Fruits and vegetables are essential components of our nutrition.
However, it is advantageous to go a step further and consume them when they are still fresh.
There’s a pure thrill in the snap of leafy greens, the juiciness of oranges or the crunch of raw carrots fresh from the store. However, keeping those perishables fresh once you get them home can be difficult, especially during the dry season.
Here are a few simple tips to help you enjoy your fresh fruits and vegetables for longer while also reducing the rate at which they dry out.
1) Start fresh
The first step in ensuring the longest storage life is to select the freshest fruits and vegetables. Green leafy vegetables should be “richly colored” and free of “any weak or fading leaves.”
When selecting root vegetables, cabbages, squash, and onions, look for ones that are “heavy for their size” and free of blemishes or soft places.
Citrus fruits, such as lemons, oranges, grapefruits, and tangerines, have a pleasant aroma and no soft patches. Apples have firm, smooth skin that is free of blemishes.
Cucumbers, eggplants, and peppers are dense, wrinkle-free, and dark. Tomatoes must be solid, have a pleasant aroma, and be free of stains. The tomato is riper when it is red.
The skin of potatoes should not be wrinkled. Green skin indicates deadly solanine. Dirt on potatoes can indicate freshness because they are usually washed before storage.
2. Know the conditions
Freshness, type, temperature, ethylene production, and ventilation must all be considered while preserving fresh fruits and vegetables. Many fruits and vegetables store well in the refrigerator, but some, such as potatoes, onions, and garlic, are best kept at cool room temperature.
Some fruits, such as apples and bananas, naturally produce Ethylene (a plant components that stimulate ripening in fruits). Ethylene hastens the ripening (and eventual death) of ethylene-sensitive vegetables such as cabbage, leafy greens, lettuce, and broccoli, to mention a few.
These ethylene-sensitive fruits and vegetables should be kept away from ethylene producing ones.
3) Wrapping and refrigerating
Wrapping fruits and vegetables can help seal in moisture while also protecting them from dry air. Fruits and vegetables such as peppers, citrus fruits, mushrooms, broccoli, cabbage, carrots, okra, root vegetables, and so on can be wrapped in film or stored in zip lock bags to keep them fresh.
Refrigerable fruits or vegetables when sealed, whether in zip-top plastic bags, reusable silicone pouches, or containers with tight-fitting lids stay fresher for longer.
If you buy carrots, beets, or other vegetables with their greens still attached, cut the tops all the way down to the root before storing them to seal in their moisture.
Keep leafy greens unwashed and store in a zip lock bag to keep them fresh. Rinsing them before storing might cause them to rot faster.
4) Room Temperature
Produce that stays best at room temperature, such as potatoes, onions, and bananas, need air circulation and should be kept out and spaced in a cool, dark place with relatively high humidity and air circulation. Ripe ones should also be separated from the unripe or moderately ripe ones.
Banana and onions (ethylene producing fruits) should be kept separately from other fruits. Potatoes and yams store well in comparable settings but may have different shelf life.
5) Soaking in water
Some fruits and vegetables, particularly greens, can be soaked and stored outside or in the refrigerator. This approach may be used to keep fruits and vegetables fresh, such as avocado and leafy greens.