Fruit Leather
Submitted by talula
Homemade apple fruit leather sweetened naturally, spiced with a pinch of cinnamon, dried slow in a low oven. A pantry snack with no added sugar or preservatives.
YIELD
4 servingsPREP
10 minCOOK
25 minREADY
1 hrsHomemade fruit leather is one of those old-fashioned projects that sounds fussy and turns out easy. Cooked fruit puree spreads thin on a greased pan, dries for several hours on the lowest oven setting, and finishes as a chewy, naturally-sweet snack. No added sugar, no preservatives, no mystery ingredients.
Apples are forgiving for a first attempt because they’re high in pectin, which is what gives fruit leather its chewy, rolled-up texture. Low-pectin fruits like strawberries or peaches benefit from a splash of lemon juice or a tablespoon of applesauce to help them set up.
Cooking the fruit soft first is essential before pureeing. Raw fruit puree is too thick and fibrous to spread evenly, and it tends to dry unevenly into crispy edges and sticky centers. A quick simmer breaks down the cell walls so the puree comes out smooth and silky.
Thickness is the make-or-break detail. Thicker than ¼-inch and the center stays tacky. Thinner and the edges turn brittle and crack. Spread as evenly as you can, using the back of a spatula or an offset palette knife to even it out. A piece of parchment paper works better than greased pans, honestly.
The overnight low-oven dry is the traditional method, but oven pilot lights are rare in modern homes. A 170°F (77°C) oven with the door cracked open works, as does a dehydrator if you have one.
Chef Tips
- Use parchment paper or a silicone mat instead of greased pans for cleaner release.
- Dries when the surface is tacky but not wet, and it pulls off the parchment without tearing.
- Cut while still warm for cleaner edges. Cold fruit leather tends to crack at cut lines.
- Store tightly wrapped at room temperature for a week, or freeze for months. Humidity is the enemy.
Variations
Ingredients
Directions
Cook the fruit in enough water to cover, until very soft.
Drain. Mix in other ingredients. Purée in food processor fitted with steel blade, or in blender.
Spread no more than ¼ inch thick on a very well-greased cookie sheet with edges. Leave in the oven set on the lowest temp (or just the pilot light in gas ovens) for at least 6 hours or overnight.
Cut into 3×4 inch pieces and roll up in pieces of wax paper.
Store in a sealed container in the refrigerator or freezer until needed.
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