These fruit roll ups are ridiculously delicious and they look like stained glass when you hold them up to the light. But mainly I love them because they taste like summer sun.
I understand the need to snack. That's right, I said need. When it is 11 o 'clock at night and dinner is a few hours behind you and our morning coffee seems further away than the next season of The Bear - you NEED a snack.
I mean, you aren't a robot. You're a food loving human who needs some quality snack time in order not to murder anyone during your daily activities
Quality snack time involves things that are sweet, sticky or salty.
Quality snack time does NOT involve carrots, celery or plain piece of fruit.
Enter the homemade fruit roll up. It's like Fruit by the Foot but without the 50% sugar.
Table of Contents
Why is your FANCY homemade fruit leather healthier??
Because you and I are using quality fruit and not adding a cup of sugar for every cup of strawberries in our fruit roll ups even though we want to. The homemade version really lets you add however much sugar or honey you want to the fruit.
I go by taste as opposed to measurements, but I generally start with ¼ cup of honey or sugar per 3 cups of fruit.
You can make fruit leather out of just about any fruit you have on hand, but I usually go with raspberries because another "need" I have at this time of year is a way to get rid of the cups and cups of raspberries I harvest. In fact my favourite way to eat raspberries is by peeling their pulverized, moistureless selves off of a piece of waxed paper.
But raspberry fruit roll ups DO need more sugar than most fruit.
GET YOUR FRUIT (3-5 cups)
What you're looking at right there are 7 cups of raspberries from 3 days of harvesting. And because diversity makes everything better I added some black raspberries too.
WASH IT
Even though I grow my own raspberries and know they have no pesticides, I still wash them in case someone accidentally peed on them or something.
Add some sweet
Shameless plug for my beekeeper friend Russell Gibbs. His honey operation Gibbs Honey was established in 1934 and he's the 3rd generation to run the family business which includes honey, beeswax candles, propolis all made from their own wildflower and clover foraging bees.
However, my next batch of fruit roll ups will be made with honey from my neighbour's bees. I like to spread my honeylove around.
Puree it
Spread everything on either a Silpat lined baking sheet or a non stick dehydrator sheet.
I bought the official Excalibur dehydrator sheets that go with my dehydrator because they're the exact right size for my machine. 14" x 14".
The mixture dries out at the edges first and then works its way inwards. So make your edges thicker - about ¼" and the rest of the puree can be ⅛" thick.
Do your best to make it even but you'll never get it perfect so don't stress over it. Just make sure every bit is covered so you don't get any holes in your leather.
Dry it
If you don't want to invest in a dehydrator, keep in mind I thought the same thing. As it turns out I use it all the time, most recently for making dried sourdough starter.
How to know if your fruit leather is done
Fruit roll ups are done when you can run your hand over the top of it and it feels slightly tacky but dry.
If there are any wet spots, keep drying.
This will take 6-8 hours depending on whether you're using an oven or a dehydrator and the moisture level in the fruit and the air.
Finished fruit leather will be translucent and pliable. And pretty enough to pop in a church window.
TIP
If you have issues with seeds - you don't like them, or they get stuck in your colon or something, BEFORE you pour your puree out, press it through a sieve to remove the seeds. You'll end up with perfectly smooth roll ups with no seeds.
Peel & Roll
See how nice and shiny the underside of the leather is? Put that shiny side down on a piece of waxed paper then roll it into a tube.
Cut each tube of roll ups into 1.5" or so pieces with scissors.
YIELD
6-7 cups of fruit will yield 3, 14" x 14" trays of fruit leather.
1, 14" x 14" tray produces 10 fruit roll ups
3 trays of fruit leather will = 30 fruit roll ups
Homemade Fruit Roll Ups
Healthy fruit leather for your adult snacking needs.
Ingredients
- 7 cups raspberries
- ½ cup honey or sugar
- 1 Tablespoon lemon juice
Instructions
- Set oven to lowest temperature or dehydrator to 135 F.
- Blend all the ingredients in a blender or food processor.
- Pour about 1 cup of mixture onto a Silpat lined baking sheet or dehydrator sheets depending on whether you're using your oven or a dehydrator.
- Spread the mixture so it's around ⅛th of an inch thick all over, but a bit thicker at the edges because those dry more quickly.
- Place in oven or dehydrator for the next 6-8 hours to dry.
- Check for doneness - fruit leather should have a consistent colour and be sticky but dry to the touch. Not wet.
- When it's done, peel the fruit leather off and place it smooth side down on a piece of waxed paper.
- Roll the waxed paper and fruit leather up and cut into 1.5" strips.
- Store in an airtight container.
Notes
For the best flavour and consistency use fruit that is ripe or just slightly overripe.
Add sugar or honey to taste. Add a minimal amount of sugar or honey, puree and then taste. Add more if needed but remember that once the puree dehydrates and loses moisture, it will also seem sweeter so don't oversweeten during the puree phase.
Each of these combos below will yield 20-30 roll ups.
OTHER FRUIT COMBINATIONS**
Strawberry/Banana - 3 cups chopped strawberries, 2 bananas
Banana - 5 bananas (frozen bananas work!)
Banana/Pineapple - 4 bananas, ½ cored and peeled pineapple
Peach - 5 medium peaches
** (add sugar to taste and 1 tablespoon lemon juice to combos below) **
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Nutrition Information
Yield 30 Serving Size 1Amount Per Serving Calories 50Total Fat 0gSaturated Fat 0gTrans Fat 0gUnsaturated Fat 0gCholesterol 0mgSodium 1mgCarbohydrates 13gFiber 2gSugar 11gProtein 0g
How to store fruit leather
Here's where things get controversial. Some sources say your fruit leather only lasts for 2 weeks in the fridge. Others say 4 weeks in an airtight container in a dark cupboard. STILL other sites claim 8 months later and your fruit roll ups will still be good.
The truth is, it really depends on how dehydrated the leather is. The drier it is the longer it will store so if you've overdried it, your leather will last a few months stored in the dark in a mason jar.
Personally, I store my fruit roll ups in a mason jar for a month or so and if they aren't all gone by then they'd get thrown into the freezer.
This has literally never happened because I eat them within the first few days of making them even if I try not to because I am a weak, weak person.
And I NEED to snack.
Hettie
This looks like a fun project, Karen.
I checked out Gibbs Honey and discovered it's in Vankleek Hill which is close to where I live. I'm going to sign up for one of their beekeeping/honey-tasting afternoons and bring home some honey. Their sweet and salty version sounds yummy.
As always, thanks for the info!
Karen
That's great! Say hi to Russell for me. :) ~ karen!
Sandra Blackwell
Based on air temp and humidity...I think that last week we could have made them on the porch in about an hour....in the 100s every day, and my thermometer read 14% humidity the one time I looked.
cathy a. fox
can you use pears?
Karen
Hi cathy! I haven't tried pears. I imagine they'd have to be quite soft. There's no reason it shouldn't work that I can think of! ~ karen
Liz
Parchment works great for me…stack of 10 precut sheets clipped together on 2 sides, then a quick scissor trim on the other 2. Then a 1/2 cup scoop of purée for each tray. Fast and very little waste. When dry, roll up with parchment and cut with scissors. I usually have lots of extra fruit in the summer so this is a great way to use it. My grandkids think so, too! Last summer when I couldn’t get jar lids I even dried applesauce, usually with a sprinkle of cinnamon. I pack in zip bags and freeze, and hopefully bury and lose a few bags for a nice surprise many months later. Thanks, Karen, gotta go pick berries!
Karen
Oh yes! Remember when we couldn't get canning lids?! This year isn't perfect but at least there are canning lids, lol. ~ karen!
Rachel
What the duece? No rhubarb recipe?
Lynn
Looked this up sounds yummy
https://www.gettystewart.com/rhubarb-fruit-leather/
whitequeen96
Banana roll ups sound interesting; I can't really imagine what they'd be like, so I guess I'll have to make them!
Karen
They taste just like pineapple! Just kidding. They taste like banana. :) ~ karen!
Lynn Evans
This brilliant and timely. This kind of preserving is scary to me! Thanks for putting this out there 😍
Karen
This is the perfect place for you to start with preserving then. No scary pressure canner needed. :) ~ karen!
Lynn
Wish I had read this a couple weeks ago! I came into a bucket of strawberries and tried my hand at making leather. Just strawberries, nothing added, and it was delicious!
But, I was not careful enough about the thickness or the time in the oven. In the end half was wonderful, half was too burnt to be yummy. Now I know better than to leave it in overnight!
Anyone ever try leather made from pawpaw?
Lorraine
I have the same dehydrator Karen. Have you used it to proof bread? It is my go to.
Karen
No, I haven't but that's good to know! I did use it to dehydrate sourdough starter last night. :) So, in the bread family, lol. ~ karen!
Signa Atherton
I made my first batch of fruit leather this year. I moved to Florida and there’s a giant mango tree in the yard. At the height of the harvest, I was collecting 25+ mango a day so I started making fruit leather. Mango is so sweet it doesn’t need the added sugar, but I look forward to trying your other recipes. I love my Excalibur dehydrator, I bought it to dry the tops of royal icing cookies before I add layers of details, so I happen to have the drying sheets on hand. It’s great to have another use for the dehydrator. Thanks!
whitequeen96
I've tried mango fruit leather, but they always sprinkle sugar on it so it's too sweet. But you homemade version sounds fabulous! And 25 mango a day, wow! I'd start having potluck parties just so you'd bring the leather.
Mark Bauer
Thank you, I copied/printed your recipe and plan to use it this fall.....maybe sooner. I'm still new to dehydrating but have had some great success. Last year I had my neighbor came over and asked if I wanted grapes from the vine. I'm sorry but I don't remember how I processed them but I made grape roll ups....everyone loved them.
Thanks Mark
Karen
You'd make them the same way I'm sure. I bet they were good! ~ karen
Kate King
Could you use parchment paper instead of a silpat? Then just roll them up in that?
Karen
I forget which I tried (waxed paper or parchment) to do just that and it didn't work. Which is why I ended up buying the teflon type mats. I think I'd be more inclined to try tin foil for drying them on and then doing like I show you and transferring them to waxed paper. But - you don't know unless you try so experiment! ~ karen
whitequeen96
That's what I want to know too.
Norma
In the summer, Dollarama sells black barbeque mats (Betty Crocker brand - two for $4) designed to go on your barbeque grates to cook sticky, small, or messy things on. These make fabulous non-stick mats for your dehydrator, and also for lining every other cake and muffin tin you have in the kitchen (just cut them to size). I love them because they're reusable almost indefinitely and save a lot of headache peeling sticky things off or scrubbing tins when your baking has glued itself down.
whitequeen96
Thank you, Norma! I'll have to get some!