Oven-Dried Apple Chips {Two Ways!}

Raise your hand if you hear the phrase “Mom I’m huuuungry” about 437 times a day.  How children with such tiny tummies, who seemingly eat all day long can be in a constant state of hunger is beyond me.  And I even cook for a living!  The one thing that fortunately never lacks in our house is food, yet they seem to always need a snack.  One thing I care a lot about is having healthy snacks around, for both the kiddos and the grown-ups, because we are definitely a family of snackers.  And while my kids love to eat fruit, it’s always a bonus when they don’t realize they’re eating something healthy.  These apple chips totally satisfy a craving for the munchies, and my kids especially love the fruity-flavored colorful ones you see in that photo.  Apple chips are obviously easy to make in a dehydrator, but just like our Homemade Fruit Roll-ups, you can make them at home without any special equipment. Keep reading to see how it’s done!

These are pretty darn easy, and although they do take quite a bit of time to cook, the actual work you have to put in is less than 5 minutes.  Your oven will do the rest!  First up, remove the cores of your apples.  If you don’t have a little apple coring gadget, the sharp end of a vegetable peeler works great.  I just do one side of the apple, about half way to the core, and then flip it over and do the other side.

You’ll need these thinly sliced, and it’s also helpful to have then evenly sliced.  If you have some thick ones, and some thin ones, they’ll take different amounts of time to cook.  So if you’re using a knife, take some care to cut in thin and even.  I use a mandoline, which really comes in handy here.

You don’t have to put a darn thing on them- they’re great baked up plain, but a little sprinkle of cinnamon is great too.  I usually do half and half.  What works best is if you sprinkle it on first and then rub it in a little.

Just use clean hands and run your finger around each one, it goes super quick.

My kids’ favorite, however, are fruity apples!  Sounds ironic since apples are fruit, I know.  My friend Britanie made these in her dehydrator for a workshop we did at church once and I thought they were so fun.  All you need is a packet of Jell-O.  I use sugar free, and with a light hand, just sprinkle it over the apple slices as evenly as you can.  Try to avoid getting it all over the baking sheet.  You don’t need to use a whole packet, just use enough to give all of the apples a nice coat.

After that, put your pans in a 170 degree oven.  It’s super low, basically just on ‘warm’ so I just leave it on and go about my day, coming and going as usual.  Baking time will depend on your oven, and your apples, but I usually leave mine in about 7 hours.  They should look shriveled up  a bit, and the plain apples get a little golden brown.  They should feel pretty dry to the touch.  At this point, I just turn off the oven and leave them there until they’re completely cooled.  They won’t be crunchy until they’re cool.

What I usually do is pop them in my oven in the morning, let’s say 10-11am.  Then I turn off the oven around dinner time, and before I go to bed I take them off the sheets and put them in an airtight container, like a mason jar.

Like I said, the process is long, but the work load couldn’t be easier!  What results is light, crispy, flavorful chips, perfect for munching on.

My kiddos always go straight for the fruit flavored ones.  The added flavor is very mild, it just adds a hint of sweetness and lots of fun colors!

I love that my boys are obsessed with these, because they’re so healthy.  They’ll pick these over fruit snacks any day.

And I don’t blame them!  They’re one of my favorite snacks too.

The apples shrink up so much to make the crispy chips, that I sometimes don’t let my kids notice I’m baking them.  That way I can do a few batches over the course of a few days and fill up a few jars- because they eat them super fast!

It’s a pretty cute gift, too.  Fill up a mason jar and tie a ribbon around it and you’re done.  I could easily eat that whole jar (which is about 2 whole apples).  Yum!

If you missed yesterday’s giveaway, check it out!  We sent so much traffic their way, it was a little slow yesterday, so head over today if you missed it!

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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 am making apple chips today. I hand sliced my Granny Smith apples, which are well on their way to being past prime. I put them on a uncoated, metal cooling rack with little holes. Oven is on 225 and I am venting by putting a wooden spoon in the door. It takes them about 1 1/2 hours to dry, no turning required. The only problem I am having is that they get eaten before I can put them in the container! These are awesome, and I am not afraid to try the jello! Good luck!

  2. I went and took it out of the oven. I sprayed the cookie sheets with oil and will dry them that way for now until I can get to the store for parchment paper. Google.com is my friend 🙂

    Thank you for these easy to follow directions. I love these, but at $4 a tiny bag a Whole Foods, I was going to break the bank. I thought it was much more involved and complicated to do this and that I needed a dehydrator.

    I am now a devoted follower of your blog 🙂

  3. I just put these in the oven with cinnamon. I used wax paper – isn’t that what parchment paper is?

  4. I made these today but they stuck to the paper! Any ideas on how I can avoid that happening next time? The little bits I picked off around the paper were so tasty – what a tease! 🙁

    1. That’s weird! I’d spray the paper with a little non-stick spray next time, I bet that would do the trick. Better luck next time!

  5. I am making these for neighbor gifts and wondering how far in advance I can make them? If I store in an air tight container, how long will they last? The tricky part is going to be keeping my kids from noticing they are cooking because they seem to eat them before they make it to a container :). Thanks in advance!

  6. Made these today w/ the Jello sprinkled on them for my kids. None of us can stop eating them because they are so good. I did raise the temp to 190, and I cut them extra thin with the mandolin, so it took about 6 hours total, including cool time. So crisp and yummy!

  7. Has anyone played around with temps and cooking times at all? I’ve had success previously with standard cinnamon&sugar chips before at ~275 for 2 hours (turning once half way through) and then allowing to cool in the oven, the whole process takes less then 3 hours. Wondering if that will be too high and maybe burn the jello? I really am just too impatient to wait >8 hours for such a simple recipe.
    Thanks in advance for any thoughts!

  8. Is there a mandoline that you recommend? Which one do you have? I looked at the one that you linked and it talked about not being able to do long things. Also, did you buy the gloves that go with it to not slice your hands? I cut myself with a knife often enough that this looks a little dangerous for me. But it looks like I need to try all your recipes that I want to do. Thanks!

  9. I have made these two years in a row (from various recipes) and I love the apple crisps but when I take them out of the dehydrator they are crisp but after a day or two even in a jar, they are not crisp. This time they were in the dehydrator for 24 hours almost at 135 degrees. Has anyone else had this problem?