Strawberry Guava and Apple Fruit Leather

Strawberry Guava and Apple Fruit Leather

If you are growing Strawberry Guava you will almost certainly experience huge bowls of fruit after a few years. They ripen quickly and new fruits are ready each day during summer or autumn. These can be eaten fresh or extras frozen to collect a bulk amount to preserve. This fruit leather is sweet and delicious and a great way to preserve and enjoy your guava harvests without the hard seeds.

Naturally sweet and delicious garden-to-plate snacks.

fruit leather

Strawberry Guava and Apple Fruit Leather

Prep Time: 20 minutes
Cook Time: 6 hours
Total Time: 6 hours 20 minutes

Sweet and tangy this fruit leather is a great way to enjoy your bumper crops without the hard seeds.

Ingredients

  • 3 Cups (or large hand fulls) of Strawberry Guava (fresh or frozen)
  • 2 Apples
  • 1 tsp fresh lemon Juice
  • 1 TBSP Honey or raw sugar (optional)

Instructions

  1. Wash and cut the ends of the guavas (the pronged part). Place the guava in a blender and the ends in a jar to make a scraps vinegar (see below recipe) or add to the compost.
  2. Wash, peel, and core apples (peels can go in the scraps jar too). Slice the apples and cook in a saucepan with a splash of water until soft.
  3. Blend the guava, apple, lemon juice, and honey until you get a smooth consistency with no chunks - there will still be seeds.
  4. Using a mesh strainer pass the mixture through a sieve to separate out the seeds. This is best done in small batches. Push down and mix around until the mixture comes out the bottom and the seeds are left behind. It seems hard at first but only takes about 10 minutes to complete. Remove the seeds (add to scraps jar or compost).
  5. Taste and add more sweetener or lemon juice (if too sweet).
  6. Using the fruit leather plastic tray of your dehydrator (or wax-free baking paper and tray) spread the mixture out to form one flat layer. Try to get it as even as possible.
  7. Dehydrate until dry and only slightly sticky approx 6 hours at 60 degrees Celsius. Can take up to 10 or 12 with high moisture or thicker trays.
  8. Remove and slice into long strips while still warm then roll up in wax-free baking paper to form roll-ups.
  9. Store in an air-tight jar for 1-2 weeks or store in the fridge for 1 month.

Notes

Any fruit can be used for this. If they are firm fruit like apple or stonefruit, cook down first until soft or try Mango raw, so yum!

How to Grow Guava – The Ultimate Garden-to-Plate Guide

How to Grow Guava – The Ultimate Garden-to-Plate Guide

strawberry guava

How to grow Guava

Learn how to grow Guava and what to make with their abundant crops in this guide. Guavas are beautiful ornamental trees that produce delicious, tropical-tasting fruit. There are many different varieties that all have their own unique flavour. Guava trees are prolific producers and can be a great addition to your homestead. Guava trees can also be grown in pots very successfully.

What parts of Guava are edible?

Quick Tips on How to Grow Guava at Home

PLANT

Sow seeds in spring- autumn. Plant trees in Spring or Autumn.

SOIL

Free-draining compost.

LOCATION

Full sun – part shade.

CARE

Prune to maintain size after fruiting has finished in Autumn.

FERTILISE

Feed with compost teas and keep well mulched.

PESTS

Rats, birds, fruit flies, bats.

HARVEST

Harvest regularly. Fruit will drop from the plant when ripe or come off easily in your hand.

REPRODUCE

Grows easily from seed. Seeds can be saved from ripe fruit. Cuttings can be taken.

guava

Why Grow Guava?

Here are some of the many reasons to grow Guava

  • Easy to grow
  • One plant provides an abundance
  • Lush evergreen leaves
  • Cover or screening
  • Shade protection
  • Immune booster
  • High Vitamin A and C
  • High antioxidants
  • Folate

Popular Guava Varieties to Grow

Guavas come in many different types a few key types, depending on your location, are:

Strawberry / Cherry Guava – Psidium cattleianum – Popular small red guava – prolific. Taste is sweet with hints of strawberry and a little tart and bitter. Dense coverage of small shiny evergreen leaves.

Lemon Guava – Psidium cattleianum – Small yellow guava similar to the strawberry but with sweet slight lemon flavours. Dense coverage of small shiny evergreen leaves.

Hawaiian Guava – Psidium guajava – Large tropical-tasting fruit with bright pink centre and yellowish outside when ripe. Large matte leaves that can be used for tea.

Ruby Supreme – Psidium guajava – Popular selection of hawaiina guava. Large tropical-tasting fruit with bright pink centre and yellowish outside when ripe. Large matte leaves that can be used for tea.

Indian Guava – Psidium guajava– Large crunchy guava with green skin and white flesh. Large matte leaves that can be used for tea.

Mexican cream – Psidium guajava – Medium yellow guava with light creamy flesh. Large matte leaves.

Purple Malaysian Guava – Psidium guajava – Deep crimson red-purple leaves. Pink flowers and the fruit have striking purple flesh.

When to Plant Guava?

It is best to plant new Guava plants is in Spring to Autumn so they have time to get established before winter. Avoid planting during the peak of summer as this can stress new plants out.

Top Tips on How to Grow Guava?

  • Choose a sunny spot with 6-8 hours of sunlight or dappled part shade.
  • Dig a hole twice the size of the current pot. Prepare the soil with free-draining compost.
  • Small trees may need a sturdy stake to support them.
  • Keep new plants well watered, especially during summer
  • Keep the base weed-free and well-mulched. Pull mulch away from the trunk to avoid rotting.
  • Prune in Autumn after they fruit to maintain size.
  • Fertilize with compost or compost/ worm teas.

How to Care and Maintain Guava Trees?

Plants will grow quickly and can be pruned in late Autumn after fruiting has finished. Young trees may produce more fruit than they can hold if branches look under stress you may need to thin fruits off before branches snap. Fruits are susceptible to fruit fly. Net the tree or individual fruits after the flowers have finished and turned into small fruit. Strawberry guavas ripen quickly, and regular harvesting can reduce fruit fly.

Some trees will get damaged by frost and lose their leaves. Plant in warm protected areas of your garden.

Pests / Disease

Rats and birds love the sweet fruit. Exclusion nets or bags may help or harvest regularly. Fruit fly and guava moth are a common problem. Ensure you net your fruit trees just as the fruit is setting to avoid worms in your fruit 😬

How and When to Harvest Guava

  • Guavas will ripen around late summer – autumn. Each variety will vary, and strawberry guava will often put on multiple crops.
  • Guavas will change colour and come off easily in your hand when ready.
  • Guavas can be eaten when they are still crunchy, or allow them to soften for a more creamy texture.

Reproducing Guava plants

Guava can be grown from both cuttings and seeds. Easy to grow from seeds but may be slightly different to the original plant. I have had plenty of success with seed-grown plants, though.

  • Save seeds from mature well ripe fruit. Rinse off the flesh and soak in a jar of water for 24 hours. Plant seeds in quality compost and potting mix and keep warm and well-watered until they sprout.
  • Take 15cm cuttings from semi-hardwood. Remove the bottom half of the leaves and the top shoot. Place in moist soil to root. Keep in the shade to prevent cutting and drying out.

Tips for Cooking and Using Guava

Guava can be used fresh or frozen.

Guava pairs well with: Citrus, Strawberry, Lime, Watermelon, Papaya, Peach, Pineapple, Mango, Melon, Coconut, Kiwifruit, Pear, Chilli, Mint, Ginger, Apple

Guava ideas:

  • Juices
  • Smoothies
  • Cakes
  • Icecream
  • Jam/chutney
  • Cheesecake
  • Tea
  • Fruit leather

How to Preserve Your Guava Harvest?

Guava can be frozen to use in larger batches as you wait for more to ripen. Make jams, jelly, chutney, or preserves in syrup. This Apple and Guava fruit leather is a must-try!

Guava Posts

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