How to Harvest Aronia melanocarpa Berries

This post is about How to Harvest Aronia melanocarpa Berries.  We will talk about harvesting and cleaning aronia and then we will bag them and freeze them for processing in the future.  Aronia is ready to be harvested in August and I’m actually harvesting a little later than usual.  The best time to harvest aronia is in early to mid-August, not in late August like I’m doing this year.

About Aronia

The Latin name is Aronia melanocarpa and it has a nickname of choke berry because it is so astringent that it makes you want to choke.  It is a member of the rose family and is a deciduous cold hardy shrub, which is hardy from zone 8 down to zone 3.  It is a native to eastern North America.

How to Harvest Aronia melanocarpa Berries

How to Harvest Aronia melanocarpa Berries – The Bush

In late May it has fragrant flowers giving way to fruit that matures in August.  The fruit is edible, but is very astringent.  Aronia is self-fertile and is pollinated by bees.  The Viking variety is a little shorter than some other aronia, only growing 3 to 6 feet high.

Removal from the Shrub

How to Harvest Aronia melanocarpa Berries

How to Harvest Aronia melanocarpa Berries – Fruit

The first step of the harvest is to remove the berries from the shrub.  Cut the cluster of fruit off back where it meets the branch.  Then pull off any bugs and put the fruit cluster in a bowl.  Do this for all of the fruit on the bush. After all of the fruit has been removed from the shrub, I head in the house for the next step.

How to Harvest Aronia melanocarpa Berries

Inspection and Separation

Now I inspect each berry to see if it is usable.  Some of them may have over ripened and be shriveled up.  Others may have bugs in them.  You can tell this by color and holes in the fruit.  At this point you separate the individual berries from the cluster.

I put the good fruit in a colander for further processing. I set the bad fruit aside and we will discuss what to do with them in a moment.

Separating the Good from the Bad

Wash and Dry

Next I wash the berries in the colander.  I just run them under some cold water and run my hands through them to loosen anything that is stuck to them.

On the counter I have a paper towel.  After washing, I pour the berries on the paper towel and then I take another paper towel and dry them.  I do this by laying the second paper towel on top of the berries and gently roll the paper towel on the berries, being careful not to squash the berries.  This movement rolls the berries between the paper towels and dries all sides of the berries.

Label and Bag

I now pick the bag I want to freeze the berries in and label the bag with a sharpie marker.  I put the name of the fruit that is going into the bag and the date that they are being frozen.

Bag for Freezer

Because I’m freezing them for a month or more, I will double bag them so they don’t get freezer burned.  So I put the berries in an UN-labeled bag and then I put that bag in the labeled bag.

Freezing

Now that they have been picked, washed, dried, bagged, and labeled, all that is left is the freezing part.  Simply toss them in a freezer until you need them.  If you dried them well enough, they will not stick together, so you do not need to flash freeze them.

Processing

You can make a lot of items with aronia.  They are a super fruit claimed to be full of antioxidants.  Keep an eye out on this blog post for a future article on processing aronia.  I’m not sure exactly what I’m going to make yet, but it will likely be something along the lines of syrup that you take once a day for the antioxidant benefit.

Bad Fruit

Now let’s talk about the bad fruit that we set aside in a previous step.  There is no sense in wasting fruit, even if it is bad.  So I save seeds from the over ripe fruit.  Each fruit has up to seven seeds.

Planting the Seed

To grow aronia from seed, follow along. Split the fruit open and remove the seeds with your finger nails. Put the seeds on a paper towel and let them dry for a month.  Then cold stratify them for three months and plant them.

How to Harvest Aronia melanocarpa Berries

How to Harvest Aronia melanocarpa Berries – Seed on the Paper Towel

Compost all of the stems and bad fruit pulp not used.

?Want to Help our Small Business Out?

If you are local you can support our small business by buying plants at Great Escape Nursery . You can also help us by shopping on Amazon just by going through our storefront! As an Amazon Associate, I earn commission from qualifying purchases. There is no additional cost to you! Our storefront at Amazon is located at this link: https://www.amazon.com/shop/greatescapefarms. Buying from either location helps our business produce more content for you.

If you like this blog post and want to find out more about Great Escape Farms check out our Great Escape Farms Overview.  Here you get an overview of all the wonderful stuff we are involved in.  Also, sign up for our email list at the bottom of the linked page.

Great Escape Farms is now on Patreon!  You can support us for as little as $1. If you enjoy our work and want to help support us, please check out our Patreon page at: https://www.patreon.com/gef.

The Video

Check out our YouTube video on Harvesting Aronia Berries.

Thanks for watching the How to Harvest Aronia melanocarpa Berries post.

Please give us your thoughts on How to Harvest Aronia melanocarpa Berries by commenting below.

16 Comments

  • Fred says:

    I would suggest making jams with no sugar added, using banana, apple, raisins or pineapple a healthy sweetener.
    You cannot benefits from the antioxidant benefits if you make sugar-loaded syrup.

  • Jim says:

    I bought a Viking aronia bush about 3 weeks ago. It was not only plantable but harvestable. I harvested approximately 1 quart of berrys. With the berries I made Glam jam (ginger, lime juice and zest, aronia, and maple syrup) I also make the maple syrup each spring. It is pretty tasty.
    I am new to your site and blog and am impressed. Thanks for the posts and info.

    • Todd McCree says:

      Thanks for the recipe Jim. I’m glad you like the site and thanks for commenting. I can tell from google analytics that I have a lot of people visiting the site, but not many comments. I appreciate the feedback.

  • paul says:

    Hi ,
    We planted 2 small Aronia plants last year and now have a fair amount of fruit on both, looking forward to harvesting them in August.
    We are in England and had not seen this fruit before, I found that it was grown in North America and Eastern Europe but not here in U.K.
    However, this year a farm in Kent ( county) has now a large plantation of Aronia, ( shame as we felt quite unique with our two unusual little fruit bushes )so expecting to see a good number of Aronia products to be in the supermarkets soon.
    Which I hope to try and then make my own versions.
    Thank you for the information plus video which was helpful.
    Best wishes and good luck with your enterprise.
    Paul

  • Marcia says:

    Can I use aronia berries that have already started st shrivel for dehydrating for powders?

    • Todd McCree says:

      The shriveled berries still on the bush are just air dehydrating for you. I eat them regularly and see no reason why you can’t finish them off in the dehydrator.

  • Sally says:

    I had read to harvest later in the year, almost frost time. My first few years of harvest were earlier like you suggested and those have been better fruit outcomes. The berries get sweeter the longer you wait, but the skins get tough in my jam and are less palatable in the later harvest. Thanks for your post!

    • Todd McCree says:

      Yes, I’ve discovered over the years that aronia does get sweeter later in the year and they lose some of the astringency.

  • Joanie says:

    This is my second harvest from my aronia. Last year I dried them by placing them on paper, like I would dry herbs, and left them for a few weeks. They dried perfectly. All winter I put them in my morning porridge to cook with everything. Very palatable in this stage and no sugar needed.

    • Todd McCree says:

      That’s awesome. I’ve dehydrated them before in a dehydrator and been able to use the all year as well.

  • Karen Osowski says:

    Bears love them! It is August 30 and over night found my young bush eaten by bear. My other large tree is being harvested today! It was an unusually good year as my little bush never produced until this year. As with my apple tree and other plants are so healthy and was told it was due to having an abundance of CO2.

  • George says:

    Question: when and how to remove the stems from the berries?

    • Todd McCree says:

      I remove the stems as I’m picking them. They are not a real juicy fruit so you don’t have to worry about juices leaking out. I’ve found that if I pull stems off as I go along, it seems like less work later when I have a lot of fruit collected.

Leave a Comment