In the kitchen
How to store Pear
Pears are best stored at room temperature while ripening - you can test for ripeness by gently pressing the stem end, it should feel slightly soft when ripe (and should also smell sweet). Once ripe pears can be stored in the fridge to help them last a little longer.
If you have too many ripe pears they can also be frozen - simply cut them into chunks or slices, and store them in an airtight container or freezer bag. Frozen pears will keep for up to a year.
Prep & Cooking tips
Pears are a versatile fruit that are particularly well-suited for baking and poaching, as their firm texture holds up well to heat and they take on a lovely, sweet flavor when cooked. They can also be used in savoury dishes, thrown raw into salad or slaw for a subtle sweetness and a nice crunch.
Easy ideas
1. Salads
Cut into a dice, slices or thin matchsticks they are wonderful thrown into a salad. In fact they are better slightly under-ripe as they are crisp and not too cloyingly sweet. Try a simple combo of hazelnuts, blue cheese and bitter salad leaves, simply dressed. Try them in a slaw with some beetroot, red cabbage and onion. Dress with crème fraîche and mustard.
2. Pickled
A simple and lightly cooked side. Perfect with pork, game or even a sharp crumbly cheese. Peel and dice 2 pears. Sauté them lightly in a little butter for a few mins before adding 3 tbsp cider vinegar and 1 tbsp light muscovado sugar. Simmer for about 5 mins until just softening. Flavour with a little fresh thyme and maybe a pinch of allspice. Season with salt and pepper. Gets better after a few days in the fridge.
3. Roasted
Peel and halve 3 pears. Scoop out the cores with a spoon. For a sweet treat throw them in a roasting tin with a split vanilla pod, a generous slug of perry or dessert wine, a knob of butter and a drizzle of honey. Bake for 20-30 mins at 180˚C/Gas 4 until tender. Turn and baste at regular intervals. Serve with mascarpone and toasted almonds. For something savoury, tuck them under roasting pork or duck with some rosemary, bay and a glass of white wine for the final 30 mins in the oven.
Goes well with
Nuts (hazelnuts, walnuts, almonds & pistachio)
Dairy (yoghurt, curd cheese, double cream, mascarpone)
Herbs (rosemary, saffron, chamomile)
Spices (cinnamon, cardamom, star anise, clove, nutmeg, ginger)
Blue cheese
Honey
Dark chocolate
Orange, apple, raspberries
Vanilla
Beetroot, parsnips, celeriac, squash
Red cabbage, cauliflower, radicchio
Honey, maple syrup
Red wine, white wine, brandy, Madeira
Pear recipes
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Ginger poached pears with honeyed crème fraîche
Serves: 4 Total time: 50 min
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Avocado, spinach and pear smoothie
Serves: 1 Total time: 5 min
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Chamomile pear, buckwheat granola & mascarpone
Serves: 2 Total time: 35 min
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Spiced pears with raspberries
Serves: 4 Total time: 55 min
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Spiralised pear and courgette salad with avocado dressing
Serves: 2 Total time: 20 min
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Courgette, Pear, Spinach & Cashew Smoothie
Serves: 4 Total time: 10 min
In the field
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Meet the grower: Joe Pardoe , Hereford, Herefordshire
Joe is the fourth generation of Pardoe to grow fruit at Priors Grove Farm. We've been enjoying his organic pears, plums, cherries, apples and more for over 15 years.
UK seasonality
Pear varieties
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Abate pears
Abate pears – Italy’s favourite variety – are sweet and fragrant, with meltingly soft flesh.
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Bosc pears
Bosc pears are crisp and juicy, with a very sweet, woodsily spiced flavour. Perfect for eating raw or cooking.
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Comice pears
Comice pears are an exceptionally sweet French heritage variety. Best enjoyed raw – their soft, juicy flesh won’t stand up well to cooking.
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Conference pears
Recognisable for their elegant long necks and russeted green skin, Conference pears have buttery soft and juicy flesh, with an intensely sweet flavour.
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Packham pears
Under their bumpy skin, Packham pears are smooth, sweet and juicy, with a distinctive aromatic flavour.