For those moments you need to know how to blanch and peel almonds! This is a fool proof method and in the end, will save you money!
That moment when you realize the recipe calls for blanched almonds.
And of course you don’t have any. Of course when I say you, I mean me.
Because that’s exactly what happened to me today. Actually, I forgot to pick up blanched almonds at the store last week and when I realized that I was not surprised. I do that alllll the time. I couldn’t {and wouldn’t} run back out to the store because of all this snow and the fact it was a hundred degrees below zero. Okay, maybe I’m exaggerating a few degrees.
But lucky for me I had a small bag of salted almonds left from this recipe, so I turned to the internet and Googled “How to remove the skin off of almonds”. Not only did I find out that you can actually do this at home, but it’s relatively easy.
Unless you need 2 pounds of blanched almonds, then I probably would’ve made that trip back to the store.
But since I only needed a small amount, I decided to just go for it… and blog it for you!
Since the almonds in my cupboard were salted, I threw them into a small colander…
…and ran the almonds under cold water to wash all that salt away. If you have un-salted nuts you can {obviously} skip this step.
Then just toss them into a heat safe bowl.
Fill your pot with water…
And bring a couple of cups of water to a boil. Of course if you have a lot of almonds to blanch then you will need more water.
Once it starts boiling, pour it directly over the almonds.
Let the almonds sit in the hot water for a minute, two tops. If you let them sit too long, they could lose their crunch.
Then drain the almonds, or you could save the water… I’ve read that you could use the almond water and pour it over your garden. But since mine is currently under 16+ inches of snow, I didn’t.
Throw the almonds on to a dry towel. The nuts cool down relatively quickly, so you don’t have to wait long.
You’ll notice the almond skin is bubbly and pulled away from the nut itself. This makes it super easy to just peel that skin right off.
See. It’s really that easy. A little time consuming but easy.
Discard the almonds skins or pop them into your compost, and just like that I now have blanched almonds. And I probably saved a lot of money.
If you have a big batch of almonds, enlist your kids, friends, your wife or husband and/or neighbors… turn it into an almond peeling party?! Wait.
Either way peeling almonds does take a little bit of time, but totally worth it.
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Wow, who knew?!
Great little tutorial Laurie thanks 🙂
Wow! That is so easy! My tiny grocery store never has specialty items like blanched almonds, so usually I go without….not anymore! Thanks Laurie 🙂
Um, WOW. LOVE this!
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I found that my almonds needed a little more time – I wonder if they could be soaked for a few minutes before blanching, to plump up the skins. Next experiment! I roast my own, and make my own butters, so this is important, cost-wise. My almonds did fine with a two minute stay in the boiled water – they roasted up very crisp.
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Yes it does 🙂
Ohh cool! I never knew how that happened! Such a great how to!
I was blanching some almonds today and when I peeled them they were brown rather than white? Has this ever happened to you? Did i over blanch the batch or are they spoiled?
Hi Rhianna, no that has never happened to me before. But it would be my guess that they are old/rancid. What a bummer!