stevez wrote:Marija wrote:I bought a box of peaches today but am unsure how to proceed since they are quite hard. Do you just ripen them all on the counter?
Yes. A couple days on the counter and things will be "peachy" in more ways then one.
Although I've never tried this myself (maybe someone can confirm or deny this), but you may be able to keep some of them refrigerated, and ripen as needed.
Marija wrote:I bought a box of peaches today but am unsure how to proceed since they are quite hard. Do you just ripen them all on the counter?
j0emv wrote:I was hoping to find a smaller amount at the truck but it looks like I'd have to get up to Wisconsin to get the smaller bags. In any event, I'm going to try and hit the Clyborn stop on 8/3 and wondering if anyone has any ideas on what two people can do with 25lbs of peaches?
Katie wrote:I've never heard of pickled peaches.
nr706 wrote:Juice and ferment to make a perry.
gastro gnome wrote:I tried one I picked up on Friday. I don't think they are quite ready yet.
ronnie_suburban wrote:gastro gnome wrote:I tried one I picked up on Friday. I don't think they are quite ready yet.
I had one last night, also procured on Friday. It was soft enough and had that telltale peach skin aroma but it lacked sweetness.
=R=
ronnie_suburban wrote:gastro gnome wrote:I tried one I picked up on Friday. I don't think they are quite ready yet.
I had one last night, also procured on Friday. It was soft enough and had that telltale peach skin aroma but it lacked sweetness.
=R=
Marija wrote:Four days of ripening on the counter, soft but not close to sweet. Disappointing.
botd wrote:My understanding is peaches don't get any sweeter as they ripen, just softer which will contribute to a better eating experience.
in How To Pick A Peach, Russ Parsons wrote:Maturity is another matter entirely. Although peaches and nectarines do soften and become juicier and more aromatic after harvest, they don’t get any sweeter.
stevez wrote:Are they particularly large this year? A couple years ago, the peaches were abnormally small, so there were more in the case. The guy on the truck told me that small ones tended to be sweeter than large ones because all of the "ripening energy", for lack of a better term, has less mass to ripen. That proved to be the case, as the peaches that year were extremely sweet.
gastro gnome wrote:Also, in their email communication, they said that these peaches to be some of the finest they've had in years which heightened my expectations a bit. These could be outliers, but there are at least a few reports here that some of this batch are so-so.