No peach tree that Christmas. However, after we moved here and became homeowners, we set about making our back yard a more edible landscape. Thanks to my spouse's hard work, part of the patio became a strawberry patch and raspberry canes went into a back corner with blueberry bushes and recycled raised beds along the fences. My daughter got her peach tree--two of them, in fact, one dwarf variety and one not-so-dwarf variety. In the spring the trees have beautiful blossoms, in the summer their thick foliage provides a dense patch of shade.
My daughter carefully tends the trees--removing diseased leaves, thinning the branches and then the fruit, so that each peach has plenty of room and air circulation. But her dream of harvesting her own peaches has not borne fruit, so to speak. Apparently the fauna of our backyard can read the Certified Wildlife Habitat sign and think that the peaches, and blueberries for that matter, are for them. It's OK, they are eating unripe peaches, and we can get fresh ripe peaches nearby to make these lovely muffins.
If you've been making ice cream lately, you may have half a cup of heavy cream left over. (If not, go out and buy a pint of heavy cream and use 1 1/2 cups for a batch of ice cream so you'll have a leftover.) Use it in these muffins! They taste so rich "almost like peach poundcake" my daughter said while polishing off the leftovers on the second day. I used more sugar than I usually use in a muffin (1/3 cup vs my usual 1/4 cup, when I remember to add the sugar) and only 1/2 cup of whole wheat flour, but this muffin recipe remains one that I'm happy to offer my kids as a snack or breakfast, not just reserved for dessert.