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What's the fastest way to seed grapes (e.g., Concordes)?

Seasoned Advice Asked on December 3, 2021

I’ve got a bunch of grapes, with seeds. I need to seed them for a recipe. Cutting them in half and prying out the seeds with a paring knife makes me yearn for stringing beans. Any suggestions on how to get through this process faster?

9 Answers

Just cook them down at a low heat in a saucepan. Allow to cool and squeeze them open then place into a bag and mash with a potato masher lightly.

Seeds will separate from the pulp, which will cook down into a thick juice, strain seeds in a colander/strainer

Answered by Alicia on December 3, 2021

As Fern said, Squeeze grape and put pulp with seed in a pot. Put Skin in another bowl.

Heat up the pulp, once heated seed will easily separate from the pulp. Put through a strainer and add seedless pulp to the skins.

Proceed with recipe

Answered by Mark Pizzinato on December 3, 2021

Have you tried pushing a straw through them? Maybe a stainless straw would work. I may take a Dremel tool to it, to put an edge on the straw!

Answered by Fred on December 3, 2021

Squeeze grape to seperate pulp from skin and seperate. Bring pulp to boil. At some point pulp will release the seed. Then filter to seperate seed from pulp. Combine unseeded pulp and skins. Ready for pie etc. See Joy of Cooking ..old version.

Answered by Fern on December 3, 2021

Here's how you do it:

  1. Cut Grape in half lengthwise, either all the way through or just through to the last skin

  2. Remove the seeds from each half with a serrated grapefruit spoon.

Note: Assembly line is most efficient - pull enough grapes off stem to fill a plate, cut all the grapes in half, then remove the seeds from each grape.

Answered by Love my CSA on December 3, 2021

It's easiest with larger grapes, cut through the middle rather than lengthwise. The seeds tend to end up in one half and are easily removed with the tip of a paring knife. I find that the loss of the edible portion of the grape is minimized.

Answered by lindamarie on December 3, 2021

Put the grapes on a plate - best if you do as many at one time as will fill the plate in one layer. Cover the plate with an identical plate turned upside down. Using a long knife cut between the plates to cut all the grapes in half at once. I use my thumb nail to scoop out the seeds, but the tip of a vegetable peeler will work better than a knife if your nails aren't long.

Answered by Sandra on December 3, 2021

I'd say this might be a good time to invest in a cherry pitter, as I'd assume it'd work on grapes, too.

Some things to try for speed :

  • crushing them, and seeing if the pots pop free (it works for olives).
  • cut more than one at a time -- put four or five down on your work surface, place your hand over them, fingers up, and slice between your hand and counter with a sharp knife. (although, I've never done this for something with pits, so I don't know how much of a problem it might be)

And, when all else fails, buy some seedless grapes, and save the seeded ones for snacking.

update : I've since learned a safer method for option #2 : use lids from deli containers or other small items with raised lips (like the bottom of some earthenware plates). Place it lip-side up, fill with items to be cut in half, place a similar item on top, press down on the stack, and slice in between the two containment devices.

Answered by Joe on December 3, 2021

If you just need the pulp (for pie, ice cream, jam, etc...) then cook them down and run them through a food strainer.

If you need them raw, or halved/skins on, then find a good audiobook...

Answered by Shog9 on December 3, 2021

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