Getting Started With Cold Food Storage For Vegetables & Fruits (2025)

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Cold food storage is the most basic food preservation method. With proper preparation, you can keep foods like homegrown vegetables, fruits, and nuts in a cold room or other low temperature space to preserve them for future use.

If you’re interested ingrowing vegetables indoors, all of my starter tips are here.

Getting Started With Cold Food Storage For Vegetables & Fruits (1)

Getting Started With Cold Storage

Getting Started With Cold Food Storage For Vegetables & Fruits (2)

Do you know the expression ‘putting up’? I’m guessing it originated from the process of placing freshly prepared jars and cans of food up on the shelves of storage cupboard (i.e. putting them up in the cupboard). If I’m wrong, it’s still a good way to remember what the expression means sinceit’s still widely used with the canning crowd today.

Some foods are preserved by putting up (pickling, canning, freezing, dehydrating, etc.) and others can be placed whole (in their natural state) in storage for extended periods of time (under the right conditions). Others can be stored with added salt, vinegar, sugar, and oils to keep them edible for months to come.

I’ve provided tips on whole food storage below.

Start Small

To get started in long-term food storage, I always suggest starting small. It really can get overwhelming and without a method to the madness, food gets wasted.

It could be something as simple as buying a large bag of potatoes at the farmer’s market and figuring out the best place to keep them in your home. The article on storing potatoes is helpful.

Done right, they could stay nice and firm for as long as 8 months. Without adequate humidity levels, you’ll see them gradually shrivel up.

Too much warmth and they start growing shoots. Food management becomes a lot more efficient when you start to learn all these nuances.

Each food has specific best practices, and a thorough book on the topic will become your dog-eared friend for years to come.

Your skills will improve the more you try.

Storing fresh producein your kitchen?

Here’s a printable fresh fruit and vegetable storage tip sheet.

Cold Storage Tips

The first step for getting started in food preservation and storage is often the most overlooked: choose vegetables, fruits, nuts, and beans you really enjoy and know you will use.

Old habits can be hard to shake. Perhaps you grew up with canned green beans but never really liked them. That’s your queue to move on to something else you really will enjoy.

Fall harvest is an excellent time to get great deals on bulk lotsat farmer’s markets.

  • Vegetablechoices include root vegetables (beets, carrots, onions, turnips, parsnips, rutabaga, celeriac), cucumbers (pickles!), tomatoes, potatoesas well aswinter squashes, pumpkins, and some unexpected picks like cauliflower and eggplant.
  • Fruitsare often best processed by canning, freezing, or drying.
  • Herbscan be dried or frozen in the pure form or as flavored pestos.
  • Nutscan also have much longer shelf lives with proper storage.

I’ll give you an overview of the entire storage process from start to finish and suggest some resources to get you started.

Related:How to Keep Dry Herbs and Spices Fresh

Basic Steps

  1. Cure / dry the produce before storing it.
  2. Create a storage area with the right conditions (temperature, humidity levels, darkness, air circulation).
  3. Monitor the vegetables in storage for mold, mildew, sprouting, or wilt.
  4. Plan your cooking around anticipated use-by dates to avoid food waste.

1Cure/Dry

Start with freshly harvested veggies and fruits in good condition, free of bruises, rot, mold, or mushy areas.

Items like onions (fresh from the garden), for example, first require a drying or curing process before placing them in cold storage.

You often see gardeners lay out their freshly harvested onions on sunny days.

This draws out excess moisture in preparation for food storage, avoiding rot, mold, and mildew later on.

2Cold Storage

There are all sorts of cold storage options from the traditional cold room or root cellar to more adaptive ideas like outdoor cellars, pits, or insulated boxes.

Choose your storage area based on the foods you are storing.

Food storage needsinclude providing the optimum temperature range, humidity levels, light or darkness, and air circulation.

Plus, you obviously don’t want things destroyed by nibbling vermin and other such creatures.

These factors will help you determine the best storage setup for each type of food crop.

Many root vegetables like potatoes favor storage conditions just above freezing (32F/0C) with 90% relative humidity, whereas something like winter squash likes a warmer room at 50F and just 70% relative humidity.

You can see the storage conundrum this creates.

The old-style approach of keeping everything in one unheated basement room may not be your best choice.

Over the years I have tested out various setups and opted for storing foodin various places throughout our basement, garage, and outdoors.

It’s not as handy but everything fairs much better.

3Monitor Stored Veggies

Once veggies are in storage, they do need to be checked every couple of weeks.

We usually get a couple of warm spells in the winter where suddenly our unheated garage is actually too warm and the potatoes and stored bulbs start to sprout.

Temporary relocation to a food cooler in a shaded area of the garden solves the problem until temperatures drop again.

Moldy items should be disposed of to avoid spreading the problem.

4Keep Track of Use-By Dates

Every item in cold storage will have a different life expectancy.

Check the expected storage lifespans, label your containers, and mark your calendar to be sure to use things up before they turn bad and chase you down the street.

Resources

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Root Cellaring: Natural Cold Storage of Fruits & Vegetables

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