Blueberries

Blueberries are one of the more successful summer fruits — they store well, freeze perfectly, and the local varieties have a depth of flavor supermarket berries rarely match.

A cluster of deep blue blueberries with frosty bloom and a green leaf.

Blueberries have the best supermarket-to-local quality ratio of any summer fruit — meaning even grocery store blueberries can be decent. But local blueberries, especially wild lowbush varieties, are on a different level. They also freeze without losing much, so peak season is freezer season.

Varieties worth knowing

Blueberries fall into three main categories, plus a hybrid:

Highbush (Vaccinium corymbosum) — The tall-shrub cultivated blueberry that dominates commercial production. Larger berries, sweeter, milder. Most supermarket and grocery blueberries. Varieties include Bluecrop (the standard), Duke, Legacy, and Elliott. Mid-Atlantic, Michigan, New Jersey, Oregon, and Washington are major growing regions.

Lowbush (wild, Vaccinium angustifolium) — The small, intensely flavored wild blueberry. Nearly all come from Maine and parts of Canada. Rarely sold fresh at any distance (too fragile), but frozen wild blueberries are widely available and excellent. Worth seeking out — the flavor is concentrated and distinctive.

Rabbiteye (Vaccinium virgatum) — A southern-US species, heat-tolerant, with a thicker skin. Longer growing season. Popular in Georgia, Florida, and the Southeast. Texture is slightly different — a little more snap, less yielding.

Southern highbush — A hybrid bred to perform in warmer climates. Spans the gap for Southeast and California commercial production.

When blueberries are in season

Early (May – June): Southern highbush and rabbiteye in Florida, Georgia, and California. Start of the cultivated season.

Peak (June – August): Highbush throughout the Mid-Atlantic, Pacific Northwest, Michigan, and Northeast. Wild lowbush blueberries in Maine peak late July through August — a tight window, but worth timing a trip around.

Late (August – September): Later highbush varieties and second-crop rabbiteye.

Off-season (October – April): Supermarket blueberries from Chile, Peru, Mexico, and Argentina. Decent quality, but picked less ripe. For anything cooked, frozen blueberries from summer are better; for fresh eating, wait or use them in a mixed fruit salad where they're not the star.

How to pick blueberries at the market

Look for: Deep blue-purple color (not red or green). A visible "bloom" — the silvery-white coating is a sign of freshness, not dust. Plumpness. No shriveled, leaking, or moldy berries in the container.

Avoid: Berries with red shoulders (underripe — blueberries don't sweeten after picking). Wrinkled skin (dehydrated). Moldy berries (they spread). Berries that feel soft or leak juice in the container.

At a farm stand: Ask about seconds or "process" berries — smaller, imperfect berries often sold at a discount and ideal for baking or freezing. Pick-your-own farms are the best value if your region has them.

How to store blueberries

Refrigerate unwashed, in the main fridge (not the crisper), in their original clamshell or a paper bag. Fresh blueberries keep 1 to 2 weeks — the longest shelf life of any common berry.

A vinegar-water rinse extends storage further: 1 part white vinegar, 3 parts water, brief dip, rinse in plain water, dry thoroughly on paper towels, refrigerate. The acid kills surface mold spores.

For freezing: wash only if you must (dry thoroughly), then freeze in a single layer on a sheet pan until solid (2 hours) before transferring to freezer bags. This keeps them from clumping. Frozen wild blueberries from peak summer last a year and are a genuine winter asset.

See the freezing guide for full detail.

How to use blueberries

Raw: Over yogurt, oatmeal, cereal. In fruit salads. Eaten by the handful.

Baked: Muffins, pancakes, scones, crumbles, cobblers, galettes, pie. See our blueberry muffin recipe for the reliable workhorse. Blueberries do not release as much water as other berries, so they bake in without turning everything to mush.

Sauces and syrups: Simmer blueberries with sugar and lemon until they burst for a sauce over pancakes, ice cream, or yogurt. A blueberry syrup for cocktails and sodas is an easy summer project.

Compotes: Slow-cooked with sugar and a cinnamon stick, spooned over toast, served with cheese.

Jam: Blueberry is one of the easier jams — high pectin, holds color, sets reliably. Peak season is the time.

Smoothies: Frozen blueberries are the base for countless green smoothies.

Savory: Blueberry balsamic reduction for duck or pork. Blueberry-goat cheese toasts. Blueberries with arugula and pecans in a salad.

Flavor pairings

  • Lemon — The canonical blueberry pairing. Lemon zest in muffins, lemon juice in compote, lemon curd with blueberries.
  • Vanilla — Amplifies blueberry flavor. Vanilla yogurt with blueberries, vanilla ice cream with blueberry sauce.
  • Buttermilk — Classic in pancakes, muffins, and scones.
  • Cornmeal — Blueberry cornmeal cake and muffins — the texture works.
  • Almond — Almond extract in blueberry desserts, sliced almonds in blueberry granola.
  • Thyme and basil — The savory pairings for blueberry. Thyme in blueberry jam, basil in blueberry salad.
  • Goat cheese and ricotta — Blueberries with soft fresh cheese, on toast or in a salad.
  • Maple syrup — Over pancakes with blueberries, in blueberry muffins.
  • Peaches and stone fruit — Mixed-berry-and-stone-fruit cobbler is peak-summer dessert.
  • Dark chocolate — Blueberry and dark chocolate scones; chocolate-covered frozen blueberries.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between wild and cultivated blueberries?

Wild (lowbush) blueberries are smaller, darker, and more intensely flavored than cultivated (highbush) blueberries. Most are grown in Maine and parts of Canada. They are usually sold frozen because they do not ship well fresh. Highbush blueberries are larger, sweeter, milder, and are what you typically see in grocery stores.

Should you wash blueberries before refrigerating them?

Not until you eat them. Moisture accelerates mold. If you must wash in advance, dry thoroughly on paper towel before refrigerating. A vinegar rinse (1 part white vinegar to 3 parts water, then a water rinse) can extend storage noticeably.

How long do fresh blueberries last?

1 to 2 weeks refrigerated, which is excellent for a berry. Store unwashed, in a breathable container or paper bag, in the main fridge (not the crisper). Discard any moldy berries immediately — one mold berry spreads fast.

Can you use frozen blueberries in baking?

Yes, in most recipes. Do not thaw first — fold them in frozen to minimize color bleeding into the batter. A light dusting of flour helps them suspend rather than sink. Frozen wild blueberries are especially good in muffins and pancakes.

What is that powdery coating on blueberries?

It is called "bloom" — a natural protective coating produced by the plant to preserve moisture and protect against decay. It is a sign of freshness and should not be rubbed off before storage. Wash it off just before eating.
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