I’ve just recently gotten into eating pomegranates. It’s a little bit by default; my boyfriend grows pomegranates and it is his very favorite fruit! During Thanksgiving of last year, I asked William if I could take some tutorial photos of him showing how to super-fast de-seed a pomegranate. After reading this tutorial, there’s no excuse for you to say that it’s hard to get the seeds (arils) out of a pomegranate, so you’d rather not waste the time.
The photos of William below show him not wearing gloves. I recommend that you wear rubber gloves if you want to prevent staining of any kind on your hands.
Cut around the pomegranate’s equator with a knife. Only cut abou 1/4″ deep. Put knife down and twist pomegranate to pry it open. If you can’t open it immediately, carefully use knife to cut deeper around the equator.
When you open up your pomegranate, it should look like this (this is the pretty and less messy way to open it)! If you slice right through the middle with the knife, you’ll get all the blood red juices flowing and likely a mess on your hands!
Fill your sink or a big pan up with with water. You can also place a collander in the sink if you’d like to make an easier retrieve the arils. Now cup the pomegranate in your hand. Note: don’t put the seeds (arils) face down in your hand. Leave a slight cupped gap for the to fall out and through your fingers while you slap the back of it forcefully and continuously with a wooden spoon.
The pomegranate arils will drop to the bottom of the water, while the white interior of the pomegranate (also known as pith) with float to the top.
As you can see, the spoon method works quite well. Almost all the arils fell out! Fish out the arils, throw away the pith, and enjoy your tasty pomegranate seeds!
Naturally, they taste best when you share them with others! They also probably taste better knowing they are a Superfruit!
Sofie (William’s niece) loves this time of year, cause she loves getting to eat pomegranates! They are generally in season from October to early January!
Do you think you’ll give one a try?
Until next time Swellions!
Awesome! I’ve for sure made de-seeding them WAY harder then I’ve needed to! I’ve got a Pomegranate sitting in my fruit bowl right now (believe it or not, my son got it while trick or treating)! I’ll for sure be trying this tomorrow!
THANKS!
Pam
http://www.overthebigmoon.com
Just a quick note to let you know that a link to this post will be placed on CraftCrave today [04 Nov 02:00am GMT]. Thanks, Maria
This is great!!! Have pinned, FB’d and saved this post for everyone I know. Thank you so much for sharing!
This is great!!! Have pinned, FB’d and saved this post for everyone I know. Thank you so much for sharing!
Thanks so much ! I’m gonna give this a try!
Very clever! I’ve never been able to do this without making a big mess, so I’ll have to try this method!
Great job putting this together, it really shows how much easier it is to use. Also thanks for including miss Sofie great photos as usual. I am adding this to my FB page:)
I had to try this right away and it worked so well! Thanks a bunch – it makes pomegranates that much more enjoyable 😉
This is awesome! I’m going to be blogging about a festive pomegranate recipe in a couple weeks time, is it ok to link to this page from my blog? Thanks!!