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14 results in Produce for "apples"
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ProduceHow to store apples
Apples keep best when they stay cool, dry, and separate from the produce most sensitive to ethylene. They are one of the easier fruits to stretch out if you store them deliberately.
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ProduceApples
Apples are one of the most versatile produce staples — available from late summer through spring storage, with variety differences that actually matter for how you cook with them.
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ProduceHow to use up too much zucchini
Zucchini grows fast and piles up quickly. These practical cooking and preserving strategies will get you through a surplus without eating zucchini bread at every meal.
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ProduceCabbage
Cabbage is one of the most useful local vegetables because it is affordable, sturdy, and flexible. It can be eaten raw, sauteed, roasted, braised, or fermented.
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ProduceCarrots
Carrots are one of the most reliable local-farm vegetables year-round — harvested in fall and stored through winter. A fresh-pulled carrot from a farm stand tastes nothing like a supermarket bag carrot.
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ProduceCucumbers
A good cucumber from a local farm in midsummer — thin-skinned, cool, and snappy — is a different experience from the waxed, seedy cylinders shipped year-round at supermarkets. Knowing what to look for makes the…
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ProduceHow to make fresh produce last all week
Most produce spoilage comes down to a handful of avoidable mistakes. These storage habits will get you through a full week of fresh vegetables and fruit with far less waste.
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ProduceHow to Store Farm-Fresh Produce to Reduce Waste
Farm-fresh produce comes with different storage needs than grocery store produce. Knowing what goes in the fridge, what stays on the counter, and how to revive wilted greens can cut your waste in half.
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ProduceHow to Store Fresh Lettuce So It Lasts Longer
Fresh lettuce from a local farm can wilt within days if stored carelessly. A few simple techniques can keep it crisp, green, and ready to eat for up to two weeks.
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ProduceLettuce
Lettuce changes a lot by type: romaine is crisp, butter lettuce is soft, leaf lettuce is tender, and iceberg is all crunch. Knowing the difference makes salads easier and waste less likely.
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ProduceMixed Seasonal Vegetables
Cooking with whatever is in season locally — rather than building a recipe and then hunting for ingredients — is how home cooks ate for most of human history. It is also how you get the best-tasting food for the least…
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ProducePears
Pears are fall fruit that ripen after harvest, which makes timing matter. Bartlett, Bosc, Anjou, Comice, and Asian pears all have different textures and best uses.
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ProduceWhat is a peach and how to use it
Peaches are juicy summer fruit that can be eaten fresh, baked, grilled, or cooked into simple sauces. Their biggest challenge is timing rather than complexity.
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ProduceWhat's the Shelf Life of Farm-Fresh Produce?
Farm-fresh produce and grocery store produce have different shelf lives — sometimes longer, sometimes shorter. Here's what to expect for common crops and how to extend it.