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60 results for "storage root vegetables"
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Guide
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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ProduceMixed Vegetables
Knowing how to cook a mix of vegetables well — whatever you have on hand — is one of the most practical skills in the kitchen. The key is understanding density, heat, and timing, not following a specific recipe.
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ProduceThe best way to store potatoes, onions, and garlic
Potatoes, onions, and garlic all need cool, dark, and dry conditions — but keeping them together or in the wrong spot cuts their storage life dramatically. Here is what actually works.
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Guide
Best fall vegetables for roasting, soups, and meal prep
Fall vegetables are built for the way most people actually cook — roasting, simmering in soups, and prepping ahead. Here's which ones work best for each method and why.
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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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Collective
Produce Storage & Use Guide
Local produce spoils because people store it like supermarket produce. Four storage rules cover 80% of what you'll buy. Here they are.
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Guide
How to harvest vegetables properly
Harvesting vegetables properly is mostly about timing, gentleness, and keeping the plant productive for what comes next. A calmer harvest usually means better eating and less damage.
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Recipe
Easy roasted vegetables
A high-heat sheet pan method that clears the crisper, works with the season, and turns mixed vegetables into a browned, caramelized side that still tastes like an actual dinner.
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Guide
Best spring vegetables to buy locally
Not all spring vegetables are worth seeking out from a local farm — but some are dramatically better when grown nearby and harvested fresh. Here are the ones worth prioritizing this season.
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Guide
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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ProduceWhat is a carrot and how to cook it
Carrots are one of the most flexible root vegetables because they can be eaten raw, roasted, sauteed, simmered, or grated into both savory and sweet dishes.
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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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Guide
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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ProduceHow to store carrots
Carrots last longer than many vegetables, but they still do better when you store them dry, cold, and without their tops attached. A little prep at the start makes a big difference.
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ProduceBeets
Beets are sweet, earthy root vegetables that store well and come with edible greens when freshly harvested. They roast beautifully, pickle easily, and add color to salads, grain bowls, and simple sides.
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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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Guide
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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Guide
How to get kids interested in local fruits and vegetables
Getting kids excited about fresh, local produce is more about small moments than big strategies. These practical approaches actually work for real families with busy lives.
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Guide
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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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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Recipe
Quick vegetable stir fry
A high-heat skillet method for cooking whatever vegetables you have — dense ones first, tender ones last, sauced at the end and on the table in under 20 minutes.
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ProduceHow to store fresh corn
Fresh corn is best when you treat it as a use-soon vegetable. Refrigeration helps, but the real secret is simply not waiting too long.
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ProduceWhat is broccoli and how to cook it
Broccoli is one of the most useful vegetables to know because it can be roasted, steamed, sauteed, stir-fried, and eaten raw with very little fuss.
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Guide
Summer produce guide: the best fruits and vegetables in season
Summer is the most abundant time of year for local produce. Here is a practical guide to what is in season, what to prioritize, and how to make the most of it.
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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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Guide
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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ProduceHow to Keep Fresh Herbs From Going Bad Too Fast
Fresh herbs are one of the most wasted items in any kitchen. The right storage method depends on the type of herb — and getting it right means your basil, cilantro, and thyme last days longer than they otherwise would.
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Guide
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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ProduceWhat is corn and how to cook it
Fresh corn is sweet, juicy, and easy to cook when you stop treating it like a special-event vegetable. It works on the cob, off the cob, and in a range of simple summer meals.
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ProduceOnions
Onions are both a base ingredient and a vegetable in their own right. Yellow, red, white, sweet, and storage onions each bring a different balance of sharpness, sweetness, and keeping quality.
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Guide
The Hidden Cost of Long Food Supply Chains
The price on the grocery store shelf doesn't tell the whole story. Long food supply chains carry real costs — to nutrition, the environment, local economies, and resilience — that simply don't show up at checkout.
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ProduceWhat is onion and how to use it
Onions are one of the most useful vegetables in the kitchen because they work as both a base ingredient and a finished component. Learning a few onion styles makes everyday cooking much easier.
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Guide
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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Guide
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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ProduceHow to store cucumbers
Cucumbers keep best when they stay cool and dry without getting trapped in the coldest, wettest part of the refrigerator. The goal is to slow softening without encouraging chill damage.
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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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Guide
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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Guide
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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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.
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Guide
Mythbusting — Local Food Is Not Just for the Wealthy
Local food has a reputation as something for people with high incomes and lots of free time. Some of that reputation is deserved — but a lot of it is outdated, incomplete, or simply wrong.
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Guide
Local food is not a trend — it is a better system
The case for local food isn't built on lifestyle preferences or nostalgia. It rests on real advantages in freshness, economics, community resilience, and accountability that the conventional food system structurally…
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ProduceWhat is zucchini and how to use it
Zucchini is one of the most flexible vegetables of summer because it cooks quickly, works with many flavors, and fits both simple sides and full meals.
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Guide
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.
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ProduceThe Best Way to Store Tomatoes
Putting tomatoes in the fridge is one of the most common kitchen mistakes. Learn the right way to store them — whether they're ripe, unripe, or cut — so they stay flavorful and last longer.
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Guide
Is Local Food More Expensive? The Honest Answer
Local food has a reputation for costing more. Sometimes it does. But the real picture is more complicated — and for many everyday purchases, local food is competitive or outright cheaper than the grocery store.
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Guide
How to compare local food to grocery prices fairly
A fair price comparison between local food and grocery store food requires more than glancing at shelf tags. Here is a practical framework for making an honest assessment.
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ProduceBest way to store leafy greens
Leafy greens last longer when they stay cold, dry, and protected from excess moisture. The exact green changes the timeline a little, but the core method stays the same.
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Guide
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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ProduceSweet Potatoes
Sweet potatoes are a fall and winter staple with genuine variety differences that most cooks never discover. From the familiar Beauregard orange-fleshed type to Japanese purple varieties, the range in flavor and texture…
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ProduceWhat is asparagus and how to cook it
Asparagus is one of the clearest signs of spring because it is tender, quick-cooking, and best when treated simply. The trick is to stop cooking it as soon as it is just done.
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Guide
Buying Local Produce vs Growing Your Own — Cost, Time, and Yield
Growing your own food is rewarding and can be cost-effective for specific crops. But for most households, a combination of home growing and buying local delivers the best outcomes on cost, variety, and effort.
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Guide
How to compare local food prices the right way
Comparing local food prices to grocery store prices on a per-item basis misses most of what matters. A more honest comparison includes quality, shelf life, waste, and what you are actually paying for.
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Guide
Is Local Food Actually Cheaper Than Grocery Stores?
Local food has a reputation for being expensive, but the real comparison is more complicated. When you factor in waste, nutrition, and what you're actually buying, the math often shifts.
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ProduceWhat is a bell pepper and how to use it
Bell peppers are crisp, sweet, and versatile enough for both raw snacking and cooked meals. They are one of the easiest vegetables to keep in regular rotation.
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ProduceWhat is cucumber and how to use it
Cucumber is one of the simplest fresh vegetables to use because it needs so little cooking and pairs with almost everything. The key is knowing when to keep it raw and when to pickle or blend it.
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Guide
Why knowing where your food comes from changes everything
When you know who grew your food and how, you make better choices — not because you're told to, but because the information itself changes what seems reasonable.
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Guide
Why price per item is not the whole story
Comparing local food prices to grocery store prices item by item misses most of what actually determines value. Here is how to think about what you are really getting for your money.
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ProducePotatoes
The variety of potato you choose matters far more than most recipes acknowledge. A Russet, a Yukon Gold, and a waxy red potato behave completely differently in the same preparation — and a freshly dug new potato from a…
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Guide
Local food on a budget: start with these five items
You do not need to buy all your food locally to benefit from it. These five categories offer the best combination of quality, value, and affordability when starting out with local food on a limited budget.
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Guide
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.