Apple & Green Tomato Mincemeat
Submitted by MrBubba
Meatless apple and green tomato mincemeat with golden raisins, currants, citrus zest, and warm holiday spices. A vegetarian alternative to traditional mincemeat, perfect for pies, tarts, and gift jars.
YIELD
96 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
120 minREADY
135 minOld-school mincemeat once contained actual minced meat and suet, but this modern vegetarian version trades that out for unripe garden tomatoes and apples without losing any of the spiced fruity character. The end-of-season green tomatoes you cannot ripen otherwise become the workhorse here, their firm tartness reading like apple flesh once cooked down with sugar.
The long slow simmer is doing the magic. Two hours of gentle cooking concentrates the fruits down into a thick jammy preserve while infusing every spoonful with cinnamon, nutmeg, clove, and bright citrus zest. The texture lands somewhere between a chunky chutney and a smooth fruit butter.
This recipe makes a serious batch, ninety-six servings worth, ideal for canning a winter’s supply or distributing as homemade gifts in pretty jars. The flavor improves dramatically with age, so make it in fall and let it mellow until the holidays for the deepest result.
Process sealed jars in a hot water bath for proper shelf stability. Once opened, the mincemeat keeps in the fridge for several weeks and freezes beautifully in smaller portions.
Pro Tips
- Use firm under-ripe green tomatoes, fully ripe red ones bleed too much juice and lack the proper tartness
- Chop everything to a relatively uniform size for even cooking, food processor pulses work but watch for puree
- Stir often during the long simmer, the heavy fruit mixture wants to stick and scorch on the bottom
- Sterilize jars and lids in advance, hot fruit goes into hot jars for the proper canning seal
- Process pints in a boiling water bath for 25 minutes for shelf-stable storage up to a year
Variations
- Add a quarter cup of brandy, dark rum, or whiskey for boozy depth before bottling
- Stir in a half cup of chopped walnuts or almonds during the last 10 minutes for crunch
- Swap currants for chopped dried cranberries or pitted prunes
How to Use It
- Bake into classic mincemeat pie with a double crust
- Spoon into tartlets with a buttery shortbread base for holiday gift platters
- Layer with vanilla ice cream and crumbled cookies for a quick parfait
- Stir a few spoonfuls into hot oatmeal or warm baked apples for a breakfast treat
Ingredients
Directions
Chop in processor apples and tomatoes.
Add remaining fruit and process.
Blend everything in a large pot.
Cook slowly for 1½ to 2 hours.
Bottle and process in hot water bath.
Comments




How long to process in a hot water bath