Not to be confused with Rubus chamaemorus, sometimes called bakeapple.
A baked apple is a dish consisting of an applebaked in an oven until it has become soft. The core is usually removed and the resulting cavity stuffed with sweet or savory fillings and seasonings. Pears and quinces may be prepared in the same way.
Baked apples are found in many European cuisines, including colonial ones.[1][2][3][4] In Germany, baked apples are often served during the Christmas season.
Preparation
The apples are cored, often not through the bottom,[5] and sometimes peeled halfway down to prevent bursting.[6]
The cavity is filled with seasonings and sometimes other fillings.
Fillings may be fresh or dried fruits such as raisins, dates, prunes, oatmeal, as well as nuts such as pistachios[8] or walnuts, which are typical in Bulgaria;[9] the Bosnian dish tufahije is also stuffed with walnuts, but is poached rather than baked; marzipan is sometimes used in Germany. Many recipes include lemon juice for tartness.[6][10]
The apples are then baked until soft.
Variations
Baked apples can also be a savory dish, used as a side dish for roasts, or standing on their own, stuffed with sausage or mincemeat.[7]
A black cap is a kind of baked apple cut in two crosswise, cored, filled with lemon rind and candied orange peel or orange marmalade, reassembled, and baked with wine and sugar. The oven is started very hot to blacken the tops.[11]
Baked apples may be baked until dry to make them suitable for storage. In the cuisine of Norfolk, England, a biffin or beefing is an apple which is baked between a weight, to flatten it into a cake, and a layer of straw, to absorb moisture, and usually made from the Norfolk Biffincultivar.[12] It is typically served with cream after the skin is removed.[13]
A baked apple wrapped in a pastry crust is an apple dumpling.
^Twentieth Century Cook Book, an Up-to-date and Skillful Preparation on the Art of Cooking and Modern Candy Making Simplified, 1921, "Baked Apples with Dates", p. 105
^"Black Caps par Excellence", Eliza Acton, Modern Cookery, in All Its Branches, 1845, p. 531