Organize Your Produce, Save $1000's of Dollars: The Healthy Storage Hacks That Will Change Your Life

Organize Your Produce, Save $1000's of Dollars: The Healthy Storage Hacks That Will Change Your Life
Here I was, being self-righteous, rounding up at the grocery store to support the local “Feed the Children” and coming back home merely to throw out 40% of my fresh produce.

I looked into the mirror and realized I was a produce hoarder. I picked up produce at all the grocery stores and farmer’s markets to discard quickly and couldn't stop. It was unfulfilling, extremely wasteful, and it was time to make a change.


The Science: Why Produce Spoils

I researched why produce goes bad in the first place, and it’s due to a few key factors: bacterial growth, oxidation, and ethylene gas buildup.

One key contributor to spoilage is ethylene gas, a natural plant hormone many fruits and vegetables produce as they ripen. While it serves a valuable purpose in nature, it doesn’t work well in your refrigerator.

a. High ethylene producers — such as apples and avocados — release this gas in larger quantities, which speeds up ripening.

1. Separate Glass Storage Containers

Keep high-ethylene emitters like apples and bananas separate from ethylene-sensitive produce such as leafy greens and berries. Storing them in different fridge compartments or containers can prevent premature ripening and spoilage.

2. Use Ethylene Absorbers

Ethylene absorbers, made from materials such as activated charcoal, zeolite clay, or alumina, can be placed in your refrigerator’s crisper drawer or in containers to neutralize the gas and slow down the ripening process.

I found the Ethylene Absorbers on the market not so great, so I made my own; you can buy them here. They are 100% sustainable and organic, among the other features noted below:


3. Proper Ventilation

Good airflow in your fridge reduces ethylene buildup, and storing produce in containers with ventilation, like mason jars with breathable lids, helps extend shelf life.

4. Temperature Control

Store produce at the right temperature to slow ripening. Cooler temperatures, such as those in the refrigerator, reduce ethylene production and bacterial growth, keeping produce fresher for longer.

a. Lettuce and Leafy Greens:

Store in a glass container with a damp cotton cloth. This method keeps them hydrated without becoming soggy, extending their shelf life to 1–2 weeks.

b. Carrots and Beets:

Store these root vegetables in sealed glass containers with an ethylene absorber to extend their freshness for up to 3–4 weeks.

c. Apples:

They can be stored in the crisper drawer or in a ventilated container to maintain their firmness and freshness for 4–6 weeks.

d. Strawberries and Blueberries:

Store in a glass container lined with cheesecloth and include an ethylene absorber to maintain their freshness for up to 1–2 weeks.

e. DOUBLE your produce’s lifespan Inside Refrigerator 



f. DOUBLE your produce’s lifespan Outside Refrigerator

RECOMMENDED: Anchor Hocking Glass Food Storage Containers

Ready to become a produce expert? Get our Produce Organization Guide today and start saving money and reducing waste immediately.

Back to blog