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Peaches
(genus
vaccinium)
Varieties
Popular Ontario varieties in ripening order include Harrow
Diamond, Garnet Beauty, Early Redhaven, Redhaven, Vivid, Loring
and Harrow Beauty.
Buying and Storing
Look for fruit that's relatively firm, with a smooth skin,
sweet aroma and clear peach background colour. Avoid wrinkled
skin or a greenish tinge at the end, or excessively soft,
bruised or blemished fruit.
Early peaches, such as Early Redhaven, are best eaten fresh.
Mid season and late varieties are best for cooking or preserving.
They're also superb for eating fresh.
Keep peaches, still fairly solid to touch, at room temperature
out of direct sun until ripening begins and their skin yields
slightly to gentle pressure.
Ripe peaches should be kept refrigerated in a single layer
for no longer than five days. Overripe (extremely soft) peaches
should be used, fresh or in cooking, at once.
Preparing
Gently rinse under running water. To make peeling easier,
first briefly immerse in boiling water for 30 to 60 seconds.
To keep sliced peaches from browning, toss lightly in lemon
juice or dip in an absorbic acid solution. Sliced peaches
may also be frozen.
Fresh peach ice cream and peach pie are perennial favourites.
Peaches are often used in cobblers, crisps, or gently cooked
with brown sugar. They are also preserved, made into jam,
baked, steeped in red wine, poached in Champagne, brandied,
or made into peach Melba.
Peaches are also delicious in main course salads or as a topping
for breakfast cereals, pancakes or waffles.
Nutrition
One medium-size peach contains 37 calories and is a source
of
Vitamin C.
History
Archaeologists have found bowls of peaches, revered as a
potent symbol of immortality, entombed with Chinese dignitaries
several centuries before Christ.
The peach is likely native to that part of China near the
Pakistani border where it still grows wild. The Latin name
for peach means "Persian plum" because the Romans
imported it from Persia (now Iran) some 2,000 years ago.
In the New World, peaches date back to the 1500's, brought
first to Latin America by early Spanish colonists. Peach trees
flourished in temperate parts of Canada almost from the time
of the first European settlement.
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