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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
This recipe is amazing! During one of the ten minute boils, a burn at the bottom occured.. I changed pans but the flavor was a bit off. I didn’t want to throw out the batch I did a search and found that adding ginger could help mask the faint burnt flavor and accentuate the peach, lemon flavor. So it did. The yield was exact. Thanks.
My pleasure! I’m glad you love the recipe Karen! Thanks for sharing your tip and great review with other readers!
I love nutmeg on my peach cobblers. I saw above where Karen added ginger to hers. Do you think I could add some nutmeg to the recipe? How much? This sounds sooo good! Thank you.
Hi Leslie, I honestly haven’t experimented with that so providing an exact amount is difficult to guess but I think it’s worth a test!
did you do a water bath after also?ty
marilynne
Hi Marilynne, We did not do a water bath but used the oven method instead. If you are more comfortable with the water bath, you can do that instead of putting them in the oven.
I have used this recipe for peach preserves each year for the past 4 years or so and it never fails to come out perfectly 🙂 Its definitely my ‘go-to’ recipe.Thank you for sharing!
You’re welcome Suzy! I’m glad you enjoy the recipe as much as I do!
Hi. I am wondering if , instead of jarring, if I can freeze this recipe?
Hi Linda, I think freezing would work great in this recipe 🙂
Thank you for writing back ; I feel confident it will work now,too. These peaches are beautiful & from my own tree! I already made a peach pie (yummy, says hubby! 🙂 ) and have too many for pie and don’t want to lose them. I am doing them todaythis evening!
First Solo canning experience and it turned out perfect! I had super sweet peaches so cut the sugar a bit and cooked over 3 days. Took two jars to work and they were gone within an hour. I’ve had 4 requests for the recipe and planning a peach jam making day this weekend again. SOOO SOOO good! Thank you for sharing.
You’re welcome Catherine! I’m glad to hear how much everyone enjoys the recipe! Thanks for sharing your fantastic review!
My peaches are sitting in the sugar right now. I’m excited because the fruit came off my own trees! They’re little and tart, but oh so scrumptious.
Please let me know what you think of the recipe Sonya! 🙂
They came out awesome. I have four small tubs for the fridge and freezer. I’m thinking they would be amazing over a cinnamon/nutmeg cheesecake!
YUM! That sounds delicious! I’m glad you love the recipe! Thanks for sharing Sonya!
After you simmer for 10 minutes do you move the pot of the burner or can you keep it sitting on that burner if it’s turned off?
Hi Sara, it will cool faster if you take it off the burner but either way it will work 🙂
Could you seal the jars with paraffin instead of the hot water bath?
Didn’t see an answer to this question, but the short answer is absolutely not. While the seal may look good initially, there is no way to ensure that the seal will remain that way given that most kitchens and pantries have high swings in temperature such that the seal will loosen. Google USDA site to get the longer explanation. BTW county fair submissions, as an example, haven’t allowed paraffin seals in many decades.
I am getting ready to use this recipe, do you let the pot simmer for 10 minutes every time you bring the jam back to a light boil?
Hi Pima, yes that is correct! I hope you enjoy the process and the preserves! 🙂 Be careful on that last boil not to increase the heat too much so you don’t scorch the bottom since it will be thicker at that point.
Can I use this same method for other fruit like pears?
Hi Janel, I haven’t tried this with pears so I’m not sure if it would work the same way. Maybe someone else has tried and can share their insights? Thanks in advance! 🙂
I decided to use a new recipe and went with this one. Although I only had one day off work, I brought to rolling boil throughout the day and love the end result. Perfect!
Awesome! I’m glad you love the recipe! Thanks for sharing Kitty!
Made it, loved it, excellent recipe. When tasting after the 3rd boil I found it very sweet. Got 5 more pounds of peaches and added them. Not only did it cut the sweet, it gave ma more whole pieces of peach in the final product. Just wonderful. Thank you
I’m sorry if you’ve already answered this question, but I don’t have time to read all the comments! I don’t care for chunks of fruit in my jam. Can I puree or mash the peaches before boiling? Thank you.
Hi Janette, I think that would still work well to puree first.
I’ve just finished — following the instructions exactly — and can see that my upside-down jars are showing at least one inch of empty space at the top, even though I filled them to within one-half inch from the top. Is that what other people have experienced? Should I have filled them up to the top?
Hi Cindy, as long as the seal has formed on the lid of your jars (it should not be clickable when you press on it), it should be fine to store.
My husband and I just finished canning our first batch of peaches using this recipe. We weighed out the peaches on a food scale and had 12 pounds to start with before peeling and pitting them. We ended up with 9 1/2 pounds of peaches once they were blanched peeled and pitted. The only changes we made were adding a half a cup more sugar and one extra lemon. We cooked it five times and it came out to the perfect consistency. We were able to get eleven half pint jars, although we are pretty sure it would’ve been 12 jars had my husband not eaten a half a pint while it was cooking over the two days. He said he had to taste it along the way. We served it up on some hot banana bread right when it was done and followed up by a glass of peach tea it was delicious.
Ofcourse he had to sample along the way! lol that is awesome! I’m so glad you loved the recipe!! 🙂 Thank you for sharing your sweet review 🙂
Do Not Place Canning Jars In An Oven! Canning jars are not made for the dry heat of an oven. If you place a canning jar in the oven, you run the risk of, at the very least, damaging your jar by the jar developing hairline fractures that you won’t be able to see, and at the most, shattering.
The proper process for this and any other high acid recipe would be to water bath it. It’s easy and quick and you don’t have the problem of damage to your canning jars. 10 minutes in a boiling water bath works. After pulling the jars out of the water bath, place them right side up on a towel in a draft-free place on your counter. Allow them to sit there for no less than 12 hours before even touching them to ensure a proper seal. DO NOT INVERT. Inversion is proven unsafe and can interfere with your seal.
I am so happy I found this because this is exactly how my Nan made all kinds of jams. I did not have 11lbs of peaches so I just used half the sugar and will add if I need more. Just finished my first boil. I have canned for most of my life but for some reason jam has never quite worked out for me but heres to hoping
I hope it is a big success for you! 🙂 I bet it smells nice at your place right now! 🙂
Wow this is amazing. My mother in law stopped in just when I finished processing the jars and of course there was a little left over that was not quite enough to jar so we just ate it. Now she is going to make it too. Thank you so much for this recipe.
Oh that is awesome!! I’m so glad you both enjoyed the recipe 🙂
Would this process work on blueberries, pears, apples?
Hi Nancy, I haven’t tried those but I think it’s worth trying! Varying fruits have varying amounts of pectin naturally so some you may not have to cook as many times. You might google the difference between different fruits before starting. If you experiment, let me now how you like it! 🙂
My 11 pounds netted out at about 7.6 pounds of cleaned flesh (I hope this is ok). First boil is down and I am interested in the spice addition. I may do as my late wife always taught me do the recipe as written and if you make changes do that the second time around.. I will keep you posted.
That is great advice! I hope you love the preserves 🙂
Finished product is Amazing I got 5.5 Pints and the flavor is outstanding. I did opt for the water bath as that is what I am most familiar with. Thx for the recipe!
Thank you for the great feedback Peter 😬
In Oregon its peach season again, making this preservative 5th or 4th year in a row and it always always disappears at my house before winter ends! Absolutely delicious, thank you for the recipe 🙂
Oh that sounds so nice! We had a late frost this year so there aren’t any peaches on the trees. I’m so happy you love the recipe!
This method really appeals to me so I’m giving it a try. Thank you for sharing it. I’ve added only two cups of sugar at this point (I’m on day 1) because it tastes just right to me. Will less sugar affect the consistency as it does with traditional pectin free jam making?
It shouldn’t effect the consistency.
theres one thing i dont get about the recipe and hope it can be explained… in the recipe it calls for boiling then cooling then repeat. what is the reason or process this acheives that a normal reduction of liquid does not give?
Hi Joe, you don’t want to keep boiling it or it will brown. It should still taste ok but the color won’t be as pretty 🙂