Herb
How the Heck Do You Store Fresh Herbs?: A Quest
Done right, you can preserve their leafy green glory for weeks.
Photo by Rocky Luten
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6 Comments
TGard
March 28, 2021
Lots of good information, Peter, thank you. Anatolia also offers many good tips.I find that store bought herbs last longer if I simply un bundle or unpackaged them and store them in those green bags for vegetable storing that one can purchase at Bed Bath and Beyond. If the herbs are wet when unbundled, I gently spread them out on a towel and then let them dry off a good bit, then loosely put into a green bag with a piece of paper towel on the bottom, stored in the vegetable drawer. I live in western Oregon so just about anything green is very, very fresh when I purchase it. Makes a huge difference.
Laurie A.
February 3, 2021
I store parsley, washed and shaken dry, in a glass of water with a plastic bag loosely covering all. Works like a charm! The parsley will last for a long time this way.
[email protected]
January 18, 2021
I have discovered what seems like a miracle. After chopping a head of lettuce and radicchio, I wash them in a salad spinner, and then, once I've gotten nearly all of the water out and the outer tub empty, I put the entire thing (with the lid) in the refrigerator. It's like Hanukkah for your greens... They last for days! The basket-in-bowl seems to optimize humidity while keeping condensation at the bottom of the bowl, so your greens won't be sitting in it. Works with parsley and cilantro too. I wish I had discovered this ages ago.
carrie B.
January 14, 2021
I have found that large glass jars/canisters with rubber seals are the best for keeping herbs dry - I wash them and spin them dry and don't pack them too tightly and they last a longer time than anything in plastic -
Cielkaye
January 6, 2021
The definitive answer to this problem. Store them in genuine Tupperware, the sort where you ‘burp’ the lid. They will last for ages. I have found that it only works with Tupperware, not the cheaper stuff.
AntoniaJames
January 6, 2021
I've been using Rubbermaid boxes with the tight red lids for years. They work great.
Some people have "vegetable drawers" in their fridges. I have an "herbs and aromatics" drawer in mine. Apart from the scallions, ginger root, and lemons/limes that reside there, it is full of boxes - larger flat boxes for parsley and cilantro and smaller ones for the various fresh herbs I grow in our community gardens (a quick bike ride away) or that I buy at the store in the winter. All of the boxes are labeled.
The key is to unbundle bunches immediately, pull out any crushed or otherwise less than perfect leaves, separate the stems to let them dry out a bit, and then put the herbs in the boxes, loosely, with a piece of paper towel on the bottom of the box and to separate layers.
Herbs last for at least a week with this system - typically much longer, I expect, though I generally use any cut herbs within a week. I NEVER wash before storing. I live in the high desert, so herbs that are wet coming in from the market dry quickly.
Seriously, though, the best way to keep herbs from going bad is to use them right away. Why on earth wouldn't you? Fresh herbs make just about anything you put them in so much better. If something comes up and I know I won't be using a fresh herb before it's past its peak, I pop it into the freezer to use in stock. ;o)
Some people have "vegetable drawers" in their fridges. I have an "herbs and aromatics" drawer in mine. Apart from the scallions, ginger root, and lemons/limes that reside there, it is full of boxes - larger flat boxes for parsley and cilantro and smaller ones for the various fresh herbs I grow in our community gardens (a quick bike ride away) or that I buy at the store in the winter. All of the boxes are labeled.
The key is to unbundle bunches immediately, pull out any crushed or otherwise less than perfect leaves, separate the stems to let them dry out a bit, and then put the herbs in the boxes, loosely, with a piece of paper towel on the bottom of the box and to separate layers.
Herbs last for at least a week with this system - typically much longer, I expect, though I generally use any cut herbs within a week. I NEVER wash before storing. I live in the high desert, so herbs that are wet coming in from the market dry quickly.
Seriously, though, the best way to keep herbs from going bad is to use them right away. Why on earth wouldn't you? Fresh herbs make just about anything you put them in so much better. If something comes up and I know I won't be using a fresh herb before it's past its peak, I pop it into the freezer to use in stock. ;o)
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