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Sunday, August 4, 2013

Whiskey Peaches

Hat tip to austinurbangardens.wordpress.com

Peaches are already coming in to the farmer’s markets, a few weeks early.  Last Spring I went peach crazy, and this Spring will be no different.  I found a recipe called Kentucky Bourbon Peaches on the Allspice Chronicles (Adapted from the Bernardin Guide to Home Preserving.)  I changed it up to make it my own and added vanilla beans, and substituted half of the sugar with brown sugar.
I picked up peaches from Lightsey Farms and Caskey Farms for some variation.  The Lightsey peaches were smaller, and many were not yet ripe, which I should have tested before I got started.  The Caskey Farms peaches were all ripe and larger.

Once the peaches were rinsed, I blanched them in boiling water for about 2 minutes, then removed them with a slotted spoon and placed them into iced water, to prevent cooking.

Once cooled, I removed the skins and the pits, and placed the peaches in a solution of 4 parts water, 1 part lemon juice to preserve their peachy color.  I had quite a few peaches, so I was working a batch at a time.  For the perfectly ripe peaches that were able to be skinned whole, I cut them into halves or quarters.  Once all of the peaches had been processed, I drained them.

I put the sugar mixture on the stove to simmer, 8 cups water, 1 cup organic sugar, 1 cup organic brown sugar, and a spice bag containing cinnamon sticks, cloves, and ginger (candied because it was what I had.)  I let that simmer for about 10 minutes while preparing my canning jars.  Next, I scraped the vanilla out of 2 vanilla beans.

When the steralized jars were ready, I put the peaches, the vanilla, and the beans into the simmering sugar mixture, and let them all simmer for about a 10 minutes.  I pulled out the vanilla beans, and poured a generous 1/2 cup of Kentucky Bourbon, I used Evan Williams, (I would have used Garrison Brothers, but my liquir store was out) into the mix.  After letting that simmer for a short bit, I ladled the peaches into pint size jars and sealed.  I processed in a water bath per the recipe for 20 minutes, and viola!

I haven’t tried these yet, but the recipients of the two jars I gave away were impressed.  One friend served his over vanilla ice cream, with a ginger cookie, and pecans.  Sounds about right.  I had intended to also make Brandied peaches, but didn’t have enough ripe peaches for both recipes.  I’ll be doing that as soon as the rest of mine ripen.

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