Buttered Peaches / Fruit

buttered peaches

I used to think that fruit for dessert was a bit boring. But having a baby in the house who loves fruit, I’ve changed my mind. Fruit can be a really delicious dessert as long as you use great quality produce and treat it with a little love and some butter!

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Buttered Peaches / Fruit

Total Time 10 minutes
Servings 2 people

Ingredients

  • 2-3 ripe peaches or other stone fruit sliced into wedges
  • 2-3 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 1/2 vanilla bean optional
  • double (heavy) cream (or whipped cream) to serve

Instructions

  • Heat a small frying pan on a medium heat. Add butter and when it melts, add peach wedges.
  • If using vanilla, scrape the seeds and add to the pan. Save the stalk for another use.
  • Cook peaches, stirring every few minutes until the peaches are warm and just a little bit browned in places. About 5 minutes.
  • Serve warm peaches and the pan juices topped with cream.

Variations

pantry – use a drained can of peaches instead. I prefer peaches packed in juice not the extra sweet sugar syrup.

different fruit – lovely with any stone fruit such as nectarines, plums or apricots. Also lovely with pears or apples (add a pinch of cinnamon).

more substantial – serve with roasted almonds or crumbled sweet biscuits (cookies) such as shortbread.

different accompaniments – creamy ricotta, sour cream, double cream, vanilla ice cream are all good.

paleo (grain, legume & dairy-free) – coconut oil instead of butter and coconut yoghurt instead of cream.

keto / ultra low carb – dark chocolate instead of peaches

Shelf Life / Storage

Refrigerate cooked fruit in an airtight container or ziplock bag. Keep cream in a separate container. Fruit will last in the fridge for 2 weeks or so. Can be frozen for up to 12 months.

Usage Suggestions

quick dessert – serve the fruit either warm or cold with your choice of cream or ice cream.

fruit ‘ice cream’ – freeze cooked fruit then when you’re ready to serve whizz it in the food processor with a little cream or coconut milk until you have a lovely icecreamy texture. Eat ASAP.

breakfast – serve cold with natural yoghurt and granola or roasted nuts.

as a side – works as a wonderful dessert accompaniment to things like this french toast (with or without the raspberries) or the Clancy family pavlova or this easy berry mousse.

almost instant crumble – use your buttered peaches in place of the canned apples in this recipe.

Problem Solving Guide

bland – a little sugar, maple syrup or honey can help for less than ripe peaches.

too hard – if the peaches aren’t ripe cooking for longer can help soften.

Waste Avoidance Strategy

peaches – will keep for a few weeks (depending on how ripe they are) in a plastic bag in the fridge. For longer storage just pop them in the freezer to defrost and cook later.

butter – keeps in the fridge for months.

vanilla bean – keep in the pantry.

marscapone or cream – freeze it or use for another meal.

Prepare Ahead?

Absolutely. Cook peaches in butter as per recipe but keep the cream separately. Will keep in the fridge for 1-2 weeks or can be frozen. To serve warm to room temp or higher.

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12 Comments

  • I made this for my son for breakfast topped with powdered. Yum! The peaches were a tad mushy but maybe that’s because I used ghee instead of butter. I used a non-stick pan. Would a regular pan work better?

    • The ghee and pan type wouldn’t impact the texture Rachel – the mushiness probably means your peaches were on the more ripe side. OR they didn’t need that much cooking. 🙂

  • Jules, I had another thought about this recipe, in reading some of your comments I think I will try a hybrid of my grilled peaches. Instead of grilling I will do them as in your recipe and then top them with a drizzle of honey and dollop of marscapone and shavings of basil.

    • ooh yum Patti – love the idea of a touch of basil for added fragrance (and marscapone is always a good idea).

  • Jules, I have made this three times since the challenge started!! Peaches are in full season in Oregon and absolutely beautiful. Vanilla bean is very expensive, as always, so I used vanilla extract and it was absolutely devine!

    • Oh lucky you Patti! I can only dream of Summer peaches at the moment.

      Yes when I wrote this recipe vanilla prices were a lot more reasonable 🙂

  • I had one peach today for the second time in this challenge, two days ago but there is only 5 days each week on the challenge..

  • I made this tonight for dinner as we got a big box of wonderful CA peaches today. Wow is all I can say! I added a bit of rum to the butter for a buttered rum feel.

  • I made this for dessert last night – so simple and so tasty! We didn’t have double cream or whipped cream but we did have some vanilla yogurt in the fridge, I plopped a dollop of it on the peaches and sprinkled over some walnuts. I wonder how it would taste with plums or cherries? Or a mixture of peaches and cherries? Can’t wait to experiment!

5 from 1 vote (1 rating without comment)

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