Freezing Peaches 101

2 09 2009

I love peaches. And I know I’m not alone in this because everywhere I turn, people are eating them. In smoothies. In lunchboxes. In ice cream. When you come right down to it, nothing beats a sweet, local peach. Except maybe a frozen local peach, especially in the dark of winter when the only thing local is snow.

Peaches are easy to freeze, so go ahead. Buy a few extra and freeze them. Hey, buy a case and enjoy peach pie, peach cobbler and peach smoothies all winter long.

Here are step-by-step instructions, illustrated with pictures from my own two-hour stint freezing a case of Ela peaches this weekend.

peach in box
First, buy your peaches. I chose a box of “imperfect” Rozas and Newhavens from Ela Family Farms, an organic grower in Hotchkiss, Colorado. The peaches might be slightly misshapen or overripe, but they’re perfect for this purpose. And they’re cheaper than buying a case of “firsts.”

peach in strainer
Wash peaches, scoring the bottom of each peach (not the stem end) with an X.

peaches boiling
Slip them into boiling water for 10-20 seconds. When you can see the skin starting to flap, take them out.

peach in ice
Put them in an ice bath and let them cool.

peach skinned
Then slip off the skins.

peach on tray
Now it’s time to decide what you want to do with them. One option is to take eight to ten peaches at a time — enough for a pie or cobbler — and slice them, adding a few tablespoons of lemon juice and some sugar. Scoop them into a Ziploc bag, squeeze out the air, drop the bag into a second Ziploc, and scribble the date. Or you can place them in a single layer on a parchment-lined cookie sheet. Put it in the freezer until the fruit is frozen solid, then put it in the double Ziplocs. This way your fruit won’t clump together and you can pull out the exact amount you want.

Last step: put them in the freezer and wait for winter.





Picking Peaches

13 08 2009

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Years ago when I lived in Paris, I remember seeing an ad campaign for local produce. The campaign ran every summer, with billboards on street corners and posters on subway walls. “Eat it now or wait another year!” the slogan urged, with fanciful drawings of mouth-watering fruit.

Not wanting to wait until next year, I found an orchard near my parents’ house and rounded up the family — grandparents, 3 kiddos and all — to go picking early Sunday morning. We fought the heat and humidity on what was billed as the hottest day of the year and picked 4 pecks of peaches and 2 pecks of apples.

At home, I promptly took them out of the bags and laid them on the counter, removing ones that had bruised in transit (they’d go bad faster and cause others near them to spoil). Then we dug in, eating peaches with cereal, peaches with yogurt and granola, and peaches as snacks. I’ve also made peach pie and a peach upside-down cake (recipes to come later), with peach cobbler and peach-blueberry pie planned for the next two nights. Even so, we were hardly making a dent. My dad was sure they’d stay there until they went bad–after all, there were so many. But this afternoon, in about an hour, I added eight bags of peaches to the freezer. Peaches are my mom’s favorite fruit, so when she wants peach pie or cobbler this winter, she’ll be able to grab a bag of local peaches and enjoy a taste of summer.

For an illustrated version of these instructions, click on Freezing Peaches 101, or just read below.

How to Freeze Peaches
Wash peaches, scoring the bottom of each peach (not the stem end) with an X. Then slip them into boiling water for 10-20 seconds. When you can see the skin starting to flap, put them in an ice bath and add the next batch to the pot. Take eight to ten peaches at a time — enough for a pie or cobbler — and slip the skins off, slice them, and add a squirt of lemon juice. Scoop them into a Ziploc bag, squeeze out the air, drop the bag into a second Ziploc, and scribble the date. Last step: put them in the freezer and wait for winter.

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Caption: Rob Stribling of Stribling Orchard in Markham, Virginia. Mr. Stribling’s family has been growing fruit on this land since 1819.








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