Sunday, February 10, 2013

Making your Freshly Cut Parsley and Cilantro Last!

I love fresh herbs in cooking. They are so versitile, flavorful, and the add so much for so little calories. If you live in a high rise in a town called, "The Windy City" you will learn that window boxes and wind chimes are things you can never have... no matter how much you like them.

The only thing WRONG with fresh herbs is how much I hated throwing them away after they had dyed from being smushed under a cucumber in my crisper drawer after 4 days. So, whatcha gonna do? You find a trick to keep store bought herbs fresher... LONGER.


Freshly-cut, Store bought Parsley and Cilantro
Freshy fresh, unwashed Cilantro and its beautiful pal, Parsley.
Just like flowers, the sooner you place them in water after cutting them the better. Store bought herbs, like flowers, need water, too. The quicker you can get your herbs into water, the better... but there have definetely been times that I've thrown them in the crisper draw for a few hours while I had some tea and tried to forget going to the grocery store in the rain.

Simply get an appropriately sized glass and fill it a little under halfways with cool water and place herbs in water. Then, you gently cover it- like a tent- with a gallon-sized plastic bag. This creates a self-sustaining ecosystem that only requires you to change the water weekly.


Mini Greenhouse for Freshly-Cut Store bought Parsley
Parsley + glass + water+ ziploc bag = mini greenhouse!

One a week, however, uncover, remove herbs from glass, remove any unsightly herbs, replace cold water, and resituate herbs in glass with plastic covering. Writing about it is taking longer than it actually takes to do this simple process which will keep fresh parsley and cilantro in your house for two weeks.


Freshly Cut Herbs Last: Countertop Parsley
Happy, Steamy, Countertop Parsley!


Making Cilantro last: Mini Refridgerated greenhouse
Happy, Steamy, Refridgerated Cilantro!





 




One last note, the parsley thrives in room temperatures, while the cilantro loves the cooler temperatures of the fridge.
                            Thanks for reading, and good luck!~ Leigh

1 comment:

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