Recipe
August 9, 2012
Oat-Stuffed Apples Recipe
Step 1: Preheat your oven to 350°F*. Turn on your convection fan if you have one.
Step 2: Rest each apple on its side and neatly slice off the top 1/2″ or so. The stem will fall out. Reserve the little apple hats.
Step 3: With an apple corer, pierce each apple and punch out the seeds. Nestle the apples tightly together in a baking dish.
Step 4: With your fingers rub together the butter, oats, sugar and cinnamon, working the mixture until it’s combined and crumbly. Evenly divide the mixture among the apples, filling their centres and mounding the rest on top. Replace the little tops on the apples.
Step 5: Bake until the apples are heated through, collapse a bit, and taste delicious, about 45 minutes, depending on the apple type. Serve and share with lots of vanilla ice cream.
* You can turn up the oven’s heat and the apples will bake faster, but above 350°F you’ll run the risk of burning the sugar. You can also use your microwave to dramatically speed up this treat. The results are not quite the same as with baking — no browning occurs in the microwave — but delicious nonetheless.
See more recipes from Michael Smith.
Reprinted with permission from Michael Smith’s Fast Flavours (2012 Penguin).
Directions
Yield:
Step 1: Preheat your oven to 350°F*. Turn on your convection fan if you have one.
Step 2: Rest each apple on its side and neatly slice off the top 1/2″ or so. The stem will fall out. Reserve the little apple hats.
Step 3: With an apple corer, pierce each apple and punch out the seeds. Nestle the apples tightly together in a baking dish.
Step 4: With your fingers rub together the butter, oats, sugar and cinnamon, working the mixture until it’s combined and crumbly. Evenly divide the mixture among the apples, filling their centres and mounding the rest on top. Replace the little tops on the apples.
Step 5: Bake until the apples are heated through, collapse a bit, and taste delicious, about 45 minutes, depending on the apple type. Serve and share with lots of vanilla ice cream.
* You can turn up the oven’s heat and the apples will bake faster, but above 350°F you’ll run the risk of burning the sugar. You can also use your microwave to dramatically speed up this treat. The results are not quite the same as with baking — no browning occurs in the microwave — but delicious nonetheless.
See more recipes from Michael Smith.
Reprinted with permission from Michael Smith’s Fast Flavours (2012 Penguin).
[img_assist|nid=2146826|title=|desc=|link=none|align=middle|width=225|height=294]James Ingram, Jive Photographic