How to Make Fruit Leather at Home

Delicious homemade fruit leather with fresh fruits on a wooden surface. Perfect healthy snack for ki.

Whenever a certain fruit is in season, I love to use fruit leather recipes because they last forever. Often called the beef jerky of fruit, fruit leather is easy to make and is an excellent way to preserve excess fruit when you find yourself with a lot. If you have any fruit trees on your property, you definitely know the feeling.

(PS if you have a food dehydrator – it is even easier!)

How to Make Fruit Leather at Home

Recipe by Stay at Home Mum
0.0 from 0 votes

Chewy, sweet fruit strips made by drying pureed fruit, perfect for a healthy homemade snack.

Course: RecipesCuisine: AmericanDifficulty: Easy
Servings
+

4

servings
Prep time

15

minutes
Cooking time

4

hours 
Calories

120

kcal
Total time

4

hours 

15

minutes
Cook Mode

Keep the screen of your device on

Ingredients

  • 2 cups Fresh fruit-chopped into little pieces

  • 0.25 cup Water

  • 0.25 cup Sugar -(if the fruit is already very sweet you may not need this)

  • 1 tbsp Lemon Juice

  • 1 tbsp Vegetable oil

Directions

  • Start by preheating the oven to 65 degrees.
  • Dump the fruit into a medium sized saucepan along with the lemon juice and the water. Bring to a low simmer over medium heat with the lid on but slightly askew. When the fruit becomes soft, take it off the heat.
  • Pour the fruit mixture into a blender or food processor and blend it up until it’s smooth. If the fruit has seeds, strain them out. Give it a taste now and see how sweet it is. If you need to, add the sugar until you’re satisfied. Remember that when the fruit starts to dry it will become sweeter automatically as the water evaporates and the sugar becomes more concentrated.
  • Now take a baking sheet and cover it with a layer of plastic (the oven isn’t hot enough to melt the plastic). Brush the vegetable oil over the sheet, then pour the fruit mixture on top and spread it around with a spatula. The layer should be even and about 4-6 mm thick.
  • Stick the sheet in the oven for 6-8 hours, making sure to allow air to circulate so the fruit doesn’t scorch. On a sunny day, you could just stick it out in the sun for the same amount of time.
  • Towards the end of the baking time, prepare another baking sheet the same way – with plastic and vegetable oil. Remove the fruit tray and flip it over onto the second baking sheet, then bake it again for another 6-8 hours at the same heat. If it starts to get too hard, you can brush water over the top.
  • Now let the tray cool and cut the fruit leather into smallish pieces. Give it a light dusting of cornflour so it doesn’t stick, cover with plastic, and store in a dark, cool place.
author avatar
Clare Whitfield Chief Editor
Clare Whitfield is the Editor of Stay at Home Mum and a recognised voice in practical home management for Australian families. Based in the northern suburbs of Sydney, she balances editorial leadership with life as a stay at home mum to two school age children. Her background in home economics and more than a decade of experience in recipe development, family budgeting, and household systems inform her work.

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