Homemade Mincemeat
Submitted by Kazzy
Homemade meatless mincemeat with green tomatoes, tart apples, raisins, currants, and warm spices. Heritage holiday filling for pies and tarts. Freezes for months.
YIELD
36 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
60 minREADY
80 minHomemade mincemeat made the modernized way: no actual meat, no suet, just a slow-simmered melange of green tomatoes, tart apples, currants, raisins, citrus, and warm baking spices. The result is a deeply spiced, sweet-tart filling that transforms into the soul of a Christmas mince pie or a stack of mincemeat tarts.
Green tomatoes are the inspired substitution. They bring tartness, body, and a slight pectin gel that thickens the mince as it cooks down. The acid balances the sweetness of the dried fruit, while the apples soften into the background and give the filling its tender chunk-and-syrup texture.
The spice triad of cinnamon, cloves, and allspice is what tells your nose this is mincemeat. Ginger underneath adds warmth without sharpness. Add the spices, taste as you go, and let the mixture cool before judging the final balance. Spice flavors deepen as they sit.
Pro Tips
- Use truly green, unripe tomatoes. Red or pink ones make the mincemeat too sweet and watery
- Choose tart, firm apples like Granny Smith or Cortland. Sweet apples turn to mush
- Simmer slowly, stirring often, until the mixture is glossy and thick. Rushed mincemeat tastes raw
- Cool completely before portioning. Hot mincemeat freezing in cold containers cracks them and steams the lids
Variations
- Stir in 1 to 2 tablespoons of brandy, rum, or whiskey at the end of cooking for a more traditional adult flavor
- Add a half cup of chopped walnuts or pecans during the last 10 minutes of simmering for crunch
- Use beef suet or butter for a richer traditional mincemeat (about ½ cup, added at the start)
Ingredients
Directions
Combine all ingredients in a large, heavy pot. Simmer until thick.
Makes about 3 quarts.
Freeze mincemeat in one-cup portions.
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