farm-fresh peaches, frozen to perfection
AFRIEND WITH AN OLD PEACH TREE made me a beneficiary of too many fruits to keep up with one bumper-crop year, and into the freezer some went. But in my overzealous drive to avoid added sugar in my diet, I made an error that affected the quality and storage life of the frozen fruit—a mistake I didn’t make again. I’m sharing my tactics for freezing farm-fresh peaches this summer, so you can make peachy recipes anytime you please.
My semi-failed batch of peaches went wrong for a couple of reasons, besides skipping the sugar entirely. How to freeze peaches:
what I did wrong when freezing peaches:
I let the peach fruit get overripe before putting it into suspended animation. If you’re freezing fresh (uncooked) fruit, you want it to be ripe but still firm—not already so soft as to be on a downhill slide. Fruit that drips down your chin when you bite into may be a sensuous summer pleasure, but it’s too far gone for putting up. More treacherous, though…
I didn’t reckon with the air pockets inherent in stuffing any irregular-shaped pieces of something solid into freezer bags, boxes or jars. Air pockets invite freezer burn, which means deterioration of peaches.
what i do now:
I pack ripe-but-firm fruit in syrup. Peaches are easy to freeze in liquid—goodbye, air spaces between fruit slices!—and it needn’t be the traditional heavy, sugary kind. (And P.S.–you don’t have to consume the syrup, but can drain it off later.)
White grape juice (below) can act as simple syrup.
Even if you prefer a sugar-based syrup, a light simple syrup of just 1:3 parts sugar to water will do. No need for heavy syrup (1:1 ratio) or even medium (1:2). To make light simple syrup, gradually add 2 cups of sugar into 6 cups of water and heat just until dissolved. Chill the syrup before using to pack fresh fruit.
Whichever liquid you use, layer as much fruit as possible into the container before filling all the crevices with “syrup.”
Pieces will want to float to the top, poking above the liquid. The standard trick is to crumple plastic wrap in the “headspace” left above the contents to allow for expansion during freezing, then remove the wrap. I just top up with more juice after the contents freeze, to cover any escaped bits, protecting them from burn.
Another essential ingredient: an anti-oxidant. Tossing the fresh-cut peaches in lemon juice will retard browning, but ascorbic acid powder (available at health food stores in the vitamin aisle from brands such as Now or Solaray) is probably more effective because you know just how much oomph you’re getting. A half-teaspoon, or 1,500 mg. of ascorbic acid powder per quart of syrup, is recommended. Have the ascorbic acid-laced syrup or juice ready, and drop the fruit directly into the mixture as you slice.
I think jars are easier than freezer bags, and (as discussed) the less plastic in contact with our food, the better. If you want to use bags, select freezer strength, and stand them up while freezing so that any air migrates to the top, where you can force it out after the food freezes at least halfway, before resealing the bag.
Still prefer to pack fruit “dry”? Get out the sugar. The National Center for Home Food Preservation recommends 2/3 cup granulated sugar per quart (or 1-1/3 pounds) of cut fruit that was first tossed in ¼ tsp. (750 mg.) of ascorbic acid and 3 Tbsp. of water. Let the sugared fruit sit 15 minutes before packing and freezing, taking care to eliminate air spaces as above.
When it’s time to defrost, do so in the refrigerator or under cold water, then use the fruit at once. If your recipe doesn’t require any liquid, pour it off, and improvise: Use it as both the liquid and sweetener in a bread or other baked good you are making. Nothing goes to waste!
And one more thing: To peel, or not to peel? If you want to, the touted “trick” is to score the skins lightly with an “X,” then drop the fruits into a pot of boiling water for about half a minute, then into a bowl of ice water to make the skins easy to rub off. It’s the same tactic used for skinning tomatoes when canning whole tomatoes.
With peaches, though, I think it yields a raggedy piece of fruit, so I peel them with a vegetable peeler—or leave the skins on, another reason for the ripe-but-firm fruit rule. Imagine peeling overripe peaches! And what’s a peach with a hint of fuzz, anyhow?
this peach clafoutis won’t last
MY BEST PEACH RECIPE (above) isn’t sugar-free at all, and it doesn’t last very long. It’s for Peach Clafoutis (the easiest of fruit desserts, though it puffs up and looks gorgeous as if you’re a master baker). Confession: I borrowed the batter from my friend Martha.
peaches: the botanical viewpoint
ALTHOUGH I DIDN’T KNOW how to freeze peaches well at first, I did have some peach savvy—mostly of the scientific or botanical variety. Did you know peaches are related to roses, for instance (that and other stone-fruit trivia is here)?
Last year I tried a couple of methods on my frozen peaches, all of which were successful in general. But I wanted to eat the thawed fruit over a period of days, mixed with yogurt, and any flesh exposed to air turned brown. And I think the fruit was too ripe. Thanks for your tips – I will try some of them this year.
Eek! I just threw my peaches into a container and tossed them in the freezer. I’ll probably use them in a cobbler though, so maybe it will be okay!
Ha! I had no idea today for the start of Summer Fest! I inadvertently made myself buckwheat kasha with peaches and heavy cream for breakfast this morning! Buckwheat groats have to be my go to warm breakfast from now on too. Just soak them overnight and put them in the microwave for 2mins. When I first started making it, I was surprised how much faster they cooked than steel-cut oats, and now I don’t need to use the stove for the morning in the summer.
Btw, you still have the 2010 Summer Fest logo.
Thanks, Matt, for noticing my blunder with the logo. Fixed!
Abby, you can only defrost what you plan to use at once (as you discovered). I freeze portion-sized amounts of perishable fruit like this if I want to use it on yogurt, e.g., as you say — I have some very small jars for that purpose. No way around it deteriorating pretty quickly after defrost, I’d say.
Don’t store them too long, Jessie — they’ll be good for a short while, but not many months on end. Freezer burn will otherwise take hold — the dreaded fate of my former peaches! :)
I like the idea of using white grape juice, or a less sugary simple syrup.
Hi, Pam, and me too! And I really can make use of the juice afterward if I plan ahead to bake some muffins or whatever then, so good all around. Nice to see you.
I had a similar situation with a friend’s excess peaches. Lack of time and not wanting to mess around in a hot kitchen dictated my technique: I merely sliced them up, spread them on a cookie sheet to freeze, and then packed them into freezer bags. No sugar (white grape juice is hardly better than plain old white sugar). No cooking. Delicious in winter when I just took a bag out of the freezer and let it defrost slowly in the refrigerator.
Incidentally, these were seedling peaches, not named varieties. They were not highly colored not large but had an old-fashioned, peachy flavor that topped anything I can buy.
Oh how I would LOVE several pounds of peaches to make organic wine! peach wine would be Heavenly!
I love peaches but they are not quite hardy enough to grow well here.
I have a question regarding glass jars that you freeze in. I understand the need for an airtight seal when canning and leaving them at room temp, but can one wash and sterilize (in the dishwasher) and repurpose glass jars from other food products for freezing?
I have a slew of chutney, salsa, and jam jars and am wondering if I can rescue them from the recycling pile for this task. (Or maybe I’m just thrifty….)
Hi, Janeen– and a good question. The best freezer jars are “canning” types — so if a product was hot-packed in the jar you buy it in, as my brand of salsa is, for instance, those are great jars to recycle for freezing. (They even say “Mason” on the side!) So I tend to recycle jars that were for things like that or tomato sauce, assuming they are the right kind of glass.
Maybe even more important is that the jars have a wide mouth (straight sides with no shoulders is best of all, but not an hourglass shape or a very narrow open; if there are “shoulders” they should be not too drastic). When the contents freeze, it expands, and pushing up against a narrow neck or extreme shoulders can cause stress and breakage. Never overfill — leave lots of headroom for expansion. I actually don’t tighten the lids right away (or I use foil/plastic wrap temporarily until the expansion happens).
I freeze cut peaches on cookie trays then pop them into the vacuum sealable bags – no air, no liquid, no sugar or ascorbic acid, no freezer burn – the packages stack up in the freezer. Yes, the peaches may darken on the cookie sheet especially if I forget them! By freezing on the cookie sheet first, you can thaw a few pieces at a time, then reseal the bag. The peaches are perfect in oatmeal on a snowy winter morning.
Last summer I tried freezing fresh, firm, yet ripe peaches whole, in their skin, straight from the tree-no washing. I put 9 (3 rows of 3) in a gallon freezer bag and laid them on a shelf in my upright freezer until they were frozen solid. Then I could stack several bags after the bottom bag was frozen solid. When I wanted a peach this past winter, I took one out, laid it on a saucer and waited about an hour or so, just until it was thawed. The peeling slipped right off and it was like picking it fresh off the tree. It did not turn brown as it was eaten as soon as I slipped the peel. Don’t wait too long to eat it once thawed. I did that too one day, and after sitting for a few hours it was mushy and the chickens got it. This same process works greqt for tomatoes, also.
ah, sheryl posted almost exactly what i came here to post!
i impulse-bought a whole lot of peaches last year and then had to search around for how to preserve them. i didn’t like the idea of having to use sugar. i don’t recall where i found the tip to freeze them whole, but that sounded like it was worth trying. so i, too, put 9 in each gallon freezer bag and stacked them in my freezer. and to use, i take one out, run it under warm water for a minute, and the skin comes right off. let it sit until thawed and the texture is really very decent.
i’ll definitely do it that way again this year.
Here’s a link to my very favorite (and easy) peach nectar recipe. I make this every year when our backyard peach trees are fully loaded, and freeze it in glass canning jars. https://queenofthecastlerecipes.blogspot.com/2010/08/peach-nectar.html
I agree with Sheryl and Bren.
I freeze both my tomatoes and my peaches whole. When I have enough to process, or if I just need a few. I grab them out of the freezer and toss them in a sink filled with water. As they thaw, the skins on either fruit slip right off. No boiling water needed! And where I live, we are on our second week of 105 to 107 temperatures, so no boiling water is a good thing in many ways!
I have 2 favorite peach recipes I’d like to share – a delicious peach cake https://kitchencatharsis.blogspot.com/2010/09/isnt-that-just-peachy.html#more
and peach chutney that I always put in and on turkey burgers or grilled pork.
https://kitchencatharsis.blogspot.com/2010/09/millions-of-peachespeaches-for-me.html
I haven’t done much with peaches this year, except eat them! Then again, the weekend is here and I’m feeling inspired. On another note, this year is my first year doing some serious gardening and I just want you to know that I find your blog so inspirational! Thank you.
Thanks, Lynn, for the peach nectar recipe link, and welcome.
Welcome also to Dianne and Kris…and hello, Bren. I am fascinated by the freezing whole idea, which is what I do with one batch of my tomatoes to use in recipes later on (I make most into sauce or soup stock, but freeze a few bags whole). The skin would take the impact of any freezer burn, at least for a time, keeping the very perishable flesh “under wraps” literally. Love it, and will try! Thank you all.
I so enjoy your A Way to Garden site. I can remember as a child that my Father had planted 5 Elberta peach trees – along the back fence on our acre of land.in Oklahoma.
They were absolutely heavenly . We would pick them .Then we would sit and peel them. I wish I had known about freezing them whole-would have save a lot of work.I wouldn’t have learned to can from my parents-or have the memories.The Fresh peach Pies-Cobblers,but the best treat has to be the homemade ice cream-HAnd cranked of course by my Dad.-(I sat on top ). I learned to garden from my Parents.They had such green Thumbs.Oh,well.I do freeze my fresh corn-Unshucked in Freezer Bags.Taste like it was just picked. Keep up the inspiration. Regina Southern
Hi, Regina. What delicious memories! Thank you and heppy new year — hope to see you lots here in 2012.
Margaret,
i just wanted to tell you that i made your recipe for the peaches with syrup last summer . i put them in the freezer and forgot about them till very recently. when we just tried them i have to say they were totally perfect. and we loved them. so fresh and firm…yummy!!! so much better than the mushy , brown things we have had in the past!
thanks.
Sheryl and Bren—I did exactly what you did. I had so many peaches last year I just washed them put them on a large cookie sheet and frooze them then transfered them to a 2 gall freezer bag. It works wonderfully!!!I I’ll do the same this year.
Peaches bring back some wonderful memories. When I was growing up in California there were 3 peach trees on a property just over the backyard fence. No one cared for them, so I felt entitled to sit in a tree and eat ripe peaches.
A friend from long ago favored white peaches–so delicious, but so perishable–because her father struggled to grow them. Every white peach reminded her of her father.
—it’s me again :) I have been using my whole, frozen unpeeled peaches to make smoothies!!! I hold them under cold running water until I can slip the skins off then with a french cleaver I carefully cut them in half (still frozen) prying them apart when I hit the pit–so easy!! I cut them in chunks, put them in a VitaMix with yogurt, almond extract and finish it off with crushed ice if necessary to make it really thick. SO good!!!!
I am always eager for the first peaches of the season to make homemade peach ice cream!
Festival Peach Pie
1 pie pastry shell-unbaked
1 qt. peeled, sliced peaches
1 egg
2 T. flour
1 c. sugar
Crumbs:(Double if you are being decadent
¼ cup butter
¼ cup brown sugar, packed
½ cup flour
Combine peaches, egg, flour and sugar. Don’t let it sit once the sugar has been added to the peaches or it will be too juicy. Put in pie shell, top with crumbs made by mixing crumb ingredients with a for until crumbly. Bake 15 minutes at 425 degrees then turn oven down to 350 degrees for 30 minutes. Bake over a pan to catch any runovers.
Liz, you are tempting me!!!!!! :)
YUM!!!!
I just took a low-sugar jam class from Liz @ Butcher’s Bunches. She uses the trick of marinating any type of fruit in various liqueurs. We made a peach jam that had been marinated in Amarreto liqueur, added real vanilla, citric acid and lime juice. We added a freshly frozen blackberry to the bottom of the jar for a beautiful touch of color. Thanks for all your ideas!
does anyone have a peach pie recipe thickened with tapioca?
Hi, Cheryl. I don’t. But Smitten Kitchen does.
An elderly neighbor turned me onto freezing my peaches in thawed orange juice concentrate. It does double duty as both syrup and anti-oxidant. They are best eaten when still a tad icy.