Apple Butter in the Crock Pot

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Made with apple sauce, fresh apples, and apple juice, this apple butter in the crock pot recipe is bursting with apple flavor. Add in some delicious spices like cinnamon, cloves, and allspice and you have a treat that’s to die for when spread on a warm biscuit.

crock pot apple butter spread on a biscuit.

From time to time I run across a person who has never heard of apple butter. When I am finished gasping in horror at the wasted life they have led up until that point, I make it my first order of business to slather some on a biscuit and get it to their mouth as soon as possible.

Some people are intimidated by apple butter because they think it’s hard to make. But I’m here to tell you it’s surprisingly easy, especially when you make apple butter in the crock pot. Perhaps it’s the complex taste of the spices combined with how few people actually do make it anymore which causes it to be shied away from in our kitchens? There is no need though as this apple butter recipe is likely one of the easiest things that I’ve brought you so far!

All we need to do is add all of the ingredients to the crock pot and let it do its magical thing. The ingredients include apple sauce, Granny Smith apples, apple juice, granulated sugar, cinnamon, cloves, and allspice. Oh, the combination of all that apple flavor with the spices makes this apple butter SO tasty, y’all.

I like to put my apple butter on to cook in the slow cooker just before I go to bed and let it cook all night long. When I wake up in the morning, the house is filled with the most delicious and fragrant smell that I often reserve making it for a time when we have company! I wake up first thing, take the lid off, and give it a few fans just to make sure the house is thoroughly saturated with that sensational apple butter smell.

We eat a breakfast of buttermilk biscuits and fresh, hot apple butter while I let the rest continue to cook. This is about as close to heaven as you can possibly get while still drawing breath. I’ve convinced you now, right?

apple butter in the crock pot ingredients

Recipe Ingredients

  • Unsweetened applesauce
  • Sugar
  • Granny Smith apples
  • Apple juice
  • Cinnamon
  • Cloves
  • Allspice

How to Make Apple Butter in the Crock Pot

chipped apples

“Chip” your apples like we did in the apple pie. If you have not read the apple pie tutorial, you now have your first official homework assignment.

Do this by peeling the apples and cutting little chips of them off.

place all ingredients in the crockpot.

Place in a large crock pot along with both jars of apple sauce, sugar, spices, and a bit of apple juice.

The exact quantities are at the bottom of this post.

stir, cover with lid, and cook overnight.

Stir well and cover with the lid. Cook on low overnight for 8 to 10 hours.

leave lid off for a few hours to let it "cook down."

After cooking overnight or throughout the day, your apple butter will be dark brown and rich.

However, it will have a bit too much water in it. This is where you will taste it and see what you want to add. I am including the exact quantities I use at the bottom of this crock pot apple butter recipe.

Leave the lid off and continue cooking for a few hours until it cooks down a little bit. “Cooks down” is how old folks say “it’s too runny, you need some of that water gone!”.

After it cooks down a bit, fill up pint or quart jars and seal.

If you go through the process of canning this slow cooker apple butter, you can simply leave the jars on a shelf in your pantry. Otherwise, you would need to refrigerate them and use them within two to three weeks.

You can also place it in jars and freeze it to keep it longer without canning. For a complete tutorial that makes canning easy, please click here (yes, I said “EASY” because it is!).

Close-up of crockpot apple butter on a spoon roll.

Here’s some scrumptious apple butter on a spoon roll. I’ve included more serving suggestions below!

Storage

  • Refrigerate the jars of apple butter and store them in the fridge for up to 3 weeks. 
  • You can also freeze apple butter for up to 1 year. Thaw in the fridge before using.
  • Alternatively, click on this canning tutorial to store them in the pantry for months.

Recipe Notes

  • If you feel like it is too much sugar for you or too many cloves or allspice, just do a little less. The beauty of this recipe is that you cook it all night in the crock pot, then taste it in the morning and add what you prefer to make it to your taste. You can also use Stevia or Monk Fruit instead of sugar if you like. However, it will require much less as these sweeteners are a lot sweeter than sugar.
  • For a different flavor, use a combination of granulated sugar and brown sugar.
  • A jar of homemade apple butter is the perfect Thanksgiving hostess gift!
  • You can easily substitute the cloves or allspice for ground nutmeg and/or ground ginger if that’s what you have on hand.
  • Another way to add sweetness is to add 1 tablespoon of vanilla extract. Stir this in when you taste it after it’s been slow cooking overnight.
  • If you want smoother apple butter, you can blend it using an immersion blender until smooth, before storing. Use the immersion blender directly in the slow cooker or transfer the mixture to a standing blender and puree.

Recipe FAQs

How do you serve apple butter?

The options are basically endless when it comes to serving your crockpot apple butter, but here are some suggestions:

  • Use apple butter instead of apple sauce the next time you serve pork chops.
  • Serve it on a Southern biscuit, toast, scone, cornbread, pancakes, crepes, or waffles.
  • Use it on your next charcuterie board, as it tastes delicious spread on a cracker with a slice of sharp cheddar cheese.
  • Add a dollop to a serving of vanilla ice cream.
  • Use as an oatmeal or yogurt topping for breakfast.
  • Enjoy a peanut butter and apple butter sandwich for lunch!

Can you overcook apple butter in the crock pot?

No, you can’t overcook apple butter in the crock pot. The longer you leave it in there on low, the more intense the flavors will become.

What are the best apples to use in apple butter?

While I opt for Granny Smith apples because they’re a great baking apple, many apple varieties work. This includes Fuji, Golden Delicious, Gala, Honeycrisp, Pink Lady, McIntosh, Braeburn, and Jonagold.

What is the difference between apple sauce and apple butter?

Apple butter is basically a more concentrated and thicker version of applesauce as it’s cooked for a longer period of time. But if you want to make apple sauce instead, check out my crockpot cinnamon apple sauce recipe.

You may also like these sensational spreads:

Peach Preserves That Will Knock Your Socks Off

Spiced Peach Butter

How To Make Strawberry Jam (No Cooking, No Canning)

Peach Freezer Jam (No Canning Involved)

apple butter spread

Apple Butter in the Crock Pot

Made with apple sauce, fresh apples, apple juice, and delicious spices, this apple butter in the crock pot recipe is just bursting with apple flavor.
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 12 hours
Total Time: 12 hours 10 minutes
Course: Breakfast, Snack
Cuisine: American
Keyword: apple, butter
Servings: 4
Calories: 62kcal

Ingredients

  • 2-3 50-oz jars unsweetened apple sauce
  • 3 lbs Granny Smith apples
  • 4 cups sugar
  • 1.5 cups apple juice
  • 2 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1 tsp cloves
  • 1 tsp allspice

Instructions

  • Peel and cut apples into small chips.
    3 lbs Granny Smith apples
  • Place all ingredients in the crock pot and stir.
    2-3 50-oz jars unsweetened apple sauce, 3 lbs Granny Smith apples, 4 cups sugar, 1.5 cups apple juice, 2 tsp ground cinnamon, 1 tsp cloves, 1 tsp allspice
  • Cover and slow cook on low overnight (eight to ten hours). Then remove the cover, stir, and taste. Add more spices or sugar if desired.
  • Continue cooking for a few more hours, uncovered, until some of the liquid has gone and the butter has cooked down a bit.
  • Pour into jars and refrigerate (unless it is canned properly).
  • Serve over hot biscuits, toast, scones, or just eat it out of the jar if no one is looking!

Nutrition

Calories: 62kcal
Tried this recipe?Mention @southernplate or tag #southernplate!

 

 

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203 Comments

  1. Hey you had similar recipe out a little while back and in that one you were freezing the jars. can you do that with this one?

  2. Great recipe – I think I will make some later today or sometime tomorrow. My Mom has an apple tree in her back yard so I make my own apple sauce to make the apple butter. This cuts down on her production as she usually makes about 100 apple pies to be shared amongst my siblings, the grandkids and the great grandkids. I also make crabapple butter or a combination of the two – apples and crabapples. I have been known to combine fruits as well just to make a “fruit butter” – apples and raspberries is great and sometimes I add some raisins to the apple butter. Depends if it is going to be eaten as a “jam” a “butter” or as a condiment with roast port, ham or pork chops. I also just slice and freeze to be used later in the winter for cakes and other desserts or to make up another batch of apple butter. I have to be creative as don’t want the apples to go to waste.
    Right now I am cooking up the chokecherries b and only tasting (several times) will prove that. In otherwords, they need a pint jar or so………LOL I tell them that I might be getting Old(er) but it hasn’t had an effect on my logic…
    PS – Mom is 81 and still going strong in the canning, freezing and preserving department.

  3. Christy, just found your website a couple weeks ago and I am loving it so much. I have tried the home brewed coffee and the House Autry pork chops. Both were so good. I have on my list for this week the sweet and sour green beans and the grilled chicken without the grill. This afternoon I am going to the Apple house to get apples for the slow cooked apple butter. Going to can a couple jars and freeze what is left. I really want to can it all but don’t have a large enough pot. I’m going to my brother’s house soon to snoop around and see if he still has our Mom’s cold bath canner. lol. There are so so many things on your site I want to try and I will soon. We have been getting so bored with eating out and having the same old things at home. You have given me so many great ideas. One more thing I have been doing is making and freezing the leftover bread as french toast. Not one piece of bread was thrown out this week..(Sorry birds, you will just have to make do with all the sunflower seeds we buy for you.) I have been passing on some of these ideas to my super busy daughter as she has no time to be on the computer for fun. Well off I go now to the Apple House. By the way, have you ever had a Mutsu apple? My fav but you can only get them around the 2nd week of September for about a month.

      1. We like to get the Mutsus from an orchard shortly after they come in. Here in East Tennessee that would be the second week of September. They are only around for about 3 or 4 weeks. About that time they taste and look like a Golden Delicious. BTW I made your slow cooker apple butter and it was very good. I always loved apple butter as a child. In recent years I could never find any that tasted good, just bland. I never knew it was so easy to make. I used Ozark Gold apples. I have tried several of your recipes and tips and it has sure improved my life. Love the cold brewed coffee, the house Autry chops. I have cooked roast beef in the slow cooker for many years and never thought to put the gravy in first. What a difference!! Thank you so much for all you do. It is much appreciated.

  4. If you are planning to can this recipe, how long do you process the jars? Or, if it requires more than just a hot water bath processing, how do you go about canning it?

  5. I’m making your apple butter for the second time right now, it’s simmering away in the crock pot and smells amazing! We just loved it when I made it last year 🙂 This time I have my fancy 3 crock crock pot so am making a great big batch in the 6 quart crock- last time I had to halve the recipe! Can’t wait for it to be done.

    1. You may not see this, but it’s 2 big 50 oz jars of applesauce so 100 oz total 🙂 You can tell because the picture has 2 jars and in the recipe itself she refers to them as jars with an s rather than just jar. In the step by step blog post, she writes out “two large jars.” That’s how I’ve made it and it’s great! You can make the apple butter without any apple sauce (just use a lot more apples), but that’s a lot of apple coring, peeling, and slicing and would get pretty expensive if you don’t have a source of inexpensive apples.

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