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9 results in Produce for "strawberries"
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ProduceHow to store strawberries so they last longer
The best way to store strawberries is to keep them cold, dry, and unwashed until you are ready to use them. A few simple habits help them last longer without promising miracles.
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ProduceStrawberries
Strawberries are the first real fruit of summer — and the produce where the gap between local and shipped is widest. A ripe local strawberry tastes of strawberry. A shipped one tastes of pink water.
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ProduceWhat is a strawberry and how to use it
Strawberries are sweet, fragrant fruit that work best when you respect how delicate they are. They can be eaten fresh, cooked lightly, or frozen without much trouble.
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ProduceBasil
Basil is the signature summer herb — bright, aromatic, and versatile. Growing it at home is the easiest way to have a good herb on hand, but local farm basil at a farm stand beats supermarket plastic-pack herbs by a…
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ProduceHow to freeze fresh berries
Freezing berries at home takes less than 30 minutes and keeps them usable for up to a year. Here is how to do it without ending up with a solid, unusable clump.
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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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ProduceMixed Salad Greens
Mixed salad greens from a farm stand — loose-leaf lettuces, arugula, spinach, and more, harvested that morning — bear no resemblance to the washed and bagged mixes that have been sitting in a bag for a week. This is the…
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ProduceSpinach
Spinach is one of the most nutritionally dense vegetables at any farm stand, and one of the most season-dependent — spring and fall spinach is sweet and tender, while summer heat pushes it to bolt and turn bitter.…
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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.