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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
I can only say that I think I heard the Heavens singing as I tasted this amazing recipe! My 1st batch yielded 4 pints because everyone in my house continued to taste test out of the pot. Such an easy recipe, even though it took time, I would not hesitate to make again and again. I also used this recipe to make cobbler, but only cooked it 2 times. I cannot thank you enough for sharing this gift from God!
Yey! Julie, I’m so happy you loved it :). It is such a good feeling to know that my recipes are a blessing for other families. Thank you for writing in.
Came across your recipe and I’m going to give it a go. I’m going to make 3 batches keeping it as is, adding cinnamon to one and fresh mint to another. Thanks for sharing your recipe and tips! I look forward to trying it.
Wow those additions sound great! Let me know how it goes 🙂
Cutting an X in the skin on the blossom end of each peach before blanching makes them MUCH easier to peel. Tomatoes, too.
Great tip! Thank you so much!!
Hi Natasha,
I used your recipe to make peach preserves last spring, and they turned out really good. Thank you! The canned preserves were fine in the pantry for many months but eventually, a year later, they got darker. Is this normal? I’m making peach preserves again and wondering about their changed color in time.
That has happened to some of my Mom’s also (she makes really big batches) and they were still fine. Make sure the seal is still intact as with all canned goods and always check to make sure the preserves don’t have any kind of odor when you open them.
First time jam maker and this recipe was super! Jam extremely good peach flavor – and I really liked being able to leave it for awhile:) plan picking up more peaches on trip to SC this weekend and making another batch- Thanks!
Oooh yum, fresh SC peaches 🙂 I’m so glad you enjoyed the recipe!
can you use bottled lemon?
Yes and it’s best if it is real lemon juice that is bottled.
Natasha I made the peach preserves and they are to die for! I am wondering whether the same method would work for apricots, or do they not have enough pectin?
I haven’t tried making apricot preserves but it should work also. You might add a little more lemon juice or add it to taste. 🙂
This is absolutely a 5 star recipe! I had tried the recipe that comes with commercial pectin and I threw it all out. Then I tried Natasha’s recipe and was delighted. It tastes like peaches, not orangey syrup. And it looks gorgeous in glass jars.
I’m so so happy to hear that you enjoyed the preserves 🙂 I can just picture all your pretty jars lined up 🙂
Hello! I was wondering, after the peaches mixture simmers for 10 minutes do I turn off the heat and take the pot off of the stove to cool down or can I leave it on the stove and let it cool down with the stove? Thanks!
Either way is fine. It will cool down a little faster if you take it off the hot burner.
Thanks for replying! I am new to canning so I have another question. When sterilizing the jars do I need to put the boiling peach preserves right after the sterilization or can the cans cool down. If so, how long can I keep them in order for them to still be considered sterilized?
The jars can cool down. I don’t know the technically correct answer for that but the sooner you use them the better since they can collect dust while standing. I’d sterilize them during the last boil of the preserves.
Just tried the Country Peach Preserves and they worked beautifully. Will this process work for raspberries as well?
Thank you!
I think it would work; you might not need to bring it to a boil as many times; just cook to your desired consistency.
I would recommend this recipe it turned out very good. I added less sugar since my peach tree gave me really sweet peaches this year, i was a little concerned during the last step when I put the jars full of preserves back in the oven, I’m not a pro at this and when the peaches started coming out of the sealed jar I got concerned. I cleaned them up and the seal was still intact, however. I needed to boil a little longer since I felt it was a little runny after 5 re-boils. Try on a toasted piece of ciabatta bread, hmmmmmmmmmm.
You might leave a tiny bit more space at the top next time. I’m so glad you liked the preserves! You must haver had some juicier peaches if you had to boil extra. I bet they were yummy!
I followed your recipe, word for word. My peaches turned dark brown and were overcooked by the 3rd heating. They looked NOTHING like yours in your pictures. I should have stopped heating by the second round. I had to throw out the entire batch of peaches. I was sooo disappointed.
Hi Deborah, it will brown if you overcook with each time you boil it. The same goes for apricot preserves or most fruit preserves; if you boil too long and at too high of heat, it will change color. I hope that helps for next time.
Thank you so much for the peach preserves recipe! This was my first attempt at canning anything and your recipe was easy to follow and delicious!
I’m so happy to hear that! Thanks so much for sharing your great review 🙂
I just tried this recipe and apparently, I overfilled all my jars. They leaked in the oven. Is there any way to still seal them?
Oh no! You might try tightening the lids slightly more next time to keep the seal in place. Yes you can rescue them: wipe around the top with a clean damp towel, making sure not to touch inside the jars, then apply sterilized lids, tighten them tightly and flip them upside down until they cool to room temp before turning them back over.
Thank you! I did just that and they all sealed perfectly. I can’t wait to get more and do it all again. Thanks again for sharing your wonderful recipe and methodology!
Sublime! The essence of peach preserved in every bite! Thank you for bringing canning to my kitchen to a whole new level without the pectin. The difference is in taste and texture. Need look no further! Third batch in the making today!
Have you a similar recipe for Strawberry Jam?
I’m so happy you are enjoying the recipe! I don’t have one for strawberry jam. I was waiting for the second wave of strawberries to start up in my Mom’s garden. The first wave was pretty small. Hopefully the second does better 🙂
Thanks! Will be trying this this year! I’m scared of the sterilization part but I’ll figure it out!
I hope you love the preserves! Do you grow peaches?
Hi Natasha! Your recipe is wonderful, I tried it for the first time this past weekend. Hope I am not repeating a question, but after placing them in the oven @ 350 for 15 min, some of my jars were leaking some juice at the lid, like it had bubbled over. I felt I had left enough room at the top for air bubbles. Did I make the lids too loose?
Thanks!
You might leave a little bit more room at the top. You should just need to tighten them enough to keep the lids in place. Were yours very loose?
Thanks for the reply! I think I was just filling them too high! I grow my own peaches and your recipe is wonderful. Think this could work with watermelon as well?
Wow I’ve never even heard of using watermelon! How does that work? You mean watermelon preserves?
Yes, well, I guess its more of a watermelon jam. I have seen some recipes but thought I might try yours with the watermelon.
Let me know how it goes! I’m so curious! 🙂
Hello, I’m about to start making this delicious recipe. I’m going to have this preserve as my baby shower favors!
However, when I’m done with the process and taking pictures I would like to share your recipe on my website blog spot. Please email so we can discuss this further more.
Sami
What a sweet idea for a baby shower! That would be fine if you shared the recipe as long as you leave a link and credit back to my original recipe. Thanks in advance for sharing it and congrats on the baby! 🙂
Roughly how many cups of peaches would this be? I got peaches this summer and sliced and froze them for winter use.
Whoops, nevermind – found your answer in the earlier thread!
I’m glad you found the answer 🙂 Thanks Sarah
Hi! Lovely recipe. Just one query, do i have yo pour water? Or i just put to boil straight after. The lemon and sugar? Thanks
The sugar causes the peaches to release their juice. You do not need to add water to the pot while it’s cooking. 🙂