Ideas to keep cut avacados from turning brown.
NancyAnne1960
Posts: 500 Member
Please, need your ideas on how to keep a cut avacado from turning brown! To eat a whole avacado is just too much, but I find the other half gets tossed because it turns brown by the next day. Any tricks on how to keep them from turning brown? (other than lemon juice?) Thanks!!
0
Replies
-
keep the seed in the half you don't use!0
-
leave the pit in the half, and wrap it really tight with saran rap0
-
Sometimes plastic wrap works for me and sometimes it doesn't.
That's all I've got! lol.0 -
Any citrus will do, for guacamole put the pit in the bottom of the bowl or vacuum pack.0
-
Squeeze a tiny bit of lemon juice on it!0
-
The only thing I know is lemon or lime juice. You may want to try an air tight seal like press and seal? because the brown comes from the oxygen that hits the advacado.0
-
Rinse the cut side under cool tap water. Don't know why, or how, but this works.
http://dinnerovereasy.blogspot.com/0 -
I've done my own vacuum sealing. Put it in a ziplock bag and suck the air out of it... hahahaha. Also, it's OK to eat if it turns brown the next day. It's not rotten or anything, it's oxidizing like the brown spots on a banana. As long as it is within 2 days or so, you're good. When it starts to get really dark and smell, then definitely don't eat it.0
-
Smear a layer of citrus juice on it (lemon or lime) before wrapping it in plastic. Make sure all the exposed area is in contact with the plastic. Other than that here's really not much you can do, avocados just don't keep once their package has been compromised.0
-
It is the oxidation that turns it brown. So you need to remove air from them. If I don't use the whole avacado, I usually make guacamole or something similiar with it, but when i wrap it with plastic I put the plastic directly on the avacado instead of around the top of the container. This will stop it from turning brown.0
-
i've never had that problem because I eat it all up before it turns brown. LOVE avocados! Seriously, lime juice works. I love mashing mine up and adding a bit of garlic salt, chili powder & lime. YUM0
-
Leave the skin on and pit intact, squirt some lemon or lime on it and throw it in a zip lock baggie. If the outside layer turns a little brown just cut a thin layer off. The rest should be fine0
-
Squeeze a tiny bit of lemon juice on it!
That's what my Chef taught me in Kitchen Class in College! It works REALLY well! Just wipe it on the cutting board before you cut, & tip all cut ends to the board before you wrap it.
Or alternatively: soak a paper towel in it & wrap it around the avacado/apple/banana & let it sit for 5 seconds then you're good to go for hours!0 -
The only thing I know is lemon or lime juice. You may want to try an air tight seal like press and seal? because the brown comes from the oxygen that hits the advacado.
Exactly. Any citrus fruit juice will help and the oxygen is what makes the fruit turn brown.0 -
If it's just the next day, it's just cosmetic, you can eat it. It doesn't taste bad or anything. It's kinda like how apples turn brown almost instantaneously, but they still taste the same. My other thought is "Fruit Fresh". It comes in a little shaker, and looks like salt, but has no flavor. I buy that to use instead of lemon juice to stop oxidation becuase I don't always want the lemon flavor. I wonder if they have a liquid version so you could just give it a little squirt. Maybe you could mix some with some water in a little spritzer...0
-
I needed this today! I pulled some avacado out of the fridge that I mashed up on Sunday for a sandwich and it had turned brown on the outside. I just mixed it all up and ate it anyway, lol.0
-
I vacuum seal mine. It keeps them just as green as when you put them in. You don't even have to have a food saver machine or spend lots of money. Ziploc makes vacuum seal bags with a small little pump. I keep a box of the bags on hand just for stuff like avocados. If I make guacamole and have left overs I usually put it in one of these bags too. It keeps for much longer!0
-
Keep the pit in the half you dont use and wrap it in saran wrap.0
-
try freezing it0
-
These are all really great ideas, I had no clue that you could prevent them from turning brown!0
-
Its turning brown because it's oxidizing. To prevent it from oxidizing, you can prevent it from getting any air (saran wrap, under water) which is why leaving the pit in prevents air from getting to the center. Putting anything on it that contains citric acid (ie diluted lemon juice, lime juice, orange juice) prevents the surface from oxidizing. You can squeeze some juice into a bowl of water if you're cutting up a lot of it.
Same things work for apples, potatoes, artichokes, etc etc.
Reference: I have degrees in culinary arts and neuroscience (i.e. organic chemistry background)0 -
any air whatsover turns avocado brown. So try wrapping tightly in saran wrap with all of the air out. Also, try dousing it with lemon juice and then wrapping it.0
-
Rinse the cut side under cool tap water. Don't know why, or how, but this works.
http://dinnerovereasy.blogspot.com/0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.2K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 421 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 23 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions