How to get the pits out of clingstone peaches for peach butter

How to get the pits out of clingstone peaches for peach butter - Slice of Ripe Apple

I'm making peach butter. The recipe I have uses the skin on the peaches (you put the peaches in a blender, put them in the slow cooker with sugar and spices, then use an immersion blender at the end to blend it all again). Unfortunately the peaches I got are clingstone. And they are small (like tangerines maybe), but the flavor is really good. If I just roughly chop the peaches and throw them into the slow cooker (pits and all), will the peaches eventually cook away from the pits, making it easy to remove them? Or will cooking the pits give off a yucky (bitter) flavor and taint the peach butter? Or is there a super simple way of removing the pits in clingstone peaches? Thanks. :)

Update 20 May: I forgot to mention that the peaches were about the size of plums. Of course a little more challenging. I ended up cutting chunks off with a paring knife and was able to get pretty close to the pit. Of course it was really messy, especially with the much riper ones! All the peaches have been blended and are in the crock pot slowly turning into peach butter! Next time I ask someone else to get me a ton of peaches, I'll make sure to specify freestone! :D

Update 21 May: I came home to a disgusting smell and mess in my slow cooker yesterday. I guess the temperature was too hot (it was on low) and it all burned into a horrible mess. I only had three ingredients in the slow cooker. $40 worth of peaches, 2 1/2 cups brown sugar, and 1/4 cup homemade vanilla extract (bourbon and vanilla pods). It was on for five hours overnight and looked great in the morning but it was still very thin (in fact it seemed thinner than the night before), so I left it on low while I went to work. I was gone eight hours and came home to a gross looking and smelling mess. Unfortunately I don't seem to be able to attach a picture. :(



Best Answer

You may try a mango pit remover. Slide the peach up as far towards the small size as possible. This is just a thought, I have not tried it.




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Quick Answer about "How to get the pits out of clingstone peaches for peach butter"

  • Using a paring knife, pierce the peach at its stem attachment, slicing it along the seam all the way around the fruit. ...
  • Place each half of the peach in either hand. ...
  • Pull the halves apart to reveal the pit.
  • Pull the pit away from the flesh with your fingers.


  • How do you remove clingstone peach pits?

    Slice in half: Starting at the stem, use a sharp paring knife to cut into the peach and slice the fruit in half. Twist: Twist each half in opposite directions to separate. Release the pit: If necessary, slide the knife under the top and bottom of the pit and pull it away from the fruit.

    How do you easily remove a peach pit?

    Using a paring knife, start at the stem end of the fruit and cut through to the pit. Run the knife all the way around the fruit, keeping the blade up against the pit, finishing where you started. 2. Hold the fruit in your hands and gently twist each half in opposite directions until one half comes free from the pit.

    How do you remove peach seeds?

    How to remove the stone from a peach
  • Use a small sharp knife to cut the peach along the seam and around the stone. Twist to separate the halves.
  • Use a teaspoon to gently scoop out the stone. Alternatively, use a small sharp knife to carefully cut around the stone. Gently lift out the stone and discard. Comments.




  • How to Pit a Peach and other Clingstone Edited




    More answers regarding how to get the pits out of clingstone peaches for peach butter

    Answer 2

    Cut the peaches all the way around following the cleavage. Twist the fruit apart, then carefully trim the pit out of the half that held on to it with a paring knife.

    If you were making slices for a presentation, then cut all the slices down to the pit. The first slice will need to be removed by rocking the knife back and forth across the pit to get it out, but the rest of the slices can be either snapped out or pared out if the fruit isn't coming free very well.

    Answer 3

    I have a small handheld thing that looks like a spoon with sharp sides and a wooden handle that works great for clingstone peaches.

    Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

    Images: Pixabay, cottonbro, Mark Stebnicki, EKATERINA BOLOVTSOVA