks.
  2. Bigger chunks = longer cooking = deeper cinnamon infusion.
Cold start infusion
  1. Put apples, liquid, salt, and cinnamon stick(s) into the pot before heating.
  2. This matters: cinnamon infuses better starting cold.
Slow heat
  1. Bring up slowly to a gentle simmer.
  2. Lid mostly on.
  3. Simmer 20–30 minutes until apples collapse.
Reinforce, don’t dominate
  1. Once apples are soft, add ½ teaspoon ground cinnamon.
  2. Stir well and cook 2–3 minutes only.
  3. This creates that “you smell it before you taste it” effect.
Sweeten last
  1. Add sugar or honey gradually.
  2. Stop early — sweetness should support cinnamon, not compete.
Mash gently
  1. Remove cinnamon sticks.
  2. Mash by hand — uneven texture is correct.
  3. If too thin, simmer uncovered for a few minutes.
Rest
  1. Let sit 10–15 minutes before serving.
  2. Cinnamon blooms as it cools.

American, European, Salads, Sides & Entrees, Snack

Previous Post: « Creamy Chanterelle & Chicken Farfalle Pasta
Next Post: Pork Bone Broth »

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




Primary Sidebar

Why Some of Our Recipe Images Are AI-Generated

We believe that a recipe's value is in its flavor, not just its looks. Sometimes, the Major forgets to snap a picture because the food is too good to wait, or a recipe is simply too old to have a photo. Our AI images are personally verified by the Major to accurately represent the dish. We're committed to replacing them with authentic photos as the site grows, but until then, we hope you'll dig in with the same enthusiasm that makes us forget the camera.

  • Home
  • Blog

Copyright © 2025 · Recipe Blogger Theme · Genesis Framework · Privacy Policy · WordPress · Log in