Fruit, part one
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Peaches, plums, pears, honeydews, cantaloupes, mangoes, bananas, and tomatoes (yes, they're a fruit) keep on ripening whether they're on the tree, in the store, or in your fruit bowl. Fact is, most produce sold at grocery stores is not fully mature when you bring it home, says Robert L. Wolke, PhD, author of "What Einstein Told His Cook." To help these fruits ripen faster, keep them on the counter for two to five days. Once they start turning soft — or you've sliced them — relocate to the fridge; the 40ºF temps delay decay. While the cold turns banana skins brown, the inside will still be fresh.
Fruit, part two
fridge
Citrus fruits, pineapples, raspberries, strawberries, grapes, watermelon, and cherries don't get any riper once they've been picked — they just go bad. To slow the spoiling process, stash them in the refrigerator immediately.
Bread
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Whether you prefer wheat, white, or another type of bread, it will stay fresh for up to four days at room temperature — depending on humidity — if sealed in its original wrapping. Although bread can be kept in the freezer for up to three months, steer clear of the refrigerator: It'll dry bread out, making it go stale faster.
Coffee
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Depositing your coffee in the fridge or freezer exposes it to fluctuating temps and therefore condensation. "It's like your coffee is brewed a little each time it's exposed to water, and that diminishes the flavor," says Johnny McGregor, PhD, chair of the department of food science and human nutrition at Clemson University. For a better brew, keep coffee in an airtight canister in a cabinet.
Potatoes, onions, garlic
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After these veggies are plucked from the cool, dark soil, they should be stored in a similar environment in your home — but not together.
Olive oil
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You already know that olive oil should be placed away from light, but did you know that the refrigerator is a suitable dark spot? It shields oil from spoilage-inducing heat and oxygen. Although cold temperatures may solidify the oil, they won't affect its quality, Wolke says. If your cabinets are fairly cool, oil should be fine there, too. In a fridge or a chilly cabinet, it'll keep about one year opened and two years unopened.
Flour
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Grab an airtight container and plant your flour in the refrigerator. The cool temperature helps keep white flour fresh for two years; whole wheat flour will last about six months. If you go through your white flour in less than a year, however, you can safely keep it on the counter in an airtight jar or canister. But stash wheat flour in the fridge no matter how fast you use it. The oils it contains make it more susceptible to spoilage.
Keep 'em separated
Store garlic solo so its scent won't permeate other eats.
Stow spuds on their own...their moisture rots onions faster.
Quick tip
Don't store any food on top of the refrigerator. It's warm up there, which will wreak havoc on almost any food — including wine
THE FRIDGE FILES
Now that you know what goes in the refrigerator, let us show you where to put it.
Top shelves
These fruits and veggies will be the first things you see — and the snacks you're most inclined to grab. Plus, up-high storage keeps them at just the right temperature.
When it comes to butter, forget the door — it's simply too warm. Instead, keep your stick in a covered butter dish on a top or middle shelf. In the same area, keep cheese tightly sealed in foil or plastic wrap.
The bottom shelf
Store all meats here; it's the coldest spot in your fridge. Low placement will also prevent any bacteria-laden juices from dripping onto other foods.
To keep eggs fresher longer, stow 'em low and in the carton they came in. And keep the carton shut to avoid odor absorption from other foods.
Separate large amounts of leftovers into small, shallow containers. The less food in each, the faster they cool — that helps prevent the growth of harmful microbes.
Though milk containers may fit snugly in the side door, this isn't an ideal place for storage. Milk is especially sensitive to temperature changes, so put it on a shelf as close to the bottom as it will fit.
One crisper
Leafy vegetables, broccoli, celery, or any veggies with lots of surface area tend to lose moisture quickly. The crisper keeps water vapor in.
The other crisper
Apples stored at room temperature deteriorate 10 times faster than when they're refrigerated. The best spot: the just-humid-enough crisper, away from anything else. Apples give off a natural gas called ethylene that can wilt, spot, or rot other food.
The door
Because condiments are high in natural preservatives, they're okay in the door.
Be sure to shelve reduced-sodium soy sauce here, too. Refrigeration is a must as there's not enough salt to keep it from spoiling.
Because OJ is pasteurized and citric acid hinders bacteria growth, the door is a fine choice.
Recorked white wine will stay fresh in the fridge door for three to five days. (For unopened wine, lay the bottle down so the cork remains moist.)
Avocados
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If you have a rock-hard avocado, put it in a brown paper bag on the counter; it'll be good to go in two to five days. Gotta have guacamole fast? Add a whole apple or banana to the bag to shave a day or so off the wait. Once it's ripe, you can keep it that way for up to three days by moving it to the fridge.
2006-11-19 03:43:20
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answer #1
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answered by txagl 2
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This doesn't sound science-y either, but, think about it, fruit ripens in the warm sun, so there would be less ripening. When fruits and vegetables ripen, they produce something called ethylene gas. Ethylene gas actually causes further ripening - it is used industrially to artificially ripen produce that has been picked early and its effects can be seen when you place an unripened piece of fruit in a bowl with other, riper fruits. The unripened fruit will ripen quickly - thanks to the ethylene gas the other fruits are producing.
2016-03-29 01:33:44
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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