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My mom makes the most amazing fruit preserves. We enjoy her garden fruit all year long this way. This peach preserves recipe takes a couple days; a longer process than most of the peach preserve recipes I’ve seen online but its worth the wait. It’s not watery like most of the recipes that rush the process.
This isn’t speed dating. You’ll get to know your peaches over a couple days and and be rewarded with some mighty fine preserves. If you are thinking about Christmas already (as I am), you can make preserves now, slap a label on in December and give them away as gifts to neighbors, co-workers, nursing directors (wink, wink) – I guess this means I can’t eat all of them myself.
Ingredients for Peach Preserves:
11 lbs peaches, rinsed (about 8 lbs after peeling and pitting)
4 cups granulated sugar, or more added to taste
1/2 cup lemon juice (from 3-4 large lemons)
What you will need:
- 5-6 pint-sized jars with lids. I purchased them at Walmart.
- Large Stock Pot (20Qt+) with Rack (or purchase a canner)
- Jar lifter to safely transfer the jars
How to Make Peach Preserves / Peach Jam:
To blanch the peaches:
1. Fill 2/3 of a large soup pot with water. Bring to a boil. Add peaches for 30 -45 seconds, then remove with slotted spoon or this OXO strainer which I used to transfer them in and out of the boiling water and drain the pot. Remove peaches immediately to a large bowl of cold water. This process is known as blanching the peaches and makes removal of the fuzzy skins really easy.
2. Peel the skin (most of them peeled easily by hand, but there were a stubborn few that required a knife), cut the peaches into quarters and remove pits.
Cooking the Preserves:
1. Place all peeled peaches in a large soup pot and squeeze in lemon juice. Drizzle well with 2 cups sugar, toss and drizzle again with the remaining 1.5-2 cups so the sugar reaches all the peaches. Here’s where you need to use your judgement.
If your peaches are very sweet, you may only need 3 1/2 cups of sugar total. You can add more sugar to taste while its cooking, so don’t panic at this step. You’ll do great!
2. Let peaches sit at room temp with the sugar for about 30min -1 hour, or until sugar is dissolved.
3. Place the pot over the stove uncovered and bring to a light boil, stirring to prevent scorching. Make sure if you see a light boil to stir because the whole pot may not be boiling, just the center. If it stops boiling after you stir it, continue boiling.
Once the whole pot is at a light boil, simmer for 10 minutes and turn off the heat. Let the pot stand uncovered until it is just warm to the touch or reaches room temp.
4. As soon as it cools, repeat step 3. You will bring it to a light boil a total of 5 times. This is why it takes 2 days to make. It’s really easy though. Definitely not rocket science to bring a pot to a boil and give it a few stirs :D.
You can go to work and come home then return it to a boil; there’s no “set” time that you need to be reboiling it. If 2 days doesn’t work for you, by all means, take 3 days. Preserves have plenty of sugar so they won’t spoil at room temp if you leave it on the counter overnight. If you want the preserves to have an even thicker consistency, you can boil it 6 times if you wish.
(Note: the fifth time you boil, bring it to a boil over a little lower heat and stir a few extra times to prevent scorching. Also, it thickens more as it cools.)
5. The last time you bring it to a boil you will want to transfer it to sterilized jars while it’s boiling hot.
To sterilize the jars:
- To sterilize your clean jars: wash them and let them dry in the oven at 215 for about 20 min or until completely dry. Boil the lids 5 min.
2. Transfer your boiling hot preserves to the jars using a glass measuring cup and a funnel (least messy method) leaving about 1/2″ space.
3. Screw the lids on enough to keep a tight seal in place but don’t over-tighten them since air bubbles need to be able to escape.
4. Place packed cans into the canning pot and cover with 1-2 inches of water. Bring to a boil and process 15 minutes. Remove from the pot with jar lifter and leave at room temperature undisturbed for 12-24 hours. You may hear a pop when the jars fully seal. After 24 hours, check that the seal has formed by pushing down on the center of the lid – it should not move at all. If the seal does not form, refrigerate preserves and enjoy within 3 months.
Tada!! You’ll make it and think “hey that wasn’t so bad.” Well, that’s what I thought the first time I made them.
Current Canning Guidelines:
Recipe updated in 2019 to reflect new canning standards. Previously we used the oven method. You can get up to date on the most recent canning guidelines here. It’s a great resource to answer frequently asked canning questions.
Country Peach Preserves

Ingredients
Peach Preserves Ingredients:
- 11 lbs peaches, rinsed
- 4 cups granulated sugar, or more to taste
- 1/2 cup lemon juice, from 3-4 large lemons
What you will need:
- 5-6 pint-sized jars with lids
Instructions
To blanch the peaches:
- Fill 2/3 of a large soup pot with water. Bring to a boil. Add peaches for 30 -45 seconds, then remove with slotted spoon and drain the pot. Remove peaches immediately to a large bowl of cold water.
- Peel the skin, cut the peaches into quarters and remove pits.
Cooking the Preserves:
- Place all peeled peaches in a large soup pot and squeeze in lemon juice. Drizzle well with 2 cups sugar, toss and drizzle again with the remaining 1.5-2 cups so the sugar reaches all the peaches. If peaches are very sweet, you may only need 3 1/2 cups of sugar total. Add more sugar to taste while its cooking.
- Let peaches sit at room temp with the sugar for about 30 min -1 hour, or until sugar is dissolved.
- Place the pot over the stove uncovered and bring to a light boil, stirring to prevent scorching. Once the whole pot is at a light boil, simmer for 10 minutes and turn off the heat. Let the pot stand uncovered until it is just warm to the touch or reaches room temp.
- As soon as it cools, repeat step 3. You will bring it to a light boil a total of 5 times. Preserves have plenty of sugar so they won't spoil at room temp if you leave it on the counter overnight. If you want the preserves to have an even thicker consistency, you can boil it 6 times if you wish. (Note: the fifth time you boil, bring it to a boil over a little lower heat and stir a few extra times to prevent scorching. Also, it thickens more as it cools.)
- The last time you bring it to a boil you will want to transfer it to sterilized jars while it's boiling hot.
To sterilize the jars: wash them and let them dry in the oven at 215 for about 20 min or until completely dry. Boil the lids 5 min.
- Transfer your boiling hot preserves to the jars using a glass measuring cup and a funnel (least messy method) leaving about 1/2″ space.
- Screw the lids on enough to keep a tight seal in place but don't over-tighten them since air bubbles need to be able to escape.
- Place packed cans into the canning pot and cover with 1-2 inches of water. Bring to a boil and process 15 minutes. Remove from the pot with jar lifter and leave at room temperature undisturbed for 12-24 hours. You may hear a pop when the jars fully seal. After 24 hours, check that the seal has formed by pushing down on the center of the lid - it should not move at all. If the seal does not form, refrigerate preserves and enjoy within 3 months.
Filed Under
Signs of Spoiled Canned Food:
With any type of canning, we follow this advice: “When in doubt, throw it out”
Discard and do not eat or taste any canned food if you notice any of the following:
- the jar is leaking, bulging, or swollen
- the jar looks damaged, cracked, or abnormal
- the jar spurts foam or liquid upon opening
- the canned food is discolored, moldy, mushy, slimy, or smells bad
The peach recipe is presented very well. Ending up with exactly 11 lbs of prepared peaches (shunned and pitted) is not easy to achieve for many folks. Using 4 cups (200 grams a cup) and converting 11 lbs to grams, I calculated the amount of sugar to add is 16%. The percentage works for any amount of peaches and in metric and English units.
I read with curiosity as to why bring to a low boil and turn off. I do not understand the logic. If this is your moms process, maybe she had a lot going on and could not watch constantly so brought to a boil, turned off, and returned to the preserves when she had time.
Hi Richard, it has to do more with the color not getting too dark as with extended boiling.
Also, the 11 lbs. of peaches is prior to peeling and pitting, not after.
My first time making peach preserves and I was a little doubtful about the 2 day method. Everything turned out great! I did add 1/2 teaspoon of cinnamon and nutmeg each.
I am wondering if this same method can be used for pears?
Hi Sara! So glad you enjoyed this recipe. The cinnamon and nutmeg additions sound amazing!!! I have not tested this with pears to advise if it would work the same. If you experiment, please let us know how it goes. 🙂
I’m in my 3rd bill and it doesn’t look as though the peaches are breaking down very much. Also, it’s still very watery. I’m doing a half recipe only because I didn’t have 11lbs of peaches (I used 6lbs and half the sugar) and followed the recipe without any additional deviations. My peaches are very ripe, and large juicy Georgia peaches, could that be the reason why it’s still so watery? Can I add a 6th, 7th boil until I like the consistency? Should I also use a masher to mash up the rest of the peaches?
HI, it could be the variety of peaches and I think it’s a good idea to break them up manually which might help you get to your desired consistency sooner.
Natasha…can I substitute Splenda for the sugar? Also…have you ever added corn starch instead of pectic to any of your jam recipes?
Hi Lynn. No, I have not used cornstarch. I have not tested Splenda in this recipe but one of my other readers stated they’ve used it many times with great success and taste. You must water bath the filled jars as there is no sugar protection to prevent bacterial/mold growth.” I hope that helps.
This is probably too late, but “NO” to the cornstarch. Neither cornstarch nor flour are safe to use in canning. ClearJel is the safe way to go.
Does this recipe have to be refrigerated or can they be on the shelf
There is no need to refrigerate them, because the sugar will keep them from spoiling. They have a shelf life of about a year and maybe longer if they are canned and tightly sealed.
Made this per recommended receipe, jam doesn’t seem to have set.
Hi Melvin, thank you for sharing that with me. Was there anything possibly altered in the process or substitutions made to the recipe?
Is it possible to add a shredded peeled apple to this recipe (for the pectin) without altering the flavor too much? I did this for a no-pectin strawberry jam and couldn’t taste the apple at all in the finished product BUT I think peach is a subtler flavor. What do you think, Natasha?
Hi Tina, I haven’t tried that myself to advise on the outcome. If you experiment, let me know how you liked the recipe.
i am having a difficult time finding the time to do the *whole* process – can I freeze the preserves after the 4th or 5th heating and then when I am ready to complete the process, do the simmer process 1 or 2 times before canning?
Hi Barb, I haven’t tested it that way but I think once it’s frozen it probably should remain a freezer jam.
Hi Natasha,
This is my 5th recipe for making peach preserves & I can finally say this is the one!
Peaches are quite expensive & difficult to find good ones here in the U.K. (they are normally picked under ripe & shipped in so are either green inside or they go off before they are fully ripe) so I bought approximately 6 pounds & ripened them in full sun. Oh joy at last beautifully ripe, juicy & the perfect recipe which led to perfect peach preserve. Thank you so much for this brilliant recipe. We can’t even buy peach preserve here, the only time I get some is if my friend brings me some from Spain.
I can tell you if I can get more decent peaches I will be making another batch.
Thanks again & hello from Liverpool U.K.
Hi Jill! I’m so happy to hear that this has become your go-to recipe for Peach Preserve. Thank you for the review.
I have pounds of white peaches but few yellow peaches. Will this recipe work for white peaches?
Yes, I think that would be fine.
In the process of making these. In between boils I am keeping the lid on because we have 2 black labs and I really really don’t want to take a chance of having dog hair in it. That would be awful. I’m on the 4th boil and it still seems a little watery. Should I add an extra boil or two to the recommended amount?
Hi Hannah, if you have a splatter guard (mesh lid), that might work well. It helps to keep the lid open for the steam to escape. I would probably boil another time or two to get the extra steam out. It could also be due to super juicy peaches that it may need a little longer just be careful not to scorch the bottom as it thickens up.
Hello, this is more of a comment. Is the 11 lbs. before slicing or 11 lbs. sliced peaches.
Hi Kathleen, that is 11 lbs before slicing the peaches. I weighed the peaches whole.
Looking forward to trying this and handing them out over the holidays.
In the directions, you mention “If the seal does not form, refrigerate preserves and enjoy within 3 months”. If it does seal, how long do they last?
Hi Brigitte, it will keep for at least a year if it is sealed correctly and stored in a cool, dry (low light place)
Do you have recipes for baby food? I have apple trees and want to make applesauce and next summer-peaches for a new great-Grandson.
Hi Dolores, I have an applesauce recipe HERE.
Can I freeze the jars instead of putting in a water-bath? Will this recipe work as a freezer jam?
Hi Rosie, that should work fine to freeze instead of canning.
My peach preserve using your recipe tasted wonderful, but turned brown after all that boiling. Its still good to eat, but not for Christmas gifting…
Hi Ivonne, the key is to not boil the peaches at too high of heat which can cause browning.
Hi, I started mine yesterday, I am so excited. I really LOVE that you can take more than a day to make this. I do have one question. When you boil it multiple times does this replace the need for Pectin? I was raised with canning but have never attempted it until now. My most favorite canned item growing up was my neighbors grape juice. Thank you for all of your delicious recipes and your contagious smile.
Hi Angie! That’s right! The idea of this recipe is a method to avoid adding pectin.
I make home made pasta sauce every year. I sterilize the jars and lids, pour the prepared sauce in and wait for the pop. I never “can” this. I have done the same years ago with apple, grape, and strawberry jam. Can I do the same for this recipe?
Forgot to ad. I used pectin back then. Don’t want to now, so hoping I can do the same as I do for my sauce.
I’m doing this recipe for first time. Directions say to simmer first boil for 10 minutes. Do the remainder of the boils need to be ten minutes or just brought to a light boil.
Hi Kay, that’s right! As soon as it cools, repeat step 3.
Can I do this with only 4 pounds of peaches? What would I change? Thanks
Hi Cindy! you can try it with 4! I recommend clicking “Jump to recipe” at the top of the post, it will take you to our printable recipe where you’ll have the option to change the number of servings. Hover over the number of servings highlighted in red and slide it to how many servings you would like to make. I hope that helps!
Do you know if that amount of sugar is necessary for canning safety? I’m making this now and I’ve added 2.5c of sugar and it already seems really sweet to me (we have fresh picked peaches).
Hi Hannah, I have not tested it any other way or with less sugar so I can’t say for sure. Feel free to experiment, we’d love to know how it goes!
I’m used to recipes showing the weight of the finished product….so I peeled and chopped all my peaches then went to make and I have no idea the weight of finished chopped peaches I need to do this recipe. Can you let me know. I have 3kg (6.6lbs of the finished product)
Hi Jennifer, I didn’t weigh them after. We started with 11 lbs of peaches before peeling and pitting. It should yield 5-6 pint jars and not half-pint.
I am making the peach preserves now and weighed it: 11 lbs whole peaches came to 9 lbs after pitting and skinning.
Hi Natasha!
I just followed your recipe and my peach preserves came out perfectly! Delicious and not runny! I’ve made peach preserves from my Grandma Thora’s recipe from the 1920’s. Although delicious, it was very runny. Also I’m so happy I could make this with 3 simple ingredients & no preservatives!
Thank you so much – I look forward to following more of your recipes!
I’m so glad you gave my recipe a try, Christine! I’m happy to hear this was a hit! Thank you for your lovely review!