Peach orchards in June are full of activity. Irrigating, managing pests and pruning to make sure each piece of fruit is getting as much nutrients as it can before harvest. All California peaches are still hand picked, carefully inspected and packed by hand.  Keep an eye out for these varieties that are just beginning to come off the trees at your local market.

See if you can tell the difference between a white peach and a yellow peach just by looking at it!

Yellow Flesh Peaches:

Sweet Scarlet

Sierra Gem

Earli Rich*

Rich Lady*

Country Sweet*

White Flesh Peaches:

Galaxy*

Snow Beauty

White Lady

Ice Princess*

Klondike

Snow Blaze*

* Pictured Below


bea_peach_granola_1b1

Breast cancer cells - even the most aggressive type - died after treatments with peach and plum extracts in lab tests at Texas AgriLife Research recently, and scientists say the results are deliciously promising. Not only did the cancerous cells keel over, but the normal cells were not harmed in the process.AgriLife Research scientists say two phenolic compounds are responsible for the cancer cell deaths in the study, which was published in the Journal of Agriculture and Food Chemistry. The phenols are organic compounds that occur in fruits. They are slightly acidic and may be associated with traits such as aroma, taste or color.

“It was a differential effect which is what you’re looking for because in current cancer treatment with chemotherapy, the substance kills all cells, so it is really tough on the body,” said Dr. David Byrne, AgriLife Research plant breeder who studies stone fruit. “Here, there is a five-fold difference in the toxic intensity. You can put it at a level where it will kill the cancer cells - the very aggressive ones - and not the normal ones.”

Byrne and Dr. Luis Cisneros-Zevallos originally studied the antioxidants and phytonutrients in plums and found them to match or exceed the blueberry which had been considered superior to other fruits in those categories.

“The following step was to choose some of these high antioxidant commercial varieties and study their anticancer properties,” Cisneros-Zevallos said. “And we chose breast cancer as the target because it’s one of the cancers with highest incidence among women. So it is of big concern.”

According to the National Cancer Institute, there were 192,370 new cases of breast cancer in females and 1,910 cases in males in 2009. That year, 40,170 women and 440 men died from breast cancer. The World Health Organization reports that breast cancer accounts for 16 percent of the cancer deaths of women globally.

Cisneros-Zevallos, an AgriLife Research food scientist, said the team compared normal cells to two types of breast cancer, including the most aggressive type. The cells were treated with an extract from two commercial varieties, the “Rich Lady” peach and the “Black Splendor” plum.

“These extracts killed the cancer cells but not the normal cells,” Cisneros-Zevallos said.

A closer look at the extracts determined that two specific phenolic acid components - chlorogenic and neochlorogenic - were responsible for killing the cancer cells while not affecting the normal cells, Cisneros-Zevallos said.

The two compounds are very common in fruits, the researchers said, but the stone fruits such as plums and peaches have especially high levels.

“So this is very, very attractive from the point of view of being an alternative to typical chemotherapy which kills normal cells along with cancerous ones,” Byrne added.

The team said laboratory tests also confirmed that the compounds prevented cancer from growing in animals given the compounds.

Byrne plans to examine more fully the lines of the varieties that were tested to see how these compounds might be incorporated into his research of breeding plums and peaches. Cisneros-Zevallos will continue testing these extracts and compounds in different types of cancer and conduct further studies of the molecular mechanisms involved.

The work documenting the health benefits of stone fruit has been supported by the Vegetable and Fruit Improvement Center at Texas A&M University, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the California Tree Fruit Agreement.

By: Kathleen Phillips, 979-845-2872
Contact(s): Dr. Luis Cisneros-Zevallos, 979-845-3244, lcisnero@tamu.edu
Dr. David Byrne, 979-862-3072, d-byrne@tamu.edu

Provided by Texas A&M AgriLife Communications

* USDA and CDFA (California Department of Food and Ag) have qualified this research as preliminary and not conclusive, and that to fully understand the effect on humans additional research studies, including human clinical studies, are needed. Many want to know where to get these compounds, if one can cook the peach or eat it raw, and whether these substances might work on other cancers. None of that is known yet - research like this is often a very long process but these preliminary results are encouraging and will surely lead to additional studies.


California Peach Sangria

Makes 6 Servings Prep Time: 10 minutes

Ingredientscalifornia_peach_sangria_recipe1

1 (750 ml.) bottle dry white wine (such as Sauvignon Blanc), chilled

1 cup Summerwhite® peach puree (about 2 medium peaches)

½ cup peach brandy

2 tablespoon sugar

1 peach, pitted and thinly sliced

4 lime slices

To garnish: mint sprigs

Directions

Stir together the wine, peach puree and brandy in a large pitcher. 
Add sugar and stir until dissolved. Add fruit slices, pressing against 
the side of the pitcher with a large spoon to release some of the juices.
Serve immediately or refrigerate for up to 2 hours. Serve in tall glasses over 
ice, garnished with mint.

Peaches and Cream Pops

Makes 4 Servings Prep Time: 10 MinutesChill Time: at least 4 Hours

Ingredientspeaches-n-creamsicles1

1/2 cup peeled, chopped fresh California peaches

1/3 cup peeled, pureed fresh California peaches

2/3 cup nonfat vanilla yogurt

Directions

Puree 1/3 cup of peaches in blender or food processor until smooth. Lightly swirl together peach puree, yogurt and remaining 1/2 cup of peaches together in a small bowl. Spoon into 4 popsicle molds and insert handle. Freeze for at least 4 hours.

* For extra sweet pops, add 1-2 tablespoons of honey to yogurt before swirling.

Per serving: 40 calories, 2g protein, 7g carbohydrate, 0g total fat, 5mg cholesterol, 25mg sodium, 1g fiber.


Just like the headline says I want to see your peaches! California peaches are here and popping up in farmers markets and retail stores - even in my backyard (I have a little bonanza peach tree back there.) I want to see what everyone else is working with so if you have a peach tree in your backyard or just picked up a fresh bunch from the market snap a photo and send them up and I’ll put it up on the site. Leave a comment with a link or send your photos with your name and location to geoffj4@gmail.com



Harvest has begun here in California peach country, and if you haven’t seen the fruit in your area yet, you will soon! As the season begins, here’s a quick refresher course on how to get the most out of your peaches.

When selecting, look for an even background color (golden yellow for yellow peaches, creamy yellow for white peaches) with no green around the stem and a fragrant aroma. The red blush on peaches is beautiful, but it isn’t an indicator of ripeness. Also take notice to the difference between a traditional yellow peach and increasingly popular white peaches.

yellow_and_white

Yellow peaches: These are the traditional peaches most of us are used to. They have deep yellow background color overlaid with pink or red blush color and deep yellow flesh inside. They are ready-to-eat when they give to a little bit of palm pressure and have a balance of sweet and tart flavors. These varieties are a little more tart when firm.

White peaches: These peaches have increased in popularity since the late 1980’s. They have a creamy yellow background color overlaid with pink or red blush color and creamy yellow flesh inside. They are naturally less tart and can be ready-to-eat when firm and crunchy. White peaches will ripen faster than yellow peaches and are sub-acid or less acidic. This means you can eat more of them without getting an upset stomach.


Here in the Central Valley growers are celebrating a Earth Day by trying to protect their peaches from a stormy spring.

California peach trees are at a vulnerable point in their life cycle. They have blossomed, been pollinated and are now pushing nutrients out to new developing  fruit. The very very first varieties are going to be ready for harvest most likely in the next 3-4 weeks, but it’s not all smooth sailing up to that point.

Spring storms whipping up in the Pacific deliver much needed water to our aquifers, but also bring devastating hail that can destroy the fruit. Hail shreds leaves, scuffs fruit and sometimes knocks it right from the branches.

Some growers have invested in a device called a hail cannon they hope will dissipate the hail before it ever harms a tree.  A few years ago NPR did a story on the use of hail cannons in the Central Valley. Click here to listen in.


It is an exciting time of year in California’s Central Valley as stone fruit trees have emerged from winter dormancy and begun to bloom! February marks the official opening of the Blossom Trail, an official route designed to provide the most spectacular views of the orchards in bloom. The Central Valley is thee top producing stone fruit region in the United States and this period in the life of a stone fruit tree is the most celebrated in our region.

Tourists and residents celebrate the beauty of bloom with festivals, art exhibits, 10K runs, car rides and bike tours through the countryside to see (and smell) the millions of blossoms. The blossom season begins in February and runs through March and can be a great intro to a trip to the Sequoia National Forest or Yosemite.


Vern Peterson - Bloom Bees Peaches! from PPN TV on Vimeo.


Check out this story below from www.CaliforinaCountry.org


Even though the harvest is over, the growers are still very busy in tending to their orchards.  During this time, California growers are evaluating crop performance, grafting new varieties of peaches, plums and nectarines if necessary, pruning for new shoot growth, preparing the soil with fertilizers and making irrigation pipeline repairs if necessary.

peach_winter

Winter Pruning

Pruning adjusts a tree’s potential crop size, but also stimulates new shoot growth for the following year. Essentially, the grower is removing “tired” branches called “hangers” to provide room for new “fruitwood” growth. Strong and healthy fruitwood is desired for producing vibrant and robust growing periods in the springtime that results in better fruit quality, size, sugar development and heavier bearing mature fruit.

A pruning technique: “Topping the orchard.” The trees are “topped” to maintain the ideal height of the tree. This is done either by hand (pruning shears) of by a tree-topping machine. Topping is also beneficial for worker safety… less time on ladders reaching for fruit high off the ground.

Chill Hours

How many “Chill Hours” are necessary?

800-850 chill hours are the desired minimum amount. That said, there are always exceptions. Depending on variety, some very early varieties need only 350 chill hours and some late varieties need 900 chill hours.

What do “Chill Hours” do to the trees?

Chill hours affect many things, one being “fruit set.” Think of chill hours as “sleep.” It’s like REM sleep for humans. The more “sleep” you get, the better you’ll feel. Consequently, if there are not enough chill hours, the bloom is spread out, meaning, mature fruit will be spread out longer over the course of season. The tree is tired. The grower has to go back into the orchard to pick more times. This is costly to the grower.


Last week California regulators approved a utility contract for the nation’s first space based solar power plant. California-based Solaren Corporation anticipates 1,700 gigawatt-hours of energy per year throughout the 15-year contract term beginning in 2016 at a facility in Fresno County.

So what does this have to do with peaches?  California growers are also finding new ways to harness the power of the sun.  Growers like Casey Jones are using current solar technology to run their packing houses. A packing house is the place where a peach goes just after it was picked. It’s the place where a peach gets inspected, sorted, packed and shipped to market.

Take a look at the video below to see Casey talk about going solar.