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Persimmons are a sweet, delicious treat that you can eat on their own or in baked goods. If you have a lot of persimmons and you don’t want them to go to waste, you can store them in the freezer for a few months until you’re ready. Either freeze them whole to eat raw or turn them into a pureé to cook with, and enjoy your persimmons for months to come.
Steps
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Store the fruit at room temperature for 1 to 2 weeks if it isn’t ripe. This will help the ripening process. You can store them next to apples or pineapples to speed them up, but they’ll stay tough and firm for a couple of weeks. [1] X Research source
- You can also keep unripe persimmons in your fridge, but they won’t ripen as quickly.
- If your persimmons are already ripe, don’t worry about keeping them at room temperature. You can go straight to freezing them.
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Place the persimmons on a tray and freeze them for 1 to 2 hours. Spread your persimmons out on a baking tray in a single layer. Put the tray in the freezer for a few hours to make them firm and harden up.
- You can also put your persimmons in a bag, but they might take a little longer to get firm.
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Wrap each persimmon individually with plastic wrap. You can also use a plastic bag. Wrap each persimmon in one layer of plastic wrap to keep them from getting freezer burn. Freezing each one individually will make them easier to eat, too. [2] X Research source
- Wrapping the fruit after it’s already frozen will make it less likely to bruise.
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Place the persimmons back into the freezer. They shouldn’t take long to freeze —an hour or two and they’ll be fully frozen! Make sure they aren’t squished behind anything or underneath anything in your freezer.
- If you’re worried about freezer burn, place your persimmons into an airtight container before you freeze them.
- You can freeze whole persimmons indefinitely, but they’ll start to lose their taste and texture after about 3 months.
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Let the persimmons thaw at room temp for 20 minutes before you eat them. When you want a deliciously cold snack, take a persimmon out of the freezer and let it sit at room temperature. Cut the top off and eat the insides with a spoon for a yummy treat.
- The persimmons will stay sweet even after they’re frozen.
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Wash your fruit in the sink and dry them off. When your persimmons feel squishy to the touch, they’re ripe! Wash them off using water from the sink and pat them dry with a towel. [3] X Research source
- Once your persimmons are ripe, you can feel free to snack on a couple before you freeze them. They’ll taste sweet, not astringent, so they’ll be delicious!
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Cut each persimmon into quarters. This will make them easier to pureé. You can skin the persimmons beforehand if you want to, or you can leave them on for some added fiber. [4] X Trustworthy Source National Center for Home Food Preservation Publicly-funded center dedicated to educating consumers about research-backed safety practices for preserving food Go to source
- Persimmons may be easier to turn into a pureé if you skin them first.
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Press each piece of persimmon through a sieve. Grab a bowl and balance your sieve over it. Hold the piece of persimmon up against the sieve and push it through with the back of the spoon. Go slowly so you break down each piece into pulpy goodness. [5] X Trustworthy Source University of California Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources Extension program of the University of California system devoted to educating and improving local communities Go to source
- If you go too fast, you run the risk of not breaking down each piece all the way. This can lead to some chunky pureé.
- If you don’t want to deal with a sieve, blitz your persimmon pieces in a food processor or a blender.
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Add 1/8 tsp (375 mg) of ascorbic acid to every 1 US qt (0.95 L) of pureé. Measure your pureé to see how much you have. Add in some ascorbic acid so the persimmons keep their bright color in the freezer. [6] X Trustworthy Source National Center for Home Food Preservation Publicly-funded center dedicated to educating consumers about research-backed safety practices for preserving food Go to source
- If you don’t have ascorbic acid, use lemon juice instead.
- Your pureé will taste fine without this, but it may turn brown.
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Pour the pureé into canning jars. This will keep your mixture fresh in the freezer so you can enjoy it long-term. Use any size jars that you’d like, as long as they all have lids. [7] X Trustworthy Source National Center for Home Food Preservation Publicly-funded center dedicated to educating consumers about research-backed safety practices for preserving food Go to source
- Make sure you leave enough headspace at the top of the jar. If you’re storing 1 US pt (470 mL), leave 0.5 in (1.3 cm) of space; if you’re storing 1 US qt (0.95 L), leave 1 in (2.5 cm) of space. [8] X Trustworthy Source National Center for Home Food Preservation Publicly-funded center dedicated to educating consumers about research-backed safety practices for preserving food Go to source
- Since you’re freezing your jars, you don’t have to sanitize them before storing your mixture.
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Seal the cans and place them in the freezer. You can keep frozen pureé around for about 3 months before it starts to lose its flavor. When you want to eat it, simply take a jar out of the freezer and let it thaw for about 10 minutes. [9] X Trustworthy Source National Center for Home Food Preservation Publicly-funded center dedicated to educating consumers about research-backed safety practices for preserving food Go to source
- You can use pureé in baked goods and jams.
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Tips
- Make sure the persimmons are 100% ripe before you freeze them. Otherwise, they may not ripen at all.Thanks
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Things You’ll Need
Whole Persimmons
- Baking tray
- Plastic wrap
Persimmon Pureé
- Knife
- Sieve
- Spoon
- Canning jars
References
- ↑ https://www.centraltexasgardener.org/resource/preparing-persimmons-for-freezing-or-for-cooking/
- ↑ https://www.cooks.com/recipe/577169ej/freezing-whole-soft-persimmons.html
- ↑ https://www.cooks.com/recipe/577169ej/freezing-whole-soft-persimmons.html
- ↑ https://nchfp.uga.edu/how/freeze/persimmon.html
- ↑ https://ucanr.edu/blogs/blogcore/postdetail.cfm?postnum=43855
- ↑ https://nchfp.uga.edu/how/freeze/persimmon.html
- ↑ https://nchfp.uga.edu/how/freeze/persimmon.html
- ↑ https://nchfp.uga.edu/how/freeze/headspace.html
- ↑ https://nchfp.uga.edu/questions/FAQ_freezing.html
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