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seggert01

best way to freeze peaches

seggert01
13 years ago

This is the first year that our peach trees are producing

enough fruit to preserve. Any recommendations on best way to freeze peaches.

Thank you,

seggert01

Comments (11)

  • alan haigh
    13 years ago

    Plus, don't wait till peaches are dead ripe. The firmer the peach the better the texture when frozen or cooked. A day or 2 before optimum eating (unless you like crisp peaches) is what to shoot for.

  • oregonwoodsmoke
    13 years ago

    My method of freezing peaches:

    I place some water into a big bowl and then stir in a couple of spoonfuls of frozen orange juice concentrate to make a dilute orange juice.

    Peel and slice the peaches and drop them into the water. Keep going until the bowl is full of peaches with just a bit of water to dampen them. You have to stir occasionally as you go, to make sure each slice gets coated with the dilute orange juice.

    Then scoop the peaches into ziploc freezer bags and freeze.

    The citric acid in the oranges juice should prevent browning. I like it better than lemon juice in my frozen peaches.

    Add sugar, or not, to your taste. It does have preservative qualities, but fruit freezes fine without it, especially if the fruit is sweet and ripe when you freeze it. If fruit isn't sweet, then adding sugar before freezing gives the fruit a chance to absorb the sweetness.

    Convenient size for me is the quart bags. After they freeze, I place them inside a gallon ziploc freezer bag, both for double protection and to keep them confined together.

    Write the date and what's in the bag with a sharpie, right on the ziploc. If I use plastic freezer containers, I label with freezer tape.

  • destin_gardener
    13 years ago

    All these methods are great, my favorite way to freeze peaches is just a little bit different. Peel and pit the peaches, slice into bite sized pieces, sugar lightly, refrigerate overnight, then pour into a semi-frozen french vanilla custard ice cream base and freeze into ice cream.

  • alabamanicole
    13 years ago

    As your harvest increases in the coming years, you may also want to consider canning them. Frozen peaches are great for many things, like smoothies and recipes, but they take up freezer space and in an extended power outage you may lose them. Canned peaches can be canned in juice or syrup or made into preserves, pie filling and other recipe bases.

    destin's vanilla/peach ice cream is also a fantastic idea, but for some reason it just doesn't seem to keep. :)

  • Scott F Smith
    13 years ago

    Or dry them. I bought a food dryer this year and the dried peaches are exceptionally good. The dried Japanese plums on the other hand are fine but not nearly as good as when fresh.

    Scott

  • alabamanicole
    13 years ago

    I would recommend people skip the cheap dehydrators and go right to the good ones. When I was a kid we had a large dehydrator that looked like an early microwave. It was awesome, and got much use. I have a cheap electric dehydrator and it mostly makes slightly burnt crisps. It looks and sounds like a hair dryer with a cap on it.

    I want to build a solar dehydrator. It's on the list, but I don't really need to handle such large quantities yet.

  • Michael
    13 years ago

    I run them through the juicer which does nothing more than remove the skins, nest the juice is poured into qt. freezer bags and frozen. Grrreat for blending with apple juice all winter long!

  • destin_gardener
    13 years ago

    Yes, for some reason, my method for freezing peaches rarely lasts more than a couple of weeks, but as a follow up for a Sunday diner of fried chicken, field peas, corn bread, rice and country milk gravy; I'm not sure it can be beat...of course you may be sleeping the afternoon away....but.... ;->

  • nans968
    8 years ago

    Thanks for the Great advice on Freezing without doing the Pectin sugar syrup way. Also I read back in a book about 10 years ago.. our forefathers and mothers use to take barrels or Brandy and Preserved their peaches that way. Modern times would be is take 24 oz mason jars- Peel and Pit your Peaches cut in 1/2 -Sterilize Mason Jars after sterilized jars set up- Stick a cinnamon stick a the innards of a vanilla Bean (of course both are optional but it's to give it more flavor- fill Jar with peach leaving at least 1in from top-..Warm a Med expensive Brandy (plain Unflavored- Not the cheapest not the most expensive) Or you can even do it w/ Southern comfort- ( make sure you get enough Brandy ( it's not as cheap now as it was back then) warm brandy on medium heat ( do not boil but make sure it's Hot- Take off Heat- and fill up jars- Put on lids and screw on tops . Put in canner and do a hot bath for 10 Min. let it cool down for 24 hours to make sure tops have set and sealed.. Label and set date..

    Alcohol is a Natural Preservative.. No sugar or Pectin needed- Can last for probably 3= years- ,, so what do you do with the peaches-?.. Peach Pie.. Peach Jam it with have the flavors of the Brandy and spices but the alcohol will Burn off--

    What do with Brandy? well now you have All Natural Flavored Vanilla Cinnamon Peach Brandy-- This could be used as a sipping brandy for special occasions.. Holidays etc.. I Make Rum, Bourbon and Brandy Balls around the Holidays-Make a Brandy Cake (Instead of rum or Bourbon) Marinade a Duck, Turkey Pheasant, or Chicken In a Baking Bag and Let it Cook in a Baking Bag- You will have the most succulent tender bird.. and the alcohol cooks off.. Save enough put it in a Gravy pitcher.. Light it on fire and pour over your Bird.. for a flare of elegance.. (it burns Off)

  • spartanapples
    8 years ago

    I tried freezing them as was not pleased with the results. Ok if thawed and eaten in hours but if left til the next day in the refrigerator they turned brown.

    I will stick to canning them. More work but I liked the outcome much better as far as flavor and color go.