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35 results in Guide for "storage"
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Root vegetables, storage crops, and winter farm shopping
Root vegetables and storage crops are what make winter local farm shopping possible. This guide explains what to look for, how to store it, and why local versions are worth seeking out.
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Should you wash produce before storing?
Usually, no. Most produce keeps better when it is washed right before use rather than before storage, especially if there is any chance moisture will remain on the surface.
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Why your produce goes bad quickly
Produce usually spoils quickly for a few repeatable reasons: too much moisture, the wrong storage zone, too much delay, or buying without a plan. Once you fix those habits, waste usually drops fast.
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Best foods to freeze, store, or preserve in fall
Fall is the best window to build a winter food supply from local farms. Some crops need nothing more than a cool shelf; others freeze or ferment beautifully with minimal effort.
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How to Store and Freeze Farm-Fresh Meat
Farm-fresh meat is often sold in bulk or in packaging that's different from what you'd find at a grocery store. Knowing how to store, freeze, and thaw it properly means nothing goes to waste and every cut comes out as…
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How to Store Farm-Fresh Eggs the Right Way
Farm-fresh eggs behave differently from store-bought, and storing them wrong can cut their shelf life in half. Here's exactly what to do — and why it matters.
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Grocery store produce vs farm-fresh produce
Grocery store produce and farm-fresh produce are not the same thing — and understanding the differences can help you make better decisions for your kitchen and your budget.
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The Real Difference Between Local Food and Grocery Store Food
Beyond the marketing, there are genuine and measurable differences between food bought locally and food from a chain grocery store. Here's what they actually are.
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Buying meat in bulk vs shopping weekly
Buying a large quantity of meat from a local farm at once and buying smaller amounts each week are two very different approaches. Each has real advantages depending on how you cook and store food.
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Comfort meals built around local winter ingredients
Winter farm ingredients — root vegetables, dried beans, cured meats, and storage squash — are exactly what you need for the kind of slow, satisfying cooking the season calls for.
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What to buy from local farms in fall
Fall is one of the most rewarding seasons to shop from local farms — winter squash, root vegetables, apples, brassicas, and storage crops are all at peak quality and worth stocking up on before winter.
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What to do with backyard tomatoes
Backyard tomatoes are usually more delicate and more abundant than store-bought ones, so the best use plan is the one that respects both. These ideas help you handle the rush without wasting your nicest fruit.
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Local Eggs vs Grocery Store Eggs: What Is the Difference
The eggs at the grocery store and the eggs from a local farm can look completely different — and they often are. Here's what actually separates them and why it matters.
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What makes an online farm store feel premium
Premium doesn't require expensive packaging or a marketing agency. For farm stores, it comes from the clarity, care, and consistency of how you present your products online.
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What seasonal eating looks like in winter
Winter seasonal eating is not about deprivation — it is a distinct approach to food built around storage crops, proteins, preserved goods, and the slow cooking that cold weather suits.
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Why local produce sometimes looks different than grocery store produce
Local produce doesn't always look picture-perfect, and that's not a quality problem. Here's what's actually behind the differences in size, color, and shape.
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What to buy from local farms in winter
Winter is quieter on the farm, but local buying doesn't have to stop. Here's what's genuinely available from small producers during the cold months and how to make the most of it.
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What to do with apples
A bag of apples lasts longer than most produce, but it still helps to have more than one use in mind. These ideas keep apples moving before they go mealy in the drawer.
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What to do with bell peppers
Bell peppers are one of the easiest vegetables to work through because they are good raw, cooked, and frozen for later. These ideas help you use a full bag without boredom.
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What to do with blueberries
Blueberries are easy to snack on, but a large amount still goes faster if you give it a few deliberate uses. These ideas help you enjoy them before they wrinkle or ferment.
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What to do with carrots
Carrots are forgiving, but a full bag still benefits from a plan. These ideas help you move through extra carrots in ways that are practical, not fussy.
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What to do with extra garden produce
Extra garden produce is easiest to manage when you sort it by urgency, not by category. A little triage turns a pile of mixed produce into a workable plan.
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What to do with extra strawberries
Extra strawberries do not give you much time, so the best plan is to sort them quickly and use the most delicate berries first. These ideas help you get through them before mold or softness takes over.
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What to do with fresh basil
Fresh basil has huge flavor but not much patience. These are the easiest ways to use a full bunch before the leaves blacken or collapse.
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What to do with fresh corn
Fresh corn is easiest to enjoy when you use it quickly and keep the prep simple. These ideas help you get through a market bag before the kernels lose their best texture and sweetness.
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What to do with garlic
A lot of garlic is not really a problem if you use it intentionally. These ideas help you move through extra heads without letting cloves dry out or sprout in the pantry.
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What to do with green beans
Green beans are easy to use up when you keep the cooking simple. These ideas help you move through a surplus without ending up with limp beans in the crisper.
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What to do with kale
Kale is easier to use than its reputation suggests, especially when you stop saving it for one perfect salad. These ideas help you move through a bunch or bag without waste.
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What to do with onions
Extra onions are rarely an emergency, but they are extremely useful to prep ahead. These ideas help you turn a surplus into weeknight leverage instead of just another bag in the pantry.
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What to do with peaches before they go bad
Peaches can go from hard to perfect to too soft in a very small window. These are the easiest ways to use them while they still taste like a good summer peach.
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What to do with potatoes
Potatoes hold well, but a big bag still goes faster when you treat it like meal prep instead of pantry decor. These ideas help you use more potatoes in ordinary, repeatable ways.
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What to do with spinach before it wilts
Spinach wilts quickly, which means the most useful plan is the one you can do today. These ideas help you use a bag or bunch before it turns slimy.
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What to do with squash
Squash can mean quick-cooking summer squash or longer-keeping winter squash, so the best use depends on which kind is sitting in your kitchen. These ideas cover both without overcomplicating it.
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What to do with too many tomatoes
Too many ripe tomatoes is a good problem until the counter starts filling up. These are the easiest ways to use, cook, and preserve them before they split or soften.
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Winter produce guide: what's still available locally
The growing season slows in winter, but it doesn't stop. This guide walks through what's genuinely available from local producers once the cold sets in and how to use it well.