How to Store Lemons Longer to Prevent Them from Spoiling? 6 Simple Tricks
There’s nothing quite like a fresh lemon. Its brightness adds a pop of color to the kitchen, while its tangy juice perfectly complements the fluffy topping of a lemon meringue and the frosting on a lemon-lime poke cake.
But when you buy a few lemons (or a whole bag), you want to make sure you get every last drop of juice and every last inch of zest from them. That starts with storing lemons properly.
Here are 6 of the best ways to keep this versatile citrus fresher longer, so you’ll always have an endless supply to brighten your pasta suppers, slow-cooker meals, and desserts.
How To Buy the Best Lemons
“Since lemons come from different parts of the country, usually California, the Southwest, or Southeast, as well as internationally from Mexico and India, they are usually picked unripe,” explains Richard LaMarita, a chef-instructor at the Institute of Culinary Education. “Ripe lemons will have a glossiness, firm feel, and deep yellow color.”
Keeping your lemons fresh for as long as possible starts with what lemons you purchase at the grocery store. LaMarita recommends staying away from ones that are wrinkled or squishy. Instead, look for brightly colored ones that are firm and feel like they have a lot of juice inside.
How To Store Lemons
Don’t let those juicy citrus fruits dry up or mold before you can use them. These five lemon storage methods will help.
1. Use the crisper section of your refrigerator
According to LaMarita, refrigeration is key for keeping your lemons fresh for a long time. “I store my lemons free-standing in the crisper drawer,” he explains. “They can easily last a month or more there.”
Designed to lengthen the freshness of stored fruits and vegetables, crisper drawers have air vents that allow you to control the air flowing into and out of them. However, lemons will also do well in a container outside of the crispers, in the main part of your refrigerator as well.
What Temperature Should Your Refrigerator Be Set To?
Opening the air vents results in more airflow, creating a low-humidity environment and an ideal condition for storing lemons. When kept this way, your lemons can stay fresh for up to three weeks.
2. Store them in water
In the now-viral TikTok, several whole lemons are placed in a mason jar filled with water and then stored in the fridge. When stored this way, user meowmeix claims that your lemons can remain fresh for up to three months.
3. Don’t store in plastic
Lemons don’t last very long if they’re not stored correctly—the proverbial cool and dry environment is key to preventing your lemons from turning hard and dry. Plastic bags, however, can trap moisture, causing the lemons to spoil much quicker.
Instead, store them in paper or reusable mesh bags as they’re more breathable and allow the air to circulate around the lemons, keeping them fresher for longer.
4. Keep away from other fruits
One of the best ways to keep lemons fresh for longer is to store them separately. “Certain fruits and vegetables, like melons, bananas, apples, tomatoes, and avocados, give off ethylene gas,” says LaMarita. “This will speed up the ripening of neighboring vegetables and fruits, mostly delicately skinned foods like string beans, leafy greens, and apricots.”1
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Lemons, along with limes, are also sensitive to the effects of ethylene, so storing them with ethylene-gas-producing fruits and vegetables will cause them to spoil faster.
5. Freeze your lemons
If you end up with way too many lemons, consider freezing them. “You can freeze cut or whole lemons—they freeze very well,” says LaMarita.
According to food storage company Glad, lemons can be stored in the freezer this way for up to four months. For lemon wedges, freeze them first on a cookie sheet to keep them separate before transferring them to a freezer-friendly zip-top bag.
“However, remember whenever you freeze anything, there will be changes to the cell structure of the food item,” explains LaMarita. So, while the frozen lemons will be mushy when defrosted, their juices will remain intact. If you want to prevent this from happening, you can always juice your lemons first and freeze the juice instead.
6. Planting
- Put the soil in the pot and add some water to moisten it.
- Cut the lemon and choose the seed with the best shape. Do not dry it out, moisture can still help. Make a small hole in the soil and put the seed in.
- Cover with soil and more water.
- Cover the pot with plastic wrap to trap the moisture, and then place it in a sunny spot.
- Be careful not to overwater, which can lead to seed rot. Keep an eye on the pot, and as soon as the lemon tree starts to grow, remove the plastic. This should usually happen within one to two weeks.
- Place the pot in full sun. Remember that your lemon tree needs eight hours of light daily and the soil around it should be constantly moist.
There you go, you can grow your own lemons at home!”