Peaches
The peach continues to defy modern science. Actually, when
I think about growing, harvesting, marketing, and eating peaches, they remain
pretty much the same today as they were 20, 50, even 100 years ago. Peaches
resist improvement!
Peach trees grow the way they
always have. Unlike apples, there have been no neat break-throughs such as the
development of dwarf trees or disease-immune varieties. The peach tree still
suffers from a short life span of only 10 to 20 years.
Peach trees are difficult to keep alive and healthy. Since
they are not bred for cold hardiness, peach trees fall prey to spring frosts
that kill the flower buds. Insects and diseases continue to vote peach tree the
"host of choice." These trees remain a challenge, even with Integrated Pest
Management techniques (i.e., cultivating insects that eat harmful ones,
monitoring the orchards for signs of disease and insect damage). Scourges like
canker and tree borers continue to shorten their life span.
Fuzz perseveres as a prominent feature of the peach. I,
personally, think peach fuzz is great, but I've heard people complain that
it makes them itch, etc. We've even washed and brushed our peaches in an
attempt to eliminate the fuzz. However, this treatment proved too damaging to
the fruit, since we pick our peaches at
the moment of tree-ripened perfection. Although waiting for this moment
allows our peaches to be sweeter and juicier, they unfortunately become too
perishable for such rough handling.
Another trait peaches stubbornly refuse to abandon is the
ripening cycle -- not all fruit on one tree is ready to be picked at the same
time! Apple and pear trees, for instance, are all picked at once. Not peaches.
In about a week, we pick peaches three or four times from the same tree. Each
peach is picked on just the right day. Picking peaches requires special skill
as some of you "pick-your-own" folks may have already discovered. Some peaches
picked "a bit too green" will never really ripen to perfection. Those few extra
days of "tree time" make an incredible difference in taste. In their own way,
peaches are telling us to slow down, appreciate individuality, and not expect
everyone to march to the same drummer.
While we
have many excellent new varieties, breeding for minor traits like color or
harvest schedule is an exhausting and exhaustive process. Peaches, as yet, are
not genetically engineered. Peach breeders plant hundreds of pits and wait to
see what grows. To date, this rather random selection process has improved bud
hardiness. Also, peach breeders have had some success working on the split-pit
problem; however, very cold days during the blooming season of early varieties
still result in the pit splitting when the peach is sliced open.
The process of storing and handling peaches have also
defied technology. Scientists seem to have a handle on apples -- sugar content
and firmness relative to how long an apple will stay hard and crisp in
refrigeration or in controlled atmosphere storage. Peaches defy such storage
methods and will tolerate refrigeration no longer than a week. While it is very
old fashioned to lay your peaches out on your kitchen counter in one layer,
it's still the most effective way to know when they are ready to be eaten.
Notice I didn't say when you are ready to eat them. Peaches ripen on their
own schedule, not yours!
To me, it's OK that peaches resist modernization.
While the process of growing and harvesting peaches may be inconvenient, all is
forgiven when I'm eating one of Terhune Orchards warm-from-the-sun,
dripping-with-juice peaches. I'm convinced that no technological break
through could ever improve upon the flavor so generously bestowed by nature!
Read about freezing
peaches. |