How to keep food fresher for longer and feed your family, not the bin

Mouldy bread. Bendy carrots. Slimy salad. Green potatoes. Mushy bananas. Sound familiar? It happens to the best of us: according to Retail Times, the average UK family chucks out around £350 worth of food every year – that’s a lot of wasted money, especially now the squeeze on our household budgets has got ever tighter. Fresh food only has a limited shelf life before it begins to look a bit sad, so anything you can do to make it last that little bit longer and make those hard-earned pennies go further has got to be a good thing, right?

Plan ahead

With our busy lives, it’s not always easy (or cost effective – we’ve all seen the price of fuel recently) to make multiple trips to the shops to keep stocking up on fresh food, so it pays to use up every last bit of what we buy. With a little bit of planning and some savvy storage ideas you can make sure your family eats well and your bin goes hungry.

Here’s just a few ideas to help you store your produce and keep it fresh – in and out of the fridge

Stayfresh Longer BagsStayfresh Longer Bags

They might just look like ordinary bags, but store your fruit and vegetables in one ofthesein the fridge and they’ll, erm, stay fresh longer – strawberries up to five days longer. And broccoli and carrots will last a whopping twice as long as in ordinary polythene bags. Now there’s no excuse to not eat your greens. Find out more about how theywork, and find more ideas for fruit and vegetable storage on ourwebsite.

Soup ‘n’ Sauce BagsSoup ‘n’ Sauce Bags

If some of your veg is starting to look a shadow of its former self, then make soup. Soup loves leftovers and forgotten-about veg. So chuck in all those bits and bobs – the lone half onion, the courgette from the back of the fridge, the no longer snappy sugar snap peas that you might otherwise throw out, and blitz them up into soup, which can you freeze and enjoy another day. OurSoup ‘n Sauce Bagsare just the ticket for storing your soupy endeavours. They stand up on their own so they’re easy to fill, and have write-on panels for easy labelling. Super.

Lakeland Drawstring Bread BagsLakeland Drawstring Bread Bags

蓝纹奶酪上的霉菌——很可爱(如果你喜欢那样的东西)。你的面包已经不能吃了,长霉了——不太可爱。帮助就在眼前。Thanks to their polythene liners, thesedrawstring bags帮助防止你的面包变干变不新鲜——是自制面包的理想选择,或者如果你买了一个可爱的脆皮法棍或手工面包,想要享受它们最好的一面,直到最后一层脆皮。

Lakeland Banana BagLakeland Banana Bag

Yes, we have fresh bananas. That’s because we keep ours in a Banana Bag. It provides them with the exact amount of insulation and airflow needed to stop them from overripening in the fridge for up to two weeks – twice their normal lifespan. And there’s a cheeky little monkey on the outside too. What’s not to love? But if you do let those bendy beauties go a bit beyond their best, you can always make banana bread.

Lakeland Potato BagLakeland Potato Bag

如果你的马铃薯通常在你有机会使用它们之前就变绿发芽了,确保这种情况不会再次发生,把你的马里斯派珀或爱德华国王放在这些特殊的袋子里。这种袋子由透气材料制成,内衬可以遮光,可以让空气流通,让土豆泥或烘烤的时间更长,而且“活板门”的开启意味着你可以按购买顺序使用它们,有助于减少浪费。Don’t be tempted to put onions in too – they won’t get on.

Lakeland Fridge StoresLakeland Fridge Stores

Sick of wrinkly peppers and wilted salad leaves? TheseFridge Storeshave vents for airflow and a perforated inner basket to drain excess water to help keep fruit, veg, herbs and salad fresh and unsoggy. And the outer container acts as a reservoir to help prevent herbs and salad from drying out too quickly.

Covermate Food CoversCovermate Food Covers

From opened fruit punnets to plates of leftovers, these reusable, perforated, muiltipurposefood coverswill stretch to fit and keep your food fresh and protected, without you having to resort to wasteful cling film. And during the warmer months, they’re ideal for covering plates, bowls and cups when you’re outside too. Sorry, beasties.

Zip Top Reusable Food ContainersZip Top Reusable Food Containers

Fridge, freezer and microwave safe, these multitasking Zip Top Silicone Containers can be reused over and over again: for meals and snacks on the go; storing pasta, popcorn and more in the cupboard; or freezing leftovers for later… and then reheating them again in the microwave. With flat bases so they’re easy to fill, just push the top closed and use a zipping action for a really secure seal. And when it’s time to decant? That’s easy too; the ‘corners’ of the bag act like a pouring spout. How’s that for clever?

Half cutHalf cut Onion container

Sometimes you only use half alemon, or half anonion, but what do you do with the other half? Wrap it in cling film or foil? No. You use one of these made-for-the-jobfood savers. They keep the flavour (and the smell) inside and they’re easy to store and find in the fridge.

Vacuum SealersVacuum Sealers

Offering a practical and versatile alternative to traditional food storage methods,vacuum sealingprolongs the life of your leftovers, freshly cooked food or just-bought groceries and meat and fish for up to five times longer. So you’ll throw away less and save money in the long run. And as all the air is sucked out of the storage bags, it makes your food easier to store in your fridge or freezer too.

Make friends with your freezer

And talking of freezing – we’ve been home freezing experts for over 50 years so we’ve learnt a thing or two over that time. Have a read of ourblogto find hints and tips on how to get the most out of your freezer and help you cut down on food waste – here’s just a few ideas to get you thinking.

  • Batch-cooked foods like soup, Bolognese, curry, chilli and stew are brilliant for freezing flat in Soup ‘n’ Sauce Bags or reusable freezer bags. And not only do they save tons of space when you stack them, they defrost quicker too.
  • Take mince out of its bulky plastic container, put it in a freezer bag, then flatten it out so it’s easier to store.
  • Freeze leftover wine (it happens) in ice cube trays so you can use them in your cooking.
  • Fresh herbs can be frozen in olive oil ready for cooking as and when you need them. Or freeze them in water for adding flavour to soups and stews.
  • Divide multipacks of foods like sausages and chicken breasts into smaller portions so you don’t have to defrost and cook the whole pack when you only want a couple of bangers.
  • Make larger batches and store individual meal-sized portions in separate bags and containers. That way, if the fusspots in your family don’t want what you’re having, you can still please everyone.
  • Remember, everyday essentials like bread and milk can be frozen if you have gaps to fill in your freezer – a full, well-organised freezer is a happy freezer as it works more efficiently, and saves energy too, as less cold air escapes when you open the door to get something out.

Our top 10 hints & tips to prevent food waste

  1. Keep tabs on the temperature of your fridge – the ideal is between 0°C and 5°C.
  2. Store bananas separately from other fruit – the ethylene that bananas give off will make other fruit ripen quicker.
  3. Don’t pile your fridge high. It will stop cool air circulating and things will start to warm up and bacteria will see it as an invitation to move in.
  4. Line your salad drawer with paper towels to stop things getting soggy. OurFruit & Vegetable Cushionis a good call too.
  5. Some people swear by wrapping veg like celery and broccoli in foil to keep it crisp.
  6. Don’t keep mushrooms in the fridge as they get too wet, and nobody wants slimy fungi. Keep them in a cool, dry place in a brown paper bag.
  7. Apparently, the best way to store onions is in tights. Pop them in one at a time, tie a knot between each one and hang them up in a dry, dark place.
  8. Don’t be a slave to best-before dates. They’re usually just a recommendation on how long your food will be at its best. Use your common sense and employ the look and sniff test. Use-by dates are another matter – always err on the side of caution when it comes to things like meat, dairy and fish. Food poisoning is nobody’s idea of a good time.
  9. 用多孔纸包裹奶酪。羊皮纸很好,因为奶酪还能呼吸。不要使用保鲜膜,除非你喜欢汗布里奶酪。
  10. Cut the roots off root vegetables – they nick all the nutrients, causing your veg to dry out quicker.

You can find lots more ideas to help you cut down on food waste and plenty more ways to spend smart and live wellhere.

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