How to Pick Nectarines: Ripeness, Technique & Storage
June 11, 2026 · 5 min read
Nectarines are smooth-skinned peaches — same tree, same ripening cues, same picking technique. But they're slightly firmer at the same ripeness level, which means a few of the signals read a little differently.
How to tell if a nectarine is ripe
The same principle applies as peaches: ignore the red blush and look at the background color. The difference is that nectarines stay a bit firmer when ripe, so the squeeze test requires calibrating expectations.
- Background color:The skin between the red blush should be yellow, golden, or cream — not green. Any green means the nectarine isn't ready and won't improve off the tree.
- Give at the shoulder:Press near the stem end. A ripe nectarine yields slightly — less dramatically than a ripe peach of the same variety. If it's rock-hard all over, leave it.
- Fragrance: A ripe nectarine is intensely aromatic — more floral and sharper than a peach. Close range smell is the best double-check.
- Ease of release: A ripe freestone nectarine twists cleanly off the branch. Cling varieties need more effort — check color and smell for those.
Yellow nectarines are more aromatic and tangy; white nectarines are sweeter and milder, closer to a sweet plum. White varieties often look ripe (soft, fragrant) before they've developed full flavor — give them a taste test before committing to a large pick.
Picking technique
Same as peaches: cup from below, twist upward. The smooth skin makes nectarines easier to grip without damage than peaches, but the flesh still bruises under pressure — handle from the bottom, not the sides.
- No squeezing to test ripeness: Squeeze marks show up as brown patches within a day. Press only at the shoulder (stem end), lightly.
- Lower into containers:Don't drop nectarines into a bucket. Internal bruising is invisible at picking time but shows up at home.
- Top and exterior first: Like peaches, nectarines on the outer canopy get more sun and ripen ahead of interior fruit.
Freestone vs. clingstone
Most mid-to-late season nectarines at u-pick farms are freestone — the flesh separates cleanly from the pit, which is ideal for slicing. Early-season varieties tend toward clingstone or semi-cling. Both ripen on the same cues; clingstone is just harder to work with for jam or baking.
Storage after picking
- Firm-ripe: Leave at room temperature stem-end down for a day to finish softening, then refrigerate. Do not refrigerate green-background fruit — cold makes it permanently mealy.
- Fully ripe: Refrigerate immediately and use within 3–4 days.
- Freezing: Blanch briefly to loosen the skin (though nectarines are often peeled by hand — the smooth skin grips less than peach fuzz). Slice, toss with lemon juice, freeze in a single layer, then bag. Keeps 8–12 months.
What to bring
- Shallow boxes or padded containers for ripe fruit
- A cooler — nectarines ripen fast in a hot car
- A pocketknife for on-the-spot taste tests between varieties
