Close Menu
Vikent
  • Home
  • News
  • Moral Story
  • Jokes
  • Life Hacks
  • Health and Fitness
  • Gardening
  • Recipes
  • Quiz
My New Logo
  • Home
  • News
  • Moral Story
  • Jokes
  • Life Hacks
  • Health and Fitness
  • Gardening
  • Recipes
My New Logo
Home»Life Style»Fruits and Vegetables You Shouldn’t Be Refrigerating
Life Style

Fruits and Vegetables You Shouldn’t Be Refrigerating

In an ideal world, you’d never need to put produce in the fridge. You’d go to the market before each meal, pick up your locally-grown vegetables, walk home, unpack, and start cooking right away. There’d be no need for refrigeration at all. And that sounds nice, but that’s definitely not the world we live in. Some produce needs to go in the fridge, because we don’t have the time or energy to go to the market three times a day.

  1. Garlic, Onions, and Shallots

With the exception of spring onions and scallions, alliums shouldn’t be stored in the fridge. These bulbs benefit from being kept in a cool, dry, dark place. And make sure to avoid wrapping them in plastic bags. Your shallots, onions, and garlic want to breathe! And breathing in a plastic bag isn’t the easiest thing to do.

2. Tomatoes

Tomatoes do best on the counter, in the warm light of the sun (assuming you have a window in your kitchen), where they can ripen to absolute perfection. Putting a tomato in the fridge does weird things to it’s texture, making the flesh mealy and unpleasant. And when we’re shelling out cold hard cash for heirloom tomatoes at the peak of their season, preserving that perfect texture and juicy flesh is our number one priority.

3. Pineapple

Once you pick a pineapple, it doesn’t get any riper, so you should try to buy a perfectly ripe pineapple with the intention of eating it sooner rather than later. That also means that you should just leave it at room temperature – keeping it in the fridge isn’t going to have an effect on its ripeness.

4. Potatoes and Sweet Potatoes

Similar to the alliums we were talking about earlier, you want to store these starchy vegetables in a cool, dry, dark place. This keeps potatoes from sprouting, which is facilitated by sunlight and moisture. Sprouting your potatoes won’t result in more potatoes, just the added chore of trimming off the sprouts (which taste terrible and have some potentially harmful compounds in them).

5. Hard Squashes

You should store summer squash (like zucchini) in the fridge, but thick-skinned squash like acorn, butternut, or kabocha should stay at room temperature. This is partially to preserve their texture, but it’s mostly because squash tend to take up a lot of real estate in the drawers and on the shelves of your fridge. It’s crowded enough as it is in there, so keep those hard squash out on the counter and save that space for something else.

6. Corn

Corn isn’t really a vegetable – a story for another time – and it doesn’t really belong in the fridge. But that doesn’t mean that you can’t call it one…or put it in the fridge. Putting corn in the fridge isn’t going to hurt it per se, and it may keep it fresher longer, but if you’re going to use it within a day or two you might as well leave it out and free up some fridge space.

7. Melons

You could put melons in the fridge…if you really wanted to. But we prefer to eat melons at room temperature, so the flesh is as soft as possible. Changing the temperature of the melon will tense up the interior, possibly making it a tad less succulent.

 

Foods fruit hacks healthy kitchen Life Style summer Tips

Related Post

I Thought Mom Bought a Harley-Davidson to Embarrass Me in Front of Neighbors, but the Real Reason Ran Deeper

The police dog, seeing this bag at the airport, began to whine and look at the border guard…

He’s 95, but His Liver’s Like a Teenager’s—Thanks to This Simple Daily Juice! 

Little Girl’s Bruises Kept Getting Worse. When Mom Found Out The Truth, It Was Too Late…

HE WOULDN’T STOP CLIMBING INTO MY LAP—EVEN WHEN HE COULD BARELY STAND

My 11-Year-Old Son Convinced Me to Install a Camera in the Basement – ‘Nanny Does Bad Things Down There’

Spot 3 differences between the lady archer pictures in 15 seconds!

‘James Bond’ and ‘Walking Tall’ actor Joe Don Baker dead at 89

Unique perfumes, perfect for the most sophisticated and elegant…

Copyright © 2024. Designed by Vikent.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact Us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.