Snack Easy Mexican-American

Fresh peach salsa

Ripe peaches, jalapeño, red onion, and lime tossed into a bright sweet-savory salsa — the summer condiment that belongs on fish tacos and grilled chicken.

A white bowl of fresh peach salsa with diced golden peaches, red onion, green jalapeño, and chopped cilantro.
Prep
15 min
Cook
1 min
Total
15 min
Serves
6

Peach salsa is what happens when a good batch of peaches ripens all at once and you need to move through them quickly. Ten minutes of dicing, a squeeze of lime, a little jalapeño, and suddenly you've got the summer condiment that upgrades every piece of fish, chicken, or pork you put near it. It's also unreasonably good scooped out of the bowl with tortilla chips while standing at the counter, so pretend you didn't read that.

Fresh peach salsa

Makes About 2 1/2 cups

Serves 6

Ingredients (13)

You'll need

  • Sharp knife and cutting board
  • Mixing bowl
  • Citrus juicer (or hand-squeezed)
Source these from local growers See growers + what's in season →

Instructions

Nutrition

Estimated per serving · 1 serving (about 1/3 cup)
60 Calories
1 g Protein
14 g Carbs
0 g Fat
2 g Fiber
11 g Sugar
200 mg Sodium
Ingredient intelligence

What to look for when you shop

Best varieties

  • Freestone yellow peaches — flesh separates cleanly from the pit; ideal for dicing
  • Red Haven — classic yellow freestone; sweet-tart, holds shape
  • O'Henry — late-season freestone; deeply flavored
  • Donut/Saturn peaches — flat white peaches; sweeter and less acidic
  • White peaches — subtler, floral; use with extra lime
  • Nectarines — skip the peeling; use 1-for-1

Ripeness

A ripe peach is fragrant at the stem, gives slightly when pressed (but isn't soft), and has a creamy golden background color with no green tinge. Rock-hard peaches are underripe; bruised or leaking peaches are overripe.

Imperfections are fine

Small blemishes and scars on the skin are fine — often signs of a more flavorful heirloom peach. Cut away any bruised flesh; the rest is perfect. Slightly overripe peaches work well in salsa since the dicing accepts softer flesh.

Good substitutions

  • Nectarines — direct swap, no peeling needed
  • Mangoes — 1-for-1; richer, sweeter result
  • Pineapple — diced small, same technique; tropical version
  • Mix of peaches and strawberries — halved berries
  • Plums — slightly more tart; add an extra pinch of sugar

In season

US peach season peaks July through September depending on region. Out-of-season peaches are mealy and flavorless — this recipe is worth saving for peak summer.

How much to buy

About 1 lb — 3 medium peaches, or a small market bag of 4 smaller ones.

From a grower near you

Find your peach grower on CollectiveCrop

Supermarket peaches are picked rock-hard, gassed to soften, and usually taste like watery nothing — the shipping system can't handle a ripe peach. A local peach is picked ripe on Wednesday and sold Thursday. CollectiveCrop is how you find that orchard. Salsa is where the difference shows up on the first bite: a real peach is sweet enough that the lime and chili have something to balance.

  • In season July – September
  • For this recipe 1 lb / 3 medium peaches
  • Freshness Picked within this week
  • Imperfects welcome Second-grade produce works great here
  • Diet-friendly vegan · gluten-free · dairy-free
  • While you're there Fresh cilantro · Limes · Red onions · Jalapeños · Tomatoes (for a mixed fruit-tomato salsa) · Local honey

At the market

About 1 lb — 3 medium peaches, or a small market bag of 4 smaller ones.

Best varieties

  • Freestone yellow peaches flesh separates cleanly from the pit; ideal for dicing
  • Red Haven classic yellow freestone; sweet-tart, holds shape
  • O'Henry late-season freestone; deeply flavored

Good to know

Tips

  • Use freestone peaches. Clingstone peaches are delicious but frustrating to dice — the flesh clings to the pit and you lose half the fruit cutting around it.
  • Don't skip the onion ice-water soak. Raw red onion can overwhelm delicate peach flavor; soaked onion adds crunch and color without the sharpness.
  • Add honey only if your peaches are underripe. Peak-season peaches are plenty sweet on their own.
  • For a smoky twist, grill the peach halves for 2 minutes per side before dicing.
  • A tiny pinch of ground cumin makes peach salsa taste like a restaurant made it. Worth trying.

Storage

  • Refrigerator: 2 days in an airtight container. Drain any accumulated juice before serving. Don't add avocado until serving.
  • Freezer: not recommended — the peaches turn mushy when thawed.

Reheating

  • Not applicable — served cold or at room temperature.

Make ahead

  • Dice the red onion, jalapeño, and cilantro up to 4 hours ahead.
  • Dice the peaches at the last moment — they oxidize (turn brown) within an hour or two of cutting.
  • If making up to 2 hours ahead, toss the diced peaches with the lime juice first; the acid slows browning.

Variations

  • Peach-mango salsa: swap half the peaches for ripe mango for a tropical version.
  • Grilled peach salsa: grill peach halves 2 minutes per side before dicing for a smoky edge.
  • Peach-tomato salsa: add 1 cup of halved cherry tomatoes.
  • Peach-avocado: fold in 1 diced avocado just before serving — creamy contrast.
  • Peach-corn: add 1 cup of grilled corn kernels.
  • Spicy peach salsa: swap jalapeño for habanero (1/4 pepper) for fruity heat.
  • Bourbon peach salsa: add 1 tablespoon bourbon for a grown-up edge; excellent with grilled pork.

Swaps

  • No fresh peaches: thawed frozen peaches (drained and patted dry) work off-season.
  • No cilantro: swap for fresh basil or mint — different but excellent.
  • No jalapeño: use 1 diced Fresno pepper for milder heat or a pinch of red pepper flakes.
  • No lime: lemon juice works; the flavor is slightly less bright but still good.
  • No red onion: swap for 2 thinly sliced scallions or shallot.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I peel the peaches for salsa?

Not necessary. The skin is thin and the color adds to the look. If you prefer smoother salsa, score an X in the bottom, dip in boiling water for 30 seconds, shock in ice water, and the skin slips off.

How ripe should peaches be for salsa?

Ripe but firm — fragrant at the stem, yielding slightly to gentle pressure, but not soft or bruised. Rock-hard peaches have no flavor; mushy peaches turn the salsa into a puree.

Can I make this with frozen or canned peaches?

Frozen peaches work in winter — thaw, drain well, and pat dry. Canned peaches are too soft and sweet; they'll turn the salsa into syrup. Fresh is best; frozen second; canned skip.

How long does peach salsa last?

2 to 3 days refrigerated in an airtight container. The peaches soften and release juice after day one — drain the excess liquid before serving. Add fresh cilantro at serving if keeping more than a few hours.

Can I can peach salsa for winter?

Not this recipe — it's formulated for fresh, not canning. Canning salsa safely requires a tested recipe with specific acid-to-vegetable ratios to prevent botulism. For canning, follow a USDA-tested recipe.

What do you serve with peach salsa?

Fish tacos (especially salmon, mahi, or blackened white fish), grilled chicken or pork, tortilla chips, grilled shrimp skewers, over goat cheese and crackers as an appetizer, or spooned on top of black bean quesadillas.

Can I add other fruits?

Yes. Mango, nectarine, plum, or pineapple all work beautifully. Keep the total fruit volume the same so the ratios hold. A mix of peach and mango is especially good.

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