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‎12-05-2023 10:12 AM
Wrap in foil. Works great!!
‎12-05-2023 10:23 AM
I agree with wrapping completely in foil. If you wrap celery completely in foil and a rubberband to keep it closed, celery will stay crisp and useable for weeks.
‎12-05-2023 10:53 AM
I wrap it in a paper towel to absorb the moisture then wrap it in a gallon size plastic bag. It stays fresh for several weeks. But if you buy packaged salad it doesn't work. You have to eat that right away.
‎12-05-2023 11:45 AM
@shoptilyadropagain wrote:I keep mine in those Debbie Meyer Green Bags and put them in the crisper drawer of the fridge. I think there are Debbie Meyer Green Boxes now too but I still have quite a supply of the bags so I've never looked into them.
@shoptilyadropagain @I bought those bags years ago and must have been using them wrong. I read the directions before use but I never had luck with them. I'm glad they work well for you.
‎12-05-2023 11:59 AM
I also use the long L&L container with the removable grate at the bottom. Through trial and error over time, what works for me is to separate all the leaves. I then put a paper towel at the bottom of the container, then lettuce leaves, paper towel, lettuce leaves, etc. ending with a paper towel.
Then I read a post from someone here on the forums that she puts a cloth on top to absorb moisture so I started doing that with microfiber towels and that has been working out really well. Every time I take out lettuce I replace the towel if it feels damp and the paper towels as well if they are too damp. My lettuce lasts two weeks or more. I no longer have mushy lettuce that I have to throw out before I can't use it up before it goes bad.
And as for using a lot of paper towels, they are essentially still clean so I use those to clean up little messes around the kitchen. I haven't tried using just microfiber towels instead of paper towels yet but I'll try that at some point.
‎12-05-2023 12:03 PM
About the moisture, I have one of those containers for storing produce that has a little vent on it. It tells you, depending on the produce, whether to leave the vent open or closed and whether to add a little water which goes down into the bottom lid, so not on the produce itself. For lettuce, I believe it's add water and vent.
However, I'm trying out a new method. Oxygen is the enemy, and vegetables give off oxygen. So, I'm trying out a large ziploc bag which I close off but leave open just enough to fit a SodaStream nozzle in. Add CO2 to the bag and finish closing the bag.
‎12-05-2023 12:10 PM
@goldensrbest For both romaine and iceberg I wash it when I get home from the store. Dry it on paper towels and then put it in a ziplock bag with a damp paper towel.
‎12-05-2023 12:16 PM
I rinse the head of lettuce in cool water and "smash" it on the counter to remove the core.
The head is rinsed and I fill the core with water.
Covered in paper towels, it drains for an hour or so.
I store the lettuce in a gallon zip lock with a paper towel spread flat as I can manage.
This method works very well for us and the lettuce stays crisp.
‎12-05-2023 07:42 PM
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