Thursday, October 18, 2007

How To Keep Lettuce Fresh

Hello:)

Don't know if any of your face this problem but I do and I found a solution for it! I love my greens, I have them everyday, I could probably consume a head of lettuce in the duration of 5 days...if only it lasts that long, by the 3rd day its all soggy and bleh. I found some tips online on how to keep them nice and crisp:

1. Get Fresh - Buy the freshest lettuce you can from a farmer's market or a grocery store you know that typically has good produce.
2. Keep it cool - Set your refrigerator and produce drawer temperature and humidity controls correctly. You don't want your refrigerator temperature set low and the humdity high or your lettuce will "sweat" and get soggy, especially if there is water from the leaves already pooling in the produce bag. Likewise, if you have the fridge set to the coldest setting, and the humidity set too high or the leaves are wet, your lettuce will frost (which is equally as tragic!).
3. Wrap it Up - If you buy iceberg lettuce (which I don't really advocate since it is has zero nutritional value), simply wrap it in a moistened paper towel as soon as you get home from the store and place it back in the plastic bag before storing it in the drawer. The really absorbent kind of paper towel works best.
With leafy lettuce greens like romaine, red leaf or green leaf lettuce, you can follow the same process. I have found though that it is better to remove leafy greens from their plastic bag and pat the leaves dry with a paper towel before storing them if they are wet from the produce sprayer at the store. Squeeze the water out from the paper towel and wrap the head of lettuce up. Place the wrapped head of lettuce back in the bag and in the produce drawer.
4. Room to Breathe - Store your lettuce in your produce drawer with plenty of breathing room. Leaves can be easily bruised if you have lots of other vegetables crammed in with the lettuce.
5. Water in the Bag? - As soon as you see water pooling up in your the produce bag of lettuce, drain it out if you your going to only use part of the lettuce and storing the rest for later use. Water pooling in the bag can be a sign that your humidity setting is too high, so just keep an eye one it and make adjustments if you notice this happens often.
6. Storing Leftover Salad? - Lay a damp paper towel over the top of the salad and cover the bowl with plastic wrap or a tight fitting lid.
Kitchen Tip: To save time in the kitchen, wash and tear your greens and make a big salad "base" that you and pick off for a few days during the week. Since you've already made a salad base, changing up the basic salad with different vegetables, chicken, tuna, fresh herbs, etc. is a snap!

5 Comments:

Blogger K.thekuwaiti said...

I would just throw it away after three days ... thats way too much work. Or force everyone in the house to eat Salad, all day, everyday.

2:27 AM  
Blogger This Lady said...

What I do is to dry the leaves using a salad spinner. If u dont have one, u really should! its amazing! It takes away all the sogginess and extra moisture.
Then I put the leaves (lettuce, rocket, basil, everything!) in a ziplock bag and keep it in the fridge.
It can last me a week (but they usually dont coz i run out after 3 days!)

3:31 AM  
Blogger *~Princesita~* said...

I've heard of those! Where can i get it in kuwait?

4:13 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

princesita i dunno about kuwait but you can find them on Amazon.com

10:21 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

thanks pricesita nice blog by the way .
am a nutrition freak

3:26 AM  

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