Sage Apple Butter
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With brown sugar, vanilla, and cinnamon, this sage apple butter has the coziest flavors of autumn and winter. Serve it with biscuits or buttery toast for a simple and delicious brunch!

Hello from the most boring roadtrip ever. Marc and I are making a long trek from Reno to Vegas to visit his family for the holidays. We got up at around 4 a.m. this morning to miss all of college-kids-going-home-for-Thanksgiving traffic, and I can’t quite figure out why right now but I also thought it would be a good idea to cook an entire pre-Thanksgiving feast at like, 10pm last night?
I guess it was worth it though, cause I’m rolling up to Thanksgiving armed with local coffee, black raspberry jam, and a big jar of apple butter.
I don’t really know how this slow cooker apple butter came to be, but wowowow, I’m glad it did. Before, I only ever made it on the stove when I was in culinary school. But either way, Marc and I couldn’t stop tasting little spoonfuls of it all night. It’s just the perfect mix of all the best fall flavors. Sage mixed with apples, cinnamon, vanilla, brown sugar. Ughhhh, this stuff is a total dream. Especially on apple pork chops!
Best apples to use
You’ll want to use apples that are flavorful, sweet, and crisp. Sweeter apples will lead to a sweeter butter without too much added sugar. Now would not be the time to use Red Delicious or Granny Smith. Personally, I like to use Gala, Fuji, Honeycrisp, Pink ladies, or a mix of different apples!
Make it in the slow cooker
If it’s too thin
Apple butter is only thin when it is 1. not cooked long enough or 2. doesn’t have enough sugar. Luckily in this recipe, we have plenty of sugar to get a nice consistency. If your apple butter is a bit too thin, continue cooking it in the slow cooker on high until it’s the consistency you want. It only takes an hour or two usually, but could take up to 3 or 4 depending on your slow cooker.
Storage & shelf-life
To store the butter, let it cool for an hour or so at room-temperature. Then, just divide the butter between a few jars, close the jars tightly, and store them in the fridge for up to 2 weeks. You can also freeze apple butter in freezer-safe jars. Just leave a gap at the top to allow it to expand. Freeze for up to 2-3 months.
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Sage Apple Butter
Ingredients
- 3 pounds apples, peeled, cored, and diced into 1-inch chunks
- 1/2 cup brown sugar, packed
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar
- 1/4 teaspoon Kosher salt
- 1 cinnamon stick
- 1 bunch sage
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- Place the apple chunks in a slow cooker. Stir in the brown sugar, white sugar, and salt. Place the cinnamon stick and sage in the slow cooker. Cover, and set to low for eight hours.
- After about eight hours, check the apples. They should be broken down and releasing juices. Remove the sage leaves and cinnamon stick. Discard the sage and set the cinnamon stick aside. Using an immersion blender (or regular blender), puree the apple butter until very smooth.
- Add the vanilla extract and cinnamon stick to the apple butter and stir well. Cover and cook for another two hours on high, stirring occasionally, until dark brown and thickened. You can cook it longer for thicker apple butter. Remove the cinnamon stick and discard. Cool the sage apple butter and store in jars in the fridge for up to two weeks.
Hi there! I was curious to how much this makes?
Hi Libby! This will make about 16-20 oz. (2-2 1/2 cups).