Cinnamon and Cream

Classic Peach Melba with Fresh Raspberry Sauce

18 min read

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There is a particular kind of magic in a dessert that requires almost no baking but somehow feels like the grandest thing you could set on a table. Peach Melba arrived in the late 1890s when legendary French chef Auguste Escoffier created it in honour of Australian soprano Dame Nellie Melba after hearing her perform at London’s Covent Garden. He nestled poached peaches and raspberry sauce around a swan carved from ice and surrounded them with vanilla ice cream. The swan is optional these days, but the combination of soft, fragrant peach, cold creamy vanilla, and tart raspberry is as revelatory now as it was then. This is a dessert that earns gasps with very little fuss.

What makes this version special is the poaching liquid. Rather than plain sugar syrup, the peaches are gently simmered in a vanilla-and-lemon-scented syrup that perfumes the fruit all the way through, coaxing out sweetness without masking the peach’s natural floral character. The raspberry sauce, or Melba sauce, is made fresh and uncooked, meaning every berry flavour stays alive and brilliant. No jam, no cornstarch, just raspberries, a touch of sugar, a squeeze of lemon, and a fine-mesh sieve to catch the seeds. The contrast between the warm-poached or chilled peach and the cold ice cream is the whole point, so do not skip that temperature play.

This is a genuinely easy dessert once you understand the two components, making it ideal for confident beginners and seasoned home cooks alike. It is perfect for dinner parties because every element can be prepared a day ahead and assembled in minutes at the table. If you have ripe, fragrant peaches and good-quality vanilla ice cream, you are most of the way there already.

Prep: 20 minutesTotal: 1 hour (including chilling time)Yield: 4 individual dessert glasses or shallow bowlsDifficulty: ★☆☆ EasyOccasion: Special Occasion
✓ Vegetarian✓ Egg-Free✓ Nut-Free✓ Soy-Free
Servings:

4

servings

Ingredients

  • 4 wholeripe but firm freestone peaches (about 700g total)
  • 500 mlwater (about 2 cups)
  • 200 gcaster sugar or granulated sugar (about 1 cup)
  • 1 wholevanilla bean, split and seeds scraped (or 1 tsp pure vanilla extract)
  • 1 wholelemon, zest peeled into strips and juice reserved (about 2 tbsp juice)
  • 300 gfresh or frozen raspberries, thawed if frozen (about 2 1/2 cups)
  • 50 gicing sugar, sifted (about 1/2 cup), plus more to taste
  • 1 tbspfresh lemon juice (for the raspberry sauce)
  • 500 mlgood-quality vanilla ice cream (about 4 generous scoops)
  • Fresh mint leaves or toasted flaked almonds, to serve (optional)

Ingredient Substitutions

fresh peaches

  • Canned peach halves in juice, drained: skip the poaching step entirely and proceed directly to assembly. The flavour will be milder but perfectly acceptable out of season.
  • Ripe nectarines: no substitution in method needed, the skin is edible so blanching to peel is optional. They will be slightly more tart.
fresh raspberries

  • Frozen raspberries: thaw completely and drain excess liquid before blending. The sauce will be slightly more concentrated and deeply coloured, which is lovely.
  • Strawberries: hull and halve 300g strawberries and blend the same way. The sauce will be sweeter and less tart, so reduce the icing sugar to 30g and taste as you go.
vanilla bean

  • 1 tsp pure vanilla extract: add to the poaching syrup off the heat after cooking so the flavour is not driven off by heat.
  • 1 tsp vanilla bean paste: use in the same quantity as extract for a closer approximation to the speckled appearance of a real vanilla bean.
caster sugar (for poaching syrup)

  • Honey: replace up to half the sugar with mild honey for a floral depth, but watch the syrup carefully as honey can cause it to darken faster.
  • Coconut sugar: gives a faint caramel note to the poaching liquid and a slightly deeper colour to the peach flesh. Use the same weight.
vanilla ice cream

  • Dairy-free vanilla ice cream: any good-quality coconut or oat milk variety works beautifully and keeps the dessert dairy-free.
  • Vanilla panna cotta or vanilla custard: if you want a fully composed plated dessert without ice cream, a chilled panna cotta makes a stunning base.

Instructions

🔧 Equipment

🐢medium saucepan (for stovetop and slow cooker syrup methods)
🐢slow cooker (for slow cooker method)
🧁slotted spoon
🌀blender or immersion blender
🔵fine-mesh sieve
🧁large heatproof bowl (for blanching peaches in no-cook method)
🧁bowl of ice water (for no-cook method)
🔪small sharp paring knife
🧁4 dessert glasses or shallow bowls
🧁ice cream scoop



Prep: 20 minutes
Bake: 10 to 12 minutes poaching
Total: 1 hour (including chilling)
  1. Make the poaching syrup: combine the water, caster sugar, vanilla bean and seeds, lemon zest strips, and 1 tbsp of the lemon juice in a medium saucepan (large enough to hold all 4 peaches). Stir over medium heat until the sugar fully dissolves, then bring to a gentle simmer. This takes about 3 to 4 minutes.
  2. Peel the peaches: score a shallow X through the skin on the bottom of each peach. Lower them into the simmering syrup and poach gently for 8 to 12 minutes, turning once or twice, until a skewer slides into the flesh with just slight resistance. Riper peaches need less time. Remove with a slotted spoon and set on a plate to cool for 5 minutes, then gently peel away the skins, which should slip off easily. Halve the peaches and remove the pits.
  3. Chill the peaches: return the peach halves to the cooled poaching syrup and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes and up to 24 hours. The syrup keeps the peaches moist and continues to perfume them as they rest.
  4. Make the raspberry sauce: blend the raspberries, sifted icing sugar, and 1 tbsp lemon juice together in a blender or using an immersion blender until completely smooth, about 30 seconds. Pass through a fine-mesh sieve set over a bowl, pressing firmly with the back of a spoon to extract all the juice. Discard the seeds. Taste and add a little more icing sugar if needed. Refrigerate until ready to serve.
  5. Assemble: remove the peach halves from the syrup and pat gently dry. Place a generous scoop of vanilla ice cream into each serving glass or shallow bowl. Lay two peach halves alongside or on top of the ice cream. Spoon the raspberry sauce generously over everything and finish with fresh mint leaves or a scattering of toasted flaked almonds if you like. Serve immediately.
Prep: 20 minutes
Bake: None
Total: 25 minutes (plus 15 minutes macerating)
When your peaches are perfectly ripe and juicy, poaching is unnecessary. This shortcut version lets the raw fruit shine and comes together in under 30 minutes. The raspberry sauce is identical to the classic method.
  1. Prepare the peaches: bring a kettle of water to a boil. Score a shallow X on the bottom of each peach. Place peaches in a heatproof bowl and pour boiling water over them to cover. Leave for 45 to 60 seconds, then transfer to a bowl of ice water with a slotted spoon. The skins will peel away effortlessly. Halve the peaches and remove the pits.
  2. Macerate the peaches: place the peach halves in a bowl and toss with 1 tbsp of the caster sugar, 1 tbsp lemon juice, and the scraped seeds from the vanilla bean (or 1/2 tsp vanilla extract). Cover and rest at room temperature for 15 minutes. The sugar draws out the peach juices and creates a light natural syrup.
  3. Make the raspberry sauce: blend the raspberries, sifted icing sugar, and 1 tbsp lemon juice until smooth. Pass through a fine-mesh sieve, pressing firmly to extract all the liquid. Discard the seeds. Taste for sweetness and adjust. Chill until ready to use.
  4. Assemble: place a generous scoop of vanilla ice cream in each serving glass or bowl. Add two peach halves per serving, cut side up, spooning any macerating juices over the top. Pour the raspberry sauce over generously and garnish with fresh mint or toasted flaked almonds. Serve at once.
Prep: 20 minutes
Bake: 1.5 to 2 hours on Low
Total: 2 hours 30 minutes (including chilling)
The slow cooker maintains an even, very gentle heat that is actually ideal for delicate fruit poaching. It is a wonderful hands-off option when you are preparing a larger dinner party menu and need the stovetop free.
  1. Make the poaching syrup in the slow cooker insert: add the water, caster sugar, vanilla bean and seeds, lemon zest, and 1 tbsp lemon juice. Stir well to begin dissolving the sugar. There is no need to heat separately, the slow cooker will bring it up to temperature.
  2. Score and add the peaches: score a shallow X on the bottom of each peach and nestle them into the syrup in the slow cooker. They should be mostly submerged. Cover and cook on Low for 1.5 to 2 hours, depending on ripeness. Check at 1.5 hours by pressing gently: the peaches should yield slightly but not be mushy.
  3. Peel and cool the peaches: use a slotted spoon to transfer the poached peaches to a plate. Once cool enough to handle, peel away the skins, halve the fruit, and remove the pits. Return the halves to the poaching syrup in the slow cooker insert, turn off the heat, and allow everything to cool to room temperature before transferring to the refrigerator to chill for at least 30 minutes.
  4. Make the raspberry sauce: while the peaches chill, blend the raspberries, icing sugar, and lemon juice until smooth. Strain through a fine-mesh sieve, pressing well to extract all the sauce. Taste and adjust sweetness. Refrigerate until serving.
  5. Assemble: remove the chilled peach halves from the syrup and gently pat dry. Place a large scoop of vanilla ice cream in each bowl or glass, add two peach halves, and pour the raspberry sauce over generously. Garnish with mint or toasted flaked almonds and serve immediately.

Nutrition Per Serving

Per 1 serving (makes 4 individual dessert glasses or shallow bowls)

385Calories
72gCarbs
64gSugar
9gFat
4gProtein

Why This Recipe Works

The poaching process is doing important structural and flavour work here. When peaches are submerged in a hot sugar syrup, osmosis draws moisture from the syrup into the fruit cells while simultaneously softening the pectin that holds the cell walls rigid. The result is peach flesh that is tender all the way through but still holds its shape, unlike stewing, which breaks the cells down completely. The vanilla and lemon in the syrup are fat-soluble and water-soluble aromatics respectively, and together they penetrate the fruit far more effectively than either would alone, giving the peach a deeply perfumed quality that raw fruit cannot match.

The raw raspberry sauce works because raspberries are naturally high in both pectin and acid. When blended with sugar and a little lemon juice, the sugar binds to the fruit’s water content and the acid brightens every flavour molecule, creating a sauce that tastes more intensely of raspberry than any cooked version could. Heat drives off delicate volatile aromatic compounds, which is precisely why this sauce stays raw. Straining through a fine-mesh sieve removes the seeds but preserves every drop of flavour-laden juice, and the result is a sauce with a natural, glossy body that clings beautifully to the peach.

The temperature contrast between chilled peach and cold ice cream is not just a textural trick. Cold temperatures actually suppress some sweetness perception on the palate, which means the tart raspberry sauce registers more vividly when eaten alongside the ice cream, creating a more complex, layered flavour experience than if everything were served at the same temperature. If your peaches are slightly under-ripe or the dessert tastes flat, a tiny pinch of fine sea salt added to the raspberry sauce will immediately amplify all the fruit flavours without tasting salty.

Baker’s Tips

  • Choose peaches that smell fragrant at the stem end and give very slightly when pressed at the shoulder. Peaches that are hard and odourless will never poach into something memorable.
  • Do not rush the sieving of the raspberry sauce. Use the back of a large spoon and press in circular motions, working for a full 1 to 2 minutes. You will be surprised how much extra sauce is still in the pulp.
  • Save the poaching syrup. It is fragrant and delicious stirred into sparkling water as a cordial, drizzled over yoghurt, or used to soak sponge cake layers.
  • For the cleanest presentation, chill your serving glasses in the freezer for 10 minutes before assembling. This slows the melting of the ice cream and keeps everything looking beautiful longer.
  • If you are serving this at a dinner party, scoop the ice cream balls ahead of time, place them on a parchment-lined tray, and return to the freezer. Assemble each bowl in under a minute when your guests are seated.

Variations

  • Sparkling Peach Melba: replace half the water in the poaching syrup with a light sparkling rosé wine for a subtly floral, grown-up flavour that pairs beautifully with the raspberry.
  • Peach Melba Pavlova: spoon the poached peaches and raspberry sauce over individual meringue nests with softly whipped cream instead of ice cream, for a showstopper dinner-party dessert.
  • Grilled Peach Melba: halve and pit fresh peaches and grill cut-side down on a hot grill pan for 3 to 4 minutes until caramelised. The smoky char against the cold ice cream and bright raspberry sauce is extraordinary.
  • Peach Melba Trifle: layer slices of sponge cake, poached peach pieces, raspberry sauce, and lightly whipped vanilla cream in a glass trifle bowl. Chill for 2 hours before serving.

Troubleshooting & FAQ

My peaches turned mushy during poaching. What went wrong?
This almost always means the peaches were too ripe to begin with, or they poached for too long, or at too high a heat. The syrup should be at a gentle simmer, not a rolling boil. Very ripe peaches may only need 5 to 6 minutes. Start checking early by piercing with a thin skewer: you want slight resistance, not the skewer sliding through like soft butter. If your peaches are very ripe, consider the no-cook assembly method instead.
The skins are not peeling off cleanly after poaching. What should I do?
Make sure you scored the X deeply enough through the skin before poaching, and that the peaches were fully submerged in hot syrup for the full time. If the skins still resist, use a small sharp paring knife to help lift them at the scored corners. Some peach varieties, particularly clingstone types, have skins that grip more stubbornly regardless of technique.
My raspberry sauce tastes too sharp and sour. How do I fix it?
Different batches of raspberries vary enormously in tartness, especially frozen ones. Add the icing sugar gradually and keep tasting as you go rather than adding it all at once. If the sauce is already strained and too tart, simply whisk in a little more sifted icing sugar until the balance feels right. A tiny splash of vanilla extract also softens perceived acidity beautifully.
Can I make this with canned peaches?
Absolutely, and there is no shame in it. Drain the canned peaches well and pat them dry. You can macerate them briefly in a little vanilla extract and lemon juice to add fragrance. The raspberry sauce and cold ice cream will carry the dessert beautifully. The texture will be softer and the flavour milder than fresh poached fruit, but it is still a genuinely lovely dessert.
The ice cream is melting before I can get the dessert to the table. How do I serve this at a party?
Pre-scoop the ice cream onto a parchment-lined baking sheet and freeze until solid (about 30 minutes). Keep everything else prepped and chilled. When guests are seated, it takes less than 60 seconds per bowl to place an ice cream ball, add the peaches, and pour over the raspberry sauce. Chilling the serving glasses in the freezer for 10 minutes beforehand also buys you extra time.

Storage & Make-Ahead

  • Storage: Store poached peach halves submerged in their syrup in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. Store the raspberry sauce in a sealed jar in the refrigerator for up to 4 days. Do not assemble with ice cream until ready to serve.
  • Make-Ahead: This dessert is perfectly designed for advance preparation. Poach the peaches and make the raspberry sauce up to 2 days ahead and keep refrigerated separately. At serving time, assembly takes under 3 minutes. The poaching syrup can also be saved, strained, and refrigerated for up to 1 week to use as a cordial or to poach more fruit.


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