1.
I do not believe in peeling the apples (organic recommended hence) since the skin has lots of nutrients as well. Wash the apples well and core them. If you do not have a corer, simply cut the apples in half and slice off the center section with the seeds.
2.
Chop them roughly.
3.
Add them to the Instant pot. If making mixed fruit applesauce, add the other fruits as well. I have used a mix of all the fruits mentioned since that way I “eat” more fruits in a day 🙂 we love our applesauce that way.
4.
I prefer adding some dried fruits to enhance the nutritional aspect esp since these are consumed by my kids on a daily basis. I tend to use mix of dried fruits as well – more so on prunes and raisins since I feed this to the baby and we all know that prunes+baby=smooth….err..you know what 🙂 I always eye ball the amount, but you can add as much or as little depending on the sweetness of your fruits and personal preference.
5.
Next add 1/2 cup water.
6.
Place the inner pot inside the Instant Pot. Add the lemon juice and (if using) cinnamon along with salt. Stir to combine.
7.
Make sure to turn the Steam Release Knob to the “Sealing” position.
8.
“Pressure Cook” it for 5 minutes.
9.
Once done, I tend to do a controlled quick release to maintain the color of the fruits and avoid overcooking. But you have two other options – either choose natural release for 10 minutes and then do quick release, or do natural release until the float valve is down.
10.
Open the lid. This is how it looks – see the color looks vibrant. You can choose to use an immersion blender or potato masher to make your applesauce.
11.
Or transfer the contents to a blender and puree until smooth or as per your texture preference.
// This is called with the results from from FB.getLoginStatus().
function statusChangeCallback(response) {
console.log(‘statusChangeCallback response:’ + response);
console.log(response);
// The response object is returned with a status field that lets the
// app know the current login status of the person.
// Full docs on the response object can be found in the documentation
// for FB.getLoginStatus().
if (response.status === ‘connected’) {
// Logged into your app and Facebook.
handleFBLogin();
} else if (response.status === ‘not_authorized’) {
// The person is logged into Facebook, but not your app.
document.getElementById(‘status’).innerHTML = ‘Please log ‘ +
‘into this app.’;
} else {
// The person is not logged into Facebook, so we’re not sure if
// they are logged into this app or not.
document.getElementById(‘status’).innerHTML = ‘Please log ‘ +
‘into Facebook.’;
}
}
// This function is called when someone finishes with the Login
// Button. See the onlogin handler attached to it in the sample
// code below.
function checkLoginState() {
FB.getLoginStatus(function(response) {
statusChangeCallback(response);
});
}
window.fbAsyncInit = function() {
FB.init({
appId : ‘900473083318354’,
cookie : true, // enable cookies to allow the server to access
// the session
xfbml : true, // parse social plugins on this page
version : ‘v2.1’ // use version 2.1
});
// Now that we’ve initialized the JavaScript SDK, we call
// FB.getLoginStatus(). This function gets the state of the
// person visiting this page and can return one of three states to
// the callback you provide. They can be:
//
// 1. Logged into your app (‘connected’)
// 2. Logged into Facebook, but not your app (‘not_authorized’)
// 3. Not logged into Facebook and can’t tell if they are logged into
// your app or not.
//
// These three cases are handled in the callback function.
// TODO: for not, auto login is disabled, as it never allows anyone to logout.
//FB.getLoginStatus(function(response) {
// statusChangeCallback(response);
//});
};
// Load the SDK asynchronously
(function(d, s, id) {
var js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0];
if (d.getElementById(id)) return;
js = d.createElement(s); js.id = id;
js.src = “http://connect.facebook.net/en_US/sdk.js”;
fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs);
}(document, ‘script’, ‘facebook-jssdk’));
// Here we run a very simple test of the Graph API after login is
// successful. See statusChangeCallback() for when this call is made.
function handleFBLogin() {
// console.log(‘Welcome! Fetching your information…. ‘);
FB.api(‘/me’, function(response) {
// console.log(‘Successful login for: ‘ + response.name);
//document.getElementById(‘status’).innerHTML =
// ‘Thanks for logging in, ‘ + response.name + ‘!’;
});
// Handle the FB login event on the server side.
xmlhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();
xmlhttp.onreadystatechange = function() {
if (xmlhttp.readyState == 4 && xmlhttp.status == 200) {
response = JSON.parse(xmlhttp.responseText);
// console.log(response);
if (response.status == ‘OK’) {
//window.location.replace(response.redirect_url);
window.location.replace(“http://chefinyou.com/recipe/instant-pot-applesauce”);
}
}
}
xmlhttp.open(“GET”,”/?action=dologin&authenticator=facebook”,true);
xmlhttp.send();
}
jQuery(document).ready(function() {
$(“body”).floatingSocialShare({
place: “top-left”, // alternatively top-right
counter: true, // set to false for hiding the counters of pinterest, facebook, twitter, linkedin and google-plus
buttons: [“facebook”,”twitter”,”google-plus”,”envelope”,”pinterest”], // all of the currently avalaible social buttons
title: document.title, // your title, default is current page’s title
url: window.location.href, // your url, default is current page’s url
text: “share with “, // the title of a tags
description: $(“meta[name=”description”]”).attr(“content”), // your description, default is current page’s description
popup_width: 400, // the sharer popup width, default is 400px
popup_height: 300 // the sharer popup height, default is 300px
});
});
Hello
I am a food blogger. I search for recipes and write to my blog. we have a small team of two people.
My Name is Shubham Patel And My partner name is Jenish Pateliya. we both work on this website.