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Category: > Health > 8 Tips and Tricks On How To Properly Store Fresh Produce

8 Tips and Tricks On How To Properly Store Fresh Produce

May 7, 2013 Carly Fraser Save For Later Print

Last Updated: Apr 10, 2020

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Vegan woman choosing healthy antioxidant colorful veggies, raw juice and fruits

Do you ever find yourself tossing out spoiled fruit and vegetables? These 8 tips and tricks on how to properly store fresh produce will help extend the shelf life of your produce and save you money!

The University of Arizona conducted a study that analyzed families and their eating habits and found that, on an average, over 470 pounds of food was tossed out (14% of all food brought home), at an annual cost of $600! One fourth of all produce Americans buy is thrown out because it has gone bad, which sums up nationally to around $43 billions dollars worth of food per year!

If your produce goes bad after just a few days, it may be because you are storing it improperly. Some fruits and vegetables give off ethylene gas (a ripening agent), that speeds the ripening of ethylene-sensitive foods (and thus leaving them to rot at a much higher rate). If some of your produce has mold on it, this mold can proliferate and rapidly spread to anything nearby. If you do have spoiled produce, make sure you toss it out immediately to prevent spoilage of nearby food items.

Lengthen shelf life

Putting fruit and vegetables in cooler areas (like the fridge) slows down the respiration process and helps make (most) produce last longer. In warmer temperatures, produce respires at a much faster rate, making the ripening process much faster.

You do want to slow down the rate of respiration, however, you do not want to stop it altogether. Sticking produce in airtight plastic bags in the fridge is one of the worst things you can do to fruit and vegetables. You will suffocate them and speed up the rate of decay (and thus leave you throwing out tonnes of produce)

If you recall earlier when I mentioned ethylene gas (a natural ripening agent released from fruit and vegetables), this can lead to premature decay. If you put greens like kale, collards or spinach in the same bin as nectarines, peaches or apples, you will find your greens turning yellow and limp in just a few days.

Trick #1:

Separate produce that emits ethylene from produce that is ethylene-sensitive:

– High ethylene-gas emitting produce: apples, nectarines, apricots, papayas, avocados, passion fruit, cantaloupe, peahces, cherimoyas and pears

– Keep these foods away from high ethylene-gas emitting produce: bananas (ripe), broccoli, brussels sprouts, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, cucumbers, eggplant, lettuce and other leafy greens, parsley, peas, peppers, squash, sweet potatoes and watermelon

– Refrigerate apples, apricots, canteloupe, figs, and honeydew

– Don’t refrigerate avocados, unripe bananas, nectarines, peaches, pears, plums, and tomatoes

Trick #2:

Eat more perishable items first.

For example, eat your fragile raspberries sooner than you would your apples. Fruit that ripens faster, eat first, and fruit that takes longer to ripen eat last.

Eat First:
– Artichokes
– Asparagus
– Avocados
– Bananas
– Basil
– Broccoli
– Cherries
– Dill
– Green beans
– Mustard greens
– Mushrooms
– Watercress
– Strawberries
– Raspberries

Eat Second:
– Apricots
– Bell peppers
– Brussels sprouts
– Bell peppers
– Grapefruit
– Cauliflower
– Leeks
– Lemons
– Mint
– Oranges
– Oregano
– Peaches
– Parsley
– Pears
– Spinach
– Plums
– Tomatoes
– Watermelon

Eat Third (these last for quite a while):
– Apples
– Cabbage
– Beets
– Carrots
– Celery
– Garlic
– Potatoes
– Onion
– Winter squash

Trick #3: 

Some fruit and vegetables should never be refrigerated, or should not be refrigerated until fully ripe!

For example, keep tomatoes FAR AWAY from the fridge! They turn mealy and flavourless if refrigerated. Keep tomatoes at room temperature to ripen, and only store tomatoes in the fridge if they have been cut.

Melons should not be refrigerated until fully ripe. If you put them in the fridge when they are still hard, they will turn rubbery and flavourless. The only exception here is watermelon, which tastes wonderful refrigerated (it gets a little more crunchy I find)

Winter squashes, onion, garlic and potatoes should not be kept in the fridge either, and should be kept in a cool dark place.

Trick #4: 

Use perforated plastic bags to allow for air circulation (this also prevents drying out of produce)

Trick #5:

Fresh herbs do well when you store them in water. Use mason jars, and fill them with a little bit of water – you can use these mason jars to store parsley, cilantro, oregano, sage, marjoram, basil, rosemary, tarragon, mint and chives.

For cruciferous greens like kale, chard, and collards, remove the tough stems and cut the leaves into ribbons. Store them in a perforated plastic bag with damp paper towel to keep them fresh. Likewise, you can also store your greens in little water containers to keep the leaves crisp and prevent wilting (just put the base of your romaine, kale, chard, collards, or other leafy greens in a mason jar with a little bit of water)

Trick #6:

To prevent root vegetables from wilting, cut off their tops before refrigerating.

Trick #7: 

Use paper towel in your produce bags to absorb extra moisture (this is good for leafy vegetables and herbs, especially if there is not enough room in your fridge to use the mason jar & water idea)

Trick #8:

Never soak your mushrooms in water, and do not wash them in water before storing them. Mushrooms should be left alone – water spoils their flavour. If they are muddy, remove the mud just before you eat them with a dry towel (the mud should just crumble off – and a little bit of dirt never hurt anyone, especially if you are consuming organic produce)

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Filed Under: Health, Healthy Home Tagged With: fruit, storing, vegetables

Carly Fraser

About the Author

Carly Fraser has her BSc (Hons.) Degree in Neuroscience, and is the owner and founder at Live Love Fruit. She currently lives in Winnipeg, Manitoba, with a determined life mission to help inspire and motivate individuals to critically think about what they put in their bodies and to find balance through nutrition and lifestyle. She has helped hundreds of thousands of individuals to re-connect with their bodies and learn self-love through proper eating habits and natural living. She loves to do yoga, dance, and immerse herself in nature.

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Comments

  1. S says

    Feb 17, 2014 at 12:28 am

    Tupperware has fridge smarts are great for food storage also and keep fruits and veg seperate.

    Reply
  2. Curtis Rudisail says

    Feb 17, 2014 at 10:23 pm

    That I will check it out..

    Reply
  3. Patti says

    Mar 28, 2015 at 8:14 pm

    Carly…I just saw this reposted on March 26, 2015 8:08 p.m. Where can I find the “chart”? When I click on it, it goes to this article “8 Tips and Tricks On How To Properly Store Fresh Produce
    http://livelovefruit.wpengine.com/2013/05/how-to-properly-store-fresh-produce/#wIkVWeImYJb3pVJA.99 “. I would love to have the chart for my fridge… 🙂

    Reply
    • Carly Fraser says

      Mar 31, 2015 at 5:01 pm

      Hey Patti! I never made a chart, but that is good thinking for the future! The image in the link was a separate one I uploaded. If you e-mail me at [email protected] I can send it to you 🙂

      Reply
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Trackbacks

  1. How to store your fruit and veg! | Vegan Heath says:
    Feb 18, 2014 at 5:44 pm

    […] via How To Store Produce | Live Love Fruit. […]

    Reply
  2. 10 Tips To Save Pounds Off Your Weekly Shopping Bill says:
    Oct 26, 2015 at 12:39 pm

    […] you find yourself throwing out a lot of food, then you might not be storing it properly or you’re just un-necessarily throwing out food items that could otherwise be frozen. Freeze your […]

    Reply
  3. This One Simple Trick Will Keep Your Herbs Fresh For Twice As Long says:
    Nov 5, 2015 at 6:00 pm

    […] When I went plant-based raw, I found myself buying a host of different produce items that had a seemingly short shelf-life. I’d often buy things and just throw them into the fridge without even thinking twice about how I should have stored them. […]

    Reply

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