There are recipes you make once and forget. Then there are recipes that become a permanent fixture in your kitchen — the ones your kids start requesting by name. This blueberry applesauce is firmly in the second category.
I stumbled onto this combination on a lazy Saturday afternoon when I had a bowl of apples going soft and a bag of frozen blueberries taking up freezer space. Twenty minutes later, my kitchen smelled incredible and I had four jars of the most beautiful deep purple applesauce you’ve ever seen. My family demolished it before it even had a chance to cool.
The best part? It’s made with real ingredients you probably already have, it takes less than 30 minutes, and it’s actually good for you. No store-bought jar of mystery ingredients can compete with this.
Why you’ll love this recipe
- It comes together in under 30 minutes with minimal effort
- The color alone will make your kids think it’s some kind of magic
- No added preservatives or artificial anything — just real fruit
- It works as a snack, a side dish, a baby food, or even a topping
- You can use fresh or frozen blueberries, so it’s a year-round recipe
- It stores beautifully in the fridge or freezer for weeks
Ingredients and key notes
For the applesauce:
- 4 medium apples, peeled, cored, and chopped — Honeycrisp or Fuji work best for natural sweetness
- 1 1/2 cups blueberries — fresh or frozen both work perfectly
- 2 tablespoons brown sugar — skip it entirely if your apples are sweet enough
- 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon — adds warmth without overpowering the fruit
- 1 teaspoon fresh lemon juice — this brightens the whole flavor
- 3 tablespoons water — just enough to get things moving in the pot
Key notes:
- If you use frozen blueberries, no need to thaw them first. Just toss them straight in.
- The brown sugar is totally optional. Taste your apples first — if they’re naturally sweet, you might not need any added sugar at all.
- Want a chunkier texture? Mash with a fork instead of blending. Want it silky smooth? Use an immersion blender right in the pot.
- Honeycrisp, Fuji, or Gala apples give you the best natural sweetness. Granny Smith will make it more tart, which some people actually prefer.
Step-by-step instructions
Step 1: Prep your apples
Peel, core, and chop your apples into roughly 1-inch chunks. They don’t need to be perfect — they’re going to break down completely anyway. Toss them into a medium saucepan.
Step 2: Add everything to the pot
Add your blueberries, brown sugar, cinnamon, lemon juice, and water directly into the pot with the apples. Give it a quick stir so everything gets acquainted.
Step 3: Cook it down
Set the heat to medium and bring the mixture to a gentle simmer. Once it starts bubbling, reduce the heat slightly, cover the pot, and let it cook for about 18 to 20 minutes. Stir occasionally. You’ll know it’s ready when the apples are completely soft and the blueberries have burst and released all that gorgeous color.
Step 4: Blend to your preferred texture
Take the pot off the heat. Use an immersion blender for a smooth, silky sauce — or grab a potato masher if you want it a little chunky. Both versions are great, honestly. It just depends on who you’re feeding.
Step 5: Taste and adjust
Give it a taste. Want it sweeter? Add a touch more sugar. Need more brightness? A little extra lemon juice does the trick. This is your sauce — make it exactly how you like it.
Step 6: Cool and store
Let the applesauce cool for about 10 minutes before transferring it into jars or airtight containers. It thickens slightly as it cools, so don’t panic if it looks a little thin right off the stove.
Serving suggestions
This blueberry applesauce is seriously versatile. Here are a few ways to use it beyond just eating it straight from the jar (which is also completely valid):
- Serve it warm alongside pork chops or roasted chicken for a sweet contrast
- Spoon it over oatmeal or yogurt in the morning for a quick, healthy breakfast
- Use it as a topping for pancakes or waffles instead of syrup
- Serve it chilled as an afternoon snack for kids — they will not complain
- Swirl it into vanilla ice cream for a simple, fruit-forward dessert
- Use it as a natural sweetener in baking — it works great as an applesauce substitute in muffins and quick breads
Storage tips
Refrigerator: Store in airtight jars or containers for up to 10 days. The sauce actually tastes even better after a day or two in the fridge once the flavors have had time to settle.
Freezer: This applesauce freezes beautifully. Pour it into freezer-safe containers or zip-lock bags and freeze for up to 3 months. Leave a little space at the top of the container because it expands as it freezes.
Reheating: Warm it up gently on the stovetop over low heat, stirring occasionally. You can also microwave it in 30-second intervals. Add a tiny splash of water if it thickens too much after freezing.
Before you go
Honestly, this blueberry applesauce is one of those recipes that feels too simple to be this good. But that’s kind of the whole point, right? Real ingredients, minimal effort, and a result that genuinely makes people happy.
Whether you’re making it for your kids, meal prepping for the week, or just trying to use up fruit before it goes bad — this one delivers every single time. Give it a try and let me know how it goes. I’d love to hear what your family thinks.
And if you make it, share it. Tag me, show me those jars. There’s something about seeing that deep purple color that never gets old.
With gratitude, Kip
Blueberry Applesauce — The Quick, Healthy Recipe Your Kids Will Actually Ask For
Description
This homemade blueberry applesauce blends tender cooked apples with sweet blueberries for a vibrant, naturally healthy treat the whole family will love. No preservatives, no complicated steps — just real fruit, simple spices, and big flavor in under 30 minutes.
Ingredients
Instructions
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Add chopped apples, blueberries, brown sugar, cinnamon, lemon juice, and water to a medium saucepan.
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Bring to a simmer over medium heat, then cover and cook for 18 to 20 minutes, stirring occasionally.
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Remove from heat and blend with an immersion blender or mash with a fork to your preferred texture.
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Taste and adjust sweetness or acidity as needed.
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Cool for 10 minutes, then transfer to jars or airtight containers.
