Pitting pie cherries 2026

I tried the single cherry pitters. They took too long. Then we used a single chopstick, which worked pretty well, but I couldn’t sit for that long. Then I bought one of the leifheit machines. I think they’re from Germany. I love the mechanism and the machine. Main problem is that they don’t get all of the pits.

I harvested a ton of cherries last week. I brought them in, and my wife was going to bed. How am I going to pit all of these cherries? I used the Leifheit machine. It got them done. I knew I would harvest another giant pile of cherries the next day, so I couldn’t wait. She has had work done on her teeth. She can’t afford another broken tooth. She said she wouldn’t make pie or crisp out of those cherries. Well, I guess now I have to learn how to make cherry crisp and pie. She could see how disappointed I was.

She looked on the internet and found out about this way called “the chef’s method”. Apparently, you take a normal medium sized pot like you’d use for cooking vegetables. You put the cherries in a large cookie sheet, and then you simply smash down on the cherries. Afterwards, she said it is amazingly easy to remove the pit, and you know that you got every one. Best of all, she said that she is willing to once again make cherry crisp and cherry pie on THESE cherries, but not the others. Well, I guess I will hope to learn how to make reasonably cherry crisp and pie out of the leifheit ones, and eat them very, very slowly. I am once again a happy camper because she will make some pies and crisp out of the ones from the new method.

John S
PDX OR

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Unfortunately I had the same problem with that cherry pitter. It works great on nice firm large sweet cherries, less so on fully ripe, smaller, softer, sour cherries.

I ended up have to go through them all one by one, squeezing gently to see if they had still had pits in them.

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i have that machine as well and also had the same issue. i now just hold my hands over a sheet pan and literally tear every cherry in half, ensuring i get every pit. the rest i freeze and make juice out of them. no pitting needed. im going to have a huge crop again this year as my 2 lutowka polish cherries are loaded for the 1st time this year and my romeo that barely fruited last year is also loaded. despite losing my cj to shoot blight ill still be ahead of the game.

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The hand-tear method is underrated. Yeah you lose a bit of juice but you catch every pit and it’s actually faster once you get into a rhythm. I do the same with overripe ones that would just get mangled by any machine anyway.

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Leifheit Cherry Stoner Remover

Picture from Amazon’s review:

if you put a sheet pan under your hands, you dont lose any juice. just pour it back into the bowl. ive tried all the tricks and tearing the fruit is the most time effective other than juicing them in my euro. juicer. the chics get the leftovers.

Bought a new pitter. Will take picks.

we have an itty bitty funnel (like, 2cm tall, 2mm wide spout). I’ve been inverting it on a cookie sheet and skewering the cherries on it to pit them. Hands still get very saturated in juice. Next year I’ll try just smashing them. It seems like the funnel would be faster, but never know until you do a batch and see how it goes.

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I just use my hands also. I feel like there’s likely no skirting that it’s going to be a bit of work.

I use a ziploc- any squirting juice just hits the sides of the bag and not your eyeball or shirt!

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Just got done with Juliet. Evans is a week or two behind.

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My Monty’s only gave me enough cherry jam for one large jar. It is my favorite jam! Mt new pitter! Its great!

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