Apple Pie Filling {For Canning or Freezing}

Have I ever told you how much I love fall time?  I love fall. And about this time every year I start getting antsy for it.  So it was a super great move for me to make this recipe because it was better than any candle, Scentsy bar, or scented oil I own.  The smell of fresh cut apples simmering in cinnamon and nutmeg?  Heaven.  I just ignored the fact that it was 96° outside.  You can make this recipe to can in jars (read our Introduction to Canning and Preserving by clicking here) or pop batches in your freezer.  It’s fun to have on hand for quick desserts like apple pie, apple crisp, apple turnovers, and it’s great on waffles, pancakes and ice cream too.  It also makes a super cute gift for the holidays or for a hostess gift or new neighbor gift, etc.

You’re going to ask me for those labels, aren’t you?  I’ll get on that.  One day.  Before Christmas.  Maybe.

*A note about thickeners:  I spent a better part of a Wednesday pulling my hair out and cursing driving around town in search of, and making phone call after phone call trying to get information about thickeners!  A huge thanks to my friend/canning mentor Britanie for helping me figure out what the heck to use; I must have texted her 47 times this week.  Thanks to her, and my new BFF at the extension office, I can sort of pretend I know what I’m talking about around here.   It can be confusing because I noticed recipes call for different things depending on when they were written, and I know the #1 rule of canning is to not make substitutions or changes to a recipe that has been tested for canning.  I noticed a lot of older recipes call for corn starch, which is not recommended by the USDA for safe canning.  Then I found lots of recipes calling for ClearJel, but I couldn’t find ClearJel anywhere.  I finally got a hold of someone at my local extension service (I seriously love those people!) and she explained that the only products that have been verified after testing are Ultra Gel and Thick Gel.  Ultra Gel is just a modified corn starch that’s safe and effective for use in canning (as well as tons of other things).  She said ClearJel is the same thing as Ultra Gel, it’s just changed names.  I found Ultra Gel in several local canning supply stores, so if you find a well stocked location you should be able to easily find it.  You should also be able to find it at cooking stores.  If not, then you can order it on-line, but that’s what you should be using.  It’s not the same thing as the little boxes of “Sure-Gel” you get to make jam.  If you are a Boise/Meridian local, I bought mine at Karcher Ranch Market in Nampa.  And I’ve been told in Utah it’s at Orson Gygi.  I hope that’s helpful to someone else since it took me a while to figure out!

So in order to make this yummy filling, you’ll need a bunch of apples; obviously.  Make sure they are crisp, and tart works best- like Granny Smiths, but really any crisp apple is just fine.  Feel free to use a mix!

You can use an apple-corer-slicer-thingy (which by the way always reminds me of a medieval torture device.  Not that I am in any way an expert in medieval torture devices)  or do them by hand.  If you’re not doing a huge batch, it really doesn’t take too long to peel them.  To keep your apples looking purdy, toss them into a bowl as you cut filled with either water with lemon juice or water with ascorbic acid (which sounds like a not-so-medieval torture device…)  Just a note- you’ll want to slice more apples than you think you need because they reduce a bit when blanched and you’ll measure them after blanching.

When they’re all sliced up, you’ll give them a douse in boiling water; only about a minute will do it.

Remove the apples from the pot and set them in a big strainer if you have one and just cover to keep warm.  I use one of these pasta pots that has a strainer that fits inside; it works perfectly.

Now for the sweet, sticky, full-of-fall deliciousness.  Mix your sugar, Ultra Gel, and spices, in a large sauce pot.

Whisk them together with some apple juice and some water,

And heat it until it’s thick and bubbly.  The Ultra Gel works so fast that by the time the sauce simmers, it should be about done.

As soon as your sauce is hot and bubbly, add the apples back in

and stir them until they’re heated through again.  Man I wish you all had smell-o-screens.  Someone needs to invent that.  This will smell so so good.

Use a funnel to ladle the hot mixture into your clean jars

Make sure you get every last drop of the ooey gooey syrup

Pie.  In a Jar.

Slowly move your spatula around in the jar to remove air bubbles and make sure you have one inch of headspace (the amount of space from the top of your filling to the top of your jar).  Wipe off the jar rim so it’s nice and clean and then place your jar lids on top.  Remember, your lids should have been soaking in simmering water, and your jars should be clean and warm.

Secure with the bands and process in a water bath for the time allotted.  Let cool completely at room temperature.

So fun.

A quart jar should be enough to fill one standard pie.  Just dump in a pie crust and you’re good to go!  As I mentioned it’s also really yummy over pancakes, waffles and ice cream. You can fill crescent or puff pastry dough and make apple turnovers, or do as I did below and have an apple crisp made in the time it takes to whip up a quick crumb topping (I just used have of the crumb mixture from this Crumb-Topped Apple Pie recipe).  There’s really no wrong way to eat a jar of apple pie filling.  Unless you don’t eat it at all; that would be wrong.  As noted in the comments- you can even put the pie filling in a pie crust and put the entire un-baked pie into your freezer and have ready-to-go fresh pies stocked up!

I love it when recipes are scaled way down- you could even try this out and just do one jar if you’re new and canning is intimidating.  Or two jars if you find yourself ready to can a huge batch at 10pm only to realize you only have 2 jars left.  Me? Never.

Handy chart from the National Center for Food Preservation

Have you all enjoyed canning week?  I know I did; I learned a lot!  I can’t thank my friends enough for answering all of my questions as I went along- I’m kind of a canning newbie too!  Stay tuned in about a month or so when I have tomatoes coming out of my ears.  There will probably be more canning projects then!

woman in denim shirt holding a salad bowl
Meet The Author

Sara Wells

Sara Wells co-founded Our Best Bites in 2008. She is the author of three Bestselling Cook Books, Best Bites: 150 Family Favorite RecipesSavoring the Seasons with Our Best Bites, and 400 Calories or Less from Our Best Bites. Sara’s work has been featured in many local and national news outlets and publications such as Parenting MagazineBetter Homes & GardensFine CookingThe Rachel Ray Show and the New York Times.

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Questions & Reviews

  1. I made this yesterday and it smelled DIVINE! I want to make a pie now… any instructions for temperature and length of baking would be great! Love your book and blog!

    1. So glad you liked it! I use our pie crust recipe, and bake at 375 until it’s golden brown, usually about 45 minutes or so. Enjoy!

  2. LOVE this! I just got my hands on several cases of apples for canning-can you please….pretty please, post your label..? It’s so cute and would make perfect gifts. Thank you so much, and thank you for ALL the wonderful tips!

  3. Thank you soooo much for the location of Ultra Gel. I’ve tried to conserve mine for years because I thought we couldn’t buy it in the Treasure Valley anymore. I appreciate the hair pulling you had to do to find it. I’m off to Karcher Market in the morning!

  4. How do you cook the pie filling after it’s frozen? Do you put it in a raw crust while the filling is frozen and cook the raw crust and frozen pie filling or something else? Sorry I haven’t done this before but want to now!
    Thanks!

    1. Don’t apologize Kris, I should have explained! You can thaw it out and use it in any raw pie crust or other desert and just cook it up. Or, if you want, you can take a pie crust in a pan and layer plastic wrap over it. Place your pie filling over the plastic and freeze the whole thing until solid. Then you can pick up the plastic wrap with the pie shaped frozen filling and place that in a zip top bag. That way you can actually pop the filling in a frozen pie crust when you want to bake it and just put it straight from freezer to oven. Does that make sense?

  5. When I freeze pie filling, I put it in a gallon size freezer bag and then set it inside a pie pan in the freezer. After it’s frozen, I take it out of the pan and stack the pie shaped blocks. When I want to bake a pie, the filling fits right in the pie crust without defrosting.

  6. Love this idea!! I’m have never canned anything before, but have been wanting to learn for a while. I would love to make some of these and give them out as Christmas gifts, but I was wondering how long is the shelf life??

  7. Thank you so much for the info. I have been struggling to find out if there was a difference between Clear Jel and Ultra Jel. The owner of a local kitchen store assured me that there wasn’t, but I didn’t trust that.
    I am going to make up and can some apple filling this weekend! Gracias!

  8. I have a random question that I would love to get answered. I am going to can apple pie filling here pretty soon and I saw on your post of today 8/22/11 that you’ve had a glass top stove. My question: Can you use a glass top stove for a water bath canner and a pressure cooker or should I go buy a hot plate?

    1. Sure, there’s nothing about a glass-top stove that makes it unsuitable for canning.

      1. Well, that’s true and not. you need to look at the manual for YOUR stove. Newer glass tops are better but some older ones have one of two problems. Problem the first is that some glasstops can’t take the weight of a fully loaded canner and will crack under the pressure combined with the weight. Problem the second is that glass tops typically rotate through heating cycles in the way they heat. Sometimes that will keep the pot from getting to temperature, or will slow it way down. More modern glasstops have been adjusted for both situations and work fairly well. soo…check your manual and go from there. 🙂 A hot plate will work as well and my mother loves canning on my father’s propane campstove as it means she can take all the heat of the canning outside and it heats a canner full of water in nothing flat.

        BTW…put a big scoop of this kind of apple pie filling in my oatmeal this morning. Holy yum batman.

    2. Be cautious with this. I was told by several people as well as in my stove’s manual that using ceramic with my glass cook top was not recommended. It can adhere to your stove top if it gets too hot. But my sister-in-law said her stove manual said it was just fine to can on her glass cook top.

  9. Oops, never mind, got it …

    Canning apple pie filling using tapioca or cornstarch as the thickener (outdated method.) Why is this risky? Botulism is not a major risk here because the high acid content of the apple filling. However, using cornstarch or tapioca may cause the filling to be too thick for the heat to penetrate and kill spoilage organisms throughout the product—a food safety issue. Cornstarch will break down during the canning process. Your pie filling will be runny—a food quality issue.