Fruits and vegetables are the most wasted foods on the planet. In the average household, they account for nearly half of all food waste. The lettuce that wilts, the strawberries that grow fuzzy, the potatoes sprouting in the cupboard… these scenes repeat in kitchens everywhere, week after week.
The good news? Most of this waste is avoidable. The secret isn’t eating faster — it’s storing smarter. Every fruit and every vegetable has its preferences: some love the cold, others hate it. Some last for weeks, others only hold for a few days. And crucially, some should never be placed side by side in the same drawer.
This guide gives you the keys to storing every fruit and vegetable in the right place, for the right duration, with the right tricks.
The golden rule: every item in its place
Before diving into the detailed tables, there are two fundamental concepts to understand so you never misstore your produce again.
Ethylene: the gas that ripens (and ruins)
Certain fruits produce an invisible, odorless gas called ethylene. This gas is a natural plant hormone that accelerates ripening. It’s incredibly useful when you want to ripen an avocado quickly (put it in a bag with a banana). But it’s disastrous when that gas reaches sensitive vegetables in the fridge drawer.
Heavy ethylene producers: apples, bananas, avocados, peaches, pears, tomatoes, melons, ripe kiwis.
Most sensitive to ethylene: lettuce, broccoli, cucumber, carrots, green beans, eggplant, cabbage.
The rule is simple: never store ethylene producers next to sensitive items. In your fridge, use separate drawers or perforated bags to keep the two groups apart.
Cold sensitivity
Not all fruits and vegetables tolerate cold well. Some originate from tropical or Mediterranean regions, and refrigeration damages their taste, texture, and nutritional value. Tomatoes, for example, lose much of their flavor in the fridge. Bananas turn black. Unripe avocados stop ripening altogether.
The rule: tropical fruits and fruit-vegetables (tomato, eggplant, pepper) prefer room temperature until they’re fully ripe.
Fruit storage table
Here’s how to store the most common fruits to enjoy them as long as possible:
| Fruit | Where to store | Duration | Tip |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apple | Fridge (fruit drawer) | 4 to 6 weeks | Isolate from other fruits (heavy ethylene producer) |
| Banana | Countertop | 5 to 7 days | Never refrigerate when unripe. Keep separate. Freeze peeled if overripe |
| Strawberry | Fridge (unwashed) | 3 to 5 days | Spread on paper towels, only wash before eating |
| Lemon | Countertop or fridge | 1 week (ambient) / 3-4 weeks (fridge) | In an airtight bag in the fridge to prevent drying out |
| Orange | Countertop or fridge | 1 week (ambient) / 3-4 weeks (fridge) | Tolerates both, juicier at room temperature |
| Avocado | Countertop then fridge | 2-4 days (ambient) / 3-5 days (fridge once ripe) | Ripen at room temp, refrigerate when it yields to gentle pressure |
| Peach / Nectarine | Countertop then fridge | 2-3 days (ambient) / 5 days (fridge once ripe) | Ripen at room temp, refrigerate to slow down |
| Grapes | Fridge (unwashed) | 1 to 2 weeks | Don’t wash before storage, keep on the stem |
| Kiwi | Countertop then fridge | 3-5 days (ambient) / 2-3 weeks (fridge once ripe) | Ripen outside fridge, store in fridge once ripe |
| Pear | Countertop then fridge | 2-4 days (ambient) / 1-2 weeks (fridge) | Very sensitive to bruising, handle with care |
| Melon | Countertop then fridge | 2-3 days (ambient) / 5 days (fridge once ripe) | Wrap in fridge (strong smell transfers to other foods) |
| Mango | Countertop then fridge | 2-5 days (ambient) / 5 days (fridge once ripe) | Ripen at room temp, refrigerate at peak ripeness |
| Cherry | Fridge (unwashed) | 3 to 5 days | Very fragile, don’t stack, eat quickly |
| Apricot | Countertop then fridge | 2-3 days (ambient) / 4-5 days (fridge once ripe) | Bruises easily, ripen at room temp |
| Tomato | Countertop (never in fridge) | 5 to 7 days | Cold kills the flavor. Store stem-side up |
Universal tip: a damaged or overripe fruit quickly contaminates its neighbors. Check your fruit regularly and remove any that are starting to turn.
Vegetable storage table
Vegetables have varied needs. Some love the cold humidity of the crisper drawer, while others prefer a dry, dark cupboard.
| Vegetable | Where to store | Duration | Tip |
|---|---|---|---|
| Carrot | Fridge (crisper drawer) | 2 to 3 weeks | Cut off the green tops (they draw out moisture). Wrap in a damp cloth |
| Zucchini | Fridge (crisper drawer) | 1 to 2 weeks | Don’t cut before storing, sensitive to ethylene |
| Bell pepper | Fridge (crisper drawer) | 1 to 2 weeks | Keeps better whole. Red peppers are riper and don’t last as long |
| Onion | Dry, dark cupboard | 1 to 3 months | Never in the fridge (humidity makes it rot). Never with potatoes |
| Garlic | Dry, ventilated cupboard | 1 to 3 months (whole) | Keep the head intact, peeled cloves spoil quickly |
| Potato | Dry, dark cupboard | 2 to 3 months | Never in the fridge (cold converts starch to sugar). Keep away from light |
| Lettuce | Fridge (crisper drawer) | 5 to 7 days | Wrap in a damp cloth or paper towel |
| Cucumber | Fridge (crisper drawer) | 1 week | Sensitive to extreme cold, avoid the back of the fridge |
| Eggplant | Fridge (crisper drawer) | 5 to 7 days | Cold-sensitive, consume promptly |
| Mushroom | Fridge (in a paper bag) | 5 to 7 days | Never in a plastic bag (they “sweat”). Don’t wash before storing |
| Broccoli | Fridge (crisper drawer) | 5 to 7 days | Very sensitive to ethylene, isolate from fruits |
| Cauliflower | Fridge (crisper drawer) | 1 to 2 weeks | Wrap in cling film or a damp cloth |
| Green beans | Fridge (crisper drawer) | 5 to 7 days | Don’t wash before storage, eat or freeze quickly |
| Spinach | Fridge (crisper drawer) | 3 to 5 days | Very perishable, wrap in paper towel to absorb moisture |
| Leek | Fridge (crisper drawer) | 1 to 2 weeks | Trim roots, wrap in newspaper |
Good to know: the crisper drawer in your fridge is designed to maintain higher humidity than the rest of the fridge. It’s the ideal spot for most vegetables. But don’t overcrowd it — air needs to circulate.
The most common storage mistakes
Even with the best intentions, certain habits sabotage the shelf life of your produce. Here are the most frequent mistakes and how to fix them.
Mistake #1: Putting tomatoes in the fridge
This is probably the most widespread mistake. Cold deactivates the enzymes responsible for tomato flavor and alters the texture, making it mealy. Always store tomatoes at room temperature, stem-side up to prevent moisture from pooling at the attachment point.
Mistake #2: Storing bananas with other fruit
Bananas are one of the biggest ethylene producers. If you place them in the fruit bowl with your apples, kiwis, and avocados, everything will ripen (and spoil) much faster than expected. Isolate your bananas or hang them on a hook.
Mistake #3: Keeping potatoes in the light
Light turns potatoes green. That green color is caused by solanine, a substance that’s toxic in large amounts. Store your potatoes in a dark, dry, cool spot (but not the fridge). And never store them with onions: each accelerates the other’s deterioration.
Mistake #4: Washing produce before storing
Moisture is the number one enemy of preservation. Washing your strawberries, grapes, or mushrooms before putting them in the fridge promotes mold growth. Always wash fruits and vegetables just before eating, never before storing.
Mistake #5: Throwing everything in the same drawer
The crisper drawer isn’t a catch-all bin. Mixing ethylene producers and sensitive vegetables in the same space guarantees your lettuce will yellow in 2 days and your broccoli will smell like cabbage. Use perforated bags or two separate drawers if your fridge allows it.
Freezing fruits and vegetables: the guide
Your freezer is your greatest anti-waste ally. It puts biological activity on pause and lets you preserve fruits and vegetables for months. But to get good results, there are a few rules to follow.
Freezing fruit
Most fruits freeze beautifully and are perfect for smoothies, compotes, and baking once thawed.
The flash-freeze method:
- Wash and thoroughly dry the fruit
- Cut into pieces if needed (remove pits and stems)
- Spread in a single layer on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper
- Place the sheet in the freezer for 2 hours
- Transfer the frozen fruit into freezer bags, squeezing out the air
This method prevents the fruit from clumping together. You can then grab exactly the amount you need.
Freezer shelf life: 8 to 12 months for most fruits.
Freezing vegetables
Most vegetables require blanching before freezing. This quick step (submerging for 2-3 minutes in boiling water, then plunging into ice water) deactivates the enzymes responsible for loss of color, texture, and nutrients.
Vegetables to freeze without blanching: peas, chopped bell peppers, chopped herbs, sliced onions.
Vegetables to blanch before freezing: green beans, broccoli, cauliflower, carrots, zucchini, spinach, leeks.
Vegetables that don’t freeze well: lettuce, cucumber, radishes, raw endive (too high in water content — the texture will be disastrous after thawing).
Freezer shelf life: 10 to 12 months for blanched vegetables.
Anti-waste tip: when a vegetable is starting to tire in your fridge and you know you won’t cook it in time, blanch it and freeze it immediately. It’s always better than the bin.
SauveTonPain: scan, track, waste nothing
Managing the freshness of dozens of different fruits and vegetables, each with its own shelf life, is a real daily challenge. That’s exactly why SauveTonPain exists.
With the app, you can:
- Scan your purchases as soon as you get home from shopping and log expiry dates
- Receive alerts when a product is approaching the end of its life, so you cook it in time
- Organize your fridge virtually and know exactly what’s inside
- Reduce your waste week after week by tracking your habits
No more carrots forgotten at the back of the drawer or wilted lettuce discovered too late. SauveTonPain helps you make sure every fruit and every vegetable gets eaten at the right time.
Download the app for free on the App Store and Google Play and transform the way you manage your groceries.
Also discover how to organize your fridge to reduce waste and maximize the shelf life of all your food.