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Fall Traditions: Canning apple butter

The smell of autumn rises from Ann DeMaury's basement.

It's the scent of cinnamon, cloves, sugar, apples and a little something special cooking in DeMaury's 40-gallon copper kettle during apple butter season at Ann's Apple Butter in Botetourt County.

"Of course you have to wait until the apples are ripe, so usually about mid-September we'll get started and I'll stay busy, six days a week, right up through January," she said. "Well, I'll finish by January if I'm lucky," she added.

An apple butter-making day starts with labeling jars from the previous day's canning, then a pallet of apples is brought in by tractor and the chopping, ricing (making apple sauce), cooking and spicing begins.

At 4 p.m., the apple butter has been cooking for hours and is ready for canning. Family members and kids from DeMaury's church form an assembly line to pour, top, wash, dry and assemble jar after jar of apple butter in a spicy steam cloud.

"It gets a little warm in there early on," said DeMaury, "but by January you're thankful for the warmth.

She'll eventually can around 13,000 quarts, many of which will go to local restaurants and food shops.

DeMaury is a second-generation commercial apple butter producer. Her father engineered machine-powered apple peelers and sauce churners when he began in the early 1970s. She took over in 1997 and has vendors from Northern Virginia to Georgia.

She has had desperate customers from as far away as Arizona call trying to find her apple butter.

"If they'll pay the shipping, I'll box it and send it to them."

Video and story by Sam Dean/The Roanoke Times

Meet the Photographer

The Roanoke Times is holding the first "Meet the Photographers" get together on Thursday November 12, 2009. This will be a chance to come out and talk photography with the staff members of The Roanoke Times. I am going to be hosting the first one, and my talk will be about sports photography, focusing on the action and the emotion both on and off the field. Come by and join us is you can. Here is the info for the talk.

___________________________________

Thursday, Nov. 12
7:30 – 9 p.m.
@ The Roanoke Times
RSVP by Monday, Nov. 9
to photo@roanoke.com

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VDOT reductions

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STEPHANIE KLEIN-DAVIS  | The Roanoke Times

Jason Hall, a mechanic for eight years (two of those years with VDOT), sprays the floor in VDOT's Rocky Mount repair shop as Leon Prillaman, assistant district equipment manager, sweeps on Thursday, October 22, 2009.  The shop closed its doors the next day. Hall will continue working for the department of transportation at its Martinsville location.

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Pink Umbrella

Football fans at the William Byrd/Northside football game on Friday night (October 16) sat in the rain and watched the game in rain gear in an attempt to shelter themselves with various colorful umbrellas.  I asked myself, "What's wrong with these people?" as I stood in the mushy wet grass, my socks soaked and my feet cold.

I was there to photograph the game.

The only other reason I could possibly imagine to be there in that rain might be if my son was on the team.  He's not. He's only 10 years old.

"Do all of these people have kids on the teams, cheerleading squads or the bands?" I thought.  Quite possibly. That had to be the reason they were tolerating the miserable cold and dampness.

Otherwise, there's something I don't understand. But despite my discomfort, it looked quite pretty.

STEPHANIE KLEIN-DAVIS/The Roanoke Times

Fall traditions: Hanging in the hallway

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An olfactory cocktail of body sprays, colognes and perfumes began to permeate the hallway.

"Should we go in now or what?" That question could be overheard bouncing around groups of teenagers in evening wear.

At 7:47 p.m., a line of Lord Botetourt High School students began to snake through the hallway toward the gymnasium for the Daleville school's 50th homecoming dance, "An Enchanted Evening."

Pillars made from white cardboard adorned with red sashes lined the hallway. The walls were covered with butcher paper painted to mimic a castle facade. A string of white lights on both sides of the hallway lead to the entrance of the gymnasium, where hip-hop dance hits were being played by two men and a laptop connected to speakers.

A girl wearing a silver dress, cradled by her date, greeted her smiling friends, each dressed in navy and metallic pink gowns, with a hug and: "Oh my God, you look so cute." The hugs did not smear their makeup, but their grins did get wider. After a few more complimentary exchanges, they went their separate ways down the hall to connect with fellow classmates.

With the dance in full swing by 8:58 p.m., several students still remained in the hallway. One couple could be seen stealing a kiss near the drinking fountain while pairs chatted near the doors to the gym, happily greeting those who entered the hallway.

As Eric Clapton's slow dance ballad "Wonderful Tonight" hummed into the hallway, plans for after homecoming were being finalized by friends at 10:06 p.m. With the dance winding down, groups of dates began exiting to the hallway to start their goodbyes and to start their night after the enchanted evening.

Story and photo by Jared Soares l jared.soares@roanoke.com l 981-3394

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Comments

    • Michelle: This is so cool! I have read about cheese making - I think it is so neat how the same milk can be treated...
    • ROY / FAE DYER: IT IS SO NICE TO SEE THAT A GREAT SERVICE IS BEING DONE FOR THE ELDERLY. SOMETHING SO SIMPLE YET...
    • Sam Dean: True. True. This ethic seems to only apply to newspaper photogs. If similar photos appeared on the cover of...
    • Seth Gitner: What you did was not done “in camera” — I’d label it illustration — though...
    • Jeanna Duerscherl: I agree Brenda! One of the benefits of my job is being able to spread the word about great...