Peaches have one of the tightest seasonal windows of any common fruit — and because they do not continue to develop flavor after picking, the difference between a locally-grown peach eaten at peak and a supermarket peach is enormous. Understanding the window and how to ripen is most of what matters.
Varieties worth knowing
Freestone peaches — The eating-out-of-hand category. The pit separates cleanly, so slicing is easy. Most common summer varieties (Elberta, Red Haven, Cresthaven, Loring) are freestones. These are what you want for fresh eating, cobblers, crisps, salads, and grilling.
Clingstone peaches — The flesh clings to the pit. Historically the preferred canning peach because the denser texture holds its shape. Early-season peaches are often clingstones. Less common at farm stands these days, but worth trying if you see them.
White peaches — A separate group with pale flesh, lower acidity, and more floral notes. Varieties like Arctic Supreme and Snow Beauty. Best for fresh eating; too delicate for heavy baking where yellow peaches' tartness balances sugar better.
Donut peaches (Saturn, Stark Saturn) — Flat, disc-shaped, white-fleshed. Very sweet, lower acidity. Fun at farm stands; great for kids.
Nectarines — Genetically almost identical to peaches, minus the fuzz. Everything in this guide applies to nectarines too.
When peaches are in season
Early season (May – June): Southern peaches arrive. Georgia and South Carolina lead; California follows. Early varieties tend to be clingstones and less sweet than peak-season fruit.
Peak season (July – August): The stretch where everything works. Mid-Atlantic, Midwest, and Northeast orchards hit full production. Freestone varieties dominate. This is when to eat peaches daily, bake with them, and put some up.
Late season (September): Extended varieties in California, last hurrah in New England and Michigan. Quality is still good but starting to decline.
Off-season (October – April): Do not bother with supermarket peaches. They were picked green, shipped far, and will never ripen into anything interesting. Frozen peaches from last summer are a better option for baking.
Peaches do not ripen once picked in the way bananas do — they will soften, but they will not get sweeter. This is why shipped peaches are never as good as local ones.
How to pick a peach at the market
Look for: A warm background color (yellow or cream, depending on variety) — this indicates ripeness. The red blush on the sunny side is a variety trait, not a ripeness marker. A strong, sweet, perfumed smell at the stem end is the most reliable ripeness signal. Gentle give at the shoulder when pressed.
Avoid: Rock-hard peaches (they were picked too green and will not develop flavor). Green background color (underripe). Wrinkled skin (past peak, moisture loss). Obvious bruising that goes deep. Fermented smell (overripe).
At a farm stand: Ask if the peaches were picked today or yesterday — peaches lose quality by the day once picked. Ask about seconds, which are often discounted and ideal for cooking.
How to ripen a peach
Hard peaches soften at room temperature in 1 to 3 days. A paper bag (closed) speeds the process by trapping the ethylene gas they produce. Check daily — once the peach gives slightly and smells sweet, it is ready.
Once ripe, refrigerate to slow further softening. A ripe peach in the fridge keeps 3 to 5 days, but flavor diminishes with each day in the cold. Always bring peaches back to room temperature before eating.
See the ripening guide for variety-specific notes.
How to use peaches
Raw: Sliced over yogurt or oatmeal. In salads with arugula, goat cheese, and basil. With prosciutto and burrata. Simply with a knife, over the sink, like nature intended.
Baked: Cobbler, crisp, galette, pie, upside-down cake. Peach cobbler is one of the more forgiving stone-fruit bakes — it tolerates a range of ripeness levels and forgives variety differences. See our peach cobbler recipe for a reliable version.
Grilled: Halved, pitted, grilled cut-side down for 3 to 4 minutes over medium heat. Serve with vanilla ice cream for dessert, or with grilled pork for a savory side. Grilling concentrates the sweetness and adds smoky depth.
Cooked: Peach sauce for pork or duck. Peach salsa with lime and jalapeño. Peach jam (peak season is jam season). Sliced peaches poached in wine for an elegant dessert.
Preserved: Frozen slices for winter smoothies and baking. Canned halves in light syrup. Peach jam and chutney.
Flavor pairings
- Basil — The non-obvious pairing that works beautifully. Peach and basil salad with mozzarella is a summer staple.
- Almond — Classic with peaches. Almond extract in peach desserts is a pro move; sliced almonds on peach crisp is standard.
- Vanilla — Amplifies peach aromatics. Vanilla ice cream with grilled peaches is proof.
- Bourbon and rum — Stone fruit and brown spirits have a real affinity. Bourbon-glazed peaches over pound cake is the summer cookout dessert.
- Prosciutto — Salty-sweet pairing. Peach and prosciutto with burrata is restaurant-level for almost no effort.
- Ginger — Fresh ginger in peach crisp or chutney adds depth and cuts sweetness.
- Pork — Grilled pork chops with peach salsa or glaze is summer incarnate.
- Blueberries — Same season, complementary. Mixed stone-fruit-and-berry cobbler is summer in a dish.
