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Cooking Lesson #1159: Johnny’s Apple Dumplings

2/18/2026

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…from the Perspectives’ Kitchen

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How you doin’? An Apple Dumpling is a pastry filled with a peeled and cored apple, cinnamon, spices and occasionally raisins and lemon or orange zest.
 
After the apples are first peeled and cored, they are placed on a portion of prepared dough, then filled with cinnamon and sugar. The dough is delicately folded over the apples and the dumplings are baked until tender.
 
My apple dumplings are warm, flaky, apple sweet and tart, drizzled with a sauce that makes itself right within the dumplings. Apple Dumplings are just a little time-consuming, can be a bit fussy, but are not really difficult to make. Serve ‘em up warm, with spooned on sauce and topped with whipped cream or ice cream.
 
Where did Apple Dumplings originate? Though the first recorded Apple Dumplings were made in England in and around the 18th century and can be traced throughout history across many communities in the United States, they've really become known as an iconic Amish food. On our continent, they are believed to be native to the northeastern United States, near Pennsylvania. Often found among the delicious Amish recipes, it is frequently eaten as a breakfast item in their communities. However, they are also regularly eaten as a dessert and sometimes served with vanilla ice cream… my personal favorite way to eat them!
 
Prep time:  30 minutes
Bake time:  1 hour
Yield:  6 dumplings
 
Ingredients 
1 recipe pastry for double-crust pie (see below)
6 large Granny Smith apples (or other tart baking apple), peeled, cored, held in cold water with lemon juice
1/2 cup unsalted butter, cut into pieces, divided
3/4 cup light brown sugar
1-1/2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon ground nutmeg
3 cups water
2 cups granulated sugar
2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
turbinado sugar or sugar in the raw
 
Directions
  1. Read the recipe all the way through before starting. Measure all ingredients and have at your side.
  2. Preheat your oven to 400⁰ F.
  3. Butter a 9 x 13-inch pan.
  4. On a lightly floured surface, roll the pastry into a large rectangle, about 24 x 16 inches.
  5. Cut into 6 square equal pieces.
  6. Remove the apples from the water and ensure they are fully drained. Place one apple on each pastry square with the cored opening facing upward.
  7. Cut the butter into 8 pieces. Place 1 piece of butter inside the opening of each apple; reserving remaining butter for the sauce.
  8. Divide brown sugar equally between the apples, poking some inside each cored opening and sprinkling the rest over and around the base of each apple.
  9. Sprinkle cinnamon and nutmeg over the apples.
  10. With slightly wet fingertips, bring one corner of pastry square up to the top of the apple, then bring the opposite corner to the top and press together. Bring up the two remaining opposite corners and seal. Slightly pinch the dough at the sides to completely seal in the apple. Repeat with the remaining apples.
  11. Place the pastry-wrapped apples in the prepared baking dish.
  12. In a saucepan, combine water, granulated sugar, vanilla extract and reserved butter. Place over medium heat and bring to a boil. Boil for 5 minutes, or until the sugar is dissolved. Carefully pour over dumplings.
  13. Just before baking sprinkle the tops of the pastry with turbinado or sugar in the raw for sweet added crunch. 
  14. Bake in a preheated oven for 50 to 60 minutes. Place each apple dumpling in a dessert bowl and spoon some sauce over the top.
ChefSecrets:  Don’t have time to make the dumpling crust? You can use a couple of rolls of Pillsbury Crescent Sheets. Lower the baking temperature to 350⁰ F and bake until golden brown.

                               Ed’s Perfect Flaky Pie & Dumpling Dough
                                                  Use this recipe for dumplings or pie crusts.
Prep time:  15-30 minutes
Chill time: Minimum 30 minutes
Yield:  2 single or 1 double (9-inch) crust
 
Ingredients 
1 cup (2 sticks) cold unsalted butter, chilled
1/4 to 1/2 cup ice water
3 cups all-purpose flour, plus more for rolling
1 teaspoon sea salt
1 large egg yolk whisked with 1 tablespoon warm water
 
Directions
  1. Read the recipe all the way through before starting. Measure all ingredients and have at your side.
  2. Remove the butter from the refrigerator and cut into several small cubes.  Refrigerate while preparing the flour mixture.
  3. Place a few ice cubes in a small measuring cup (1 cup) and fill it with cold water.  Stir and set aside.
  4. Combine the flour and salt in a chilled bowl of a food processor and pulse a few times to combine.  If making crust by hand, whisk the flour and salt together in a large mixing bowl.
  5. Scatter half the cubes of butter over the surface of the flour.  Attach the food processor lid and pulse 15 to 20 times until the mixture resembles cornmeal with pieces of butter no larger than pea size. Alternatively, cut the butter into the flour using a pastry cutter, a fork, or your fingertips.
  6. Remove the lid of the food processor and sprinkle about 1/4 cup of ice water over the surface of the butter-flour mixture. 
  7. Scatter the remaining butter cubes over the water-flour mixture.  Pulse 4 times to combine.
  8. You can check to see if the dough is holding together by squeezing a bit in your hand; if it holds together and feels tacky, it's ready. If it breaks apart easily, add a little more water, one tablespoon at a time as needed.  The final dough should have large clumps of dough, small pebbles of butter and should hold together when pressed.
  9. Turn the dough out onto a clean work surface sprinkled lightly with flour. Divide the dough into two piles (about 13 ounces each). Use the palm of your hand to quickly gather and press each mound into a thick disk. Wrap in food film and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes or up to 4 days.
  10. Unwrap 1 of the disks and place on a work surface dusted with flour. Sprinkle a rolling pin with flour. Working from the middle of the dough outwards, roll the dough out as directed above.  Work the dough as little as possible.
If the dough cracks when you first start rolling, let it stand for one minute to warm slightly before rolling again.  Use more flour if the dough starts to stick. Use a pastry scraper to lift the pastry from the work surface and make sure it's not sticking.
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ChefSecret:  You can substitute lard or shortening for all or some of the butter in this recipe. Leftovers can be wrapped in food film and kept on the counter for up to 3 days.
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Quip of the Day:  Since I am newly married and work with my wife every day, I always read her horoscope in the morning paper to find out what kind of day I’m going to have.
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Do you have a question or comment? Send your thoughts to [email protected]. All recipes and cooking tips are posted on our website https://www.perspectives-la.com/perspectives-on-food.
We also have 1,000 archived Covid Era recipes that you can easily access using this link https://www.perspectives-la.com/Covid-19-Survival-Guide. Use the search box above our pictures to find what you’re looking for.
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To you and everyone dear to you, be strong, positive, kind, thankful, and stay well and safe. Take a breath and count your blessings, and if you have a little extra to share with others, please consider donating to Feeding America, Tunnel to Towers, Union Rescue Mission, Samaritan’s Purse and/or American Red Cross.
#Dessert #JohnnysAppleDumplings #AppleDumplings #GrannySmithApples #BakedApples #Recipes2026 #URM #T2T #FeedingAmerica #ThreeSquare #RedCross #SamaritansPurse #PerspectivesTheConsultingGroup 
                                                                                 ©PERSPECTIVES/The Consulting Group, LLC, 2026

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  • Home
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  • Why Perspectives?
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