How To Store Ripe Avocados To Keep Them Fresh For Days

The window of time is short before avocados turn on you, so we tried a quick storage tip to help avocados stay fresh longer.

Getty Images/Jupiterimages
Getty Images/Jupiterimages

Avocados make you work for their love. The perfect piece of avocado toast or bowl of guacamole is at the mercy of whichever day your avocados decide to ripen—and then, that window of time is short before the avocados turn on you, going from bright green to murky brown in a matter of hours. With avocados, it's always like you're hurrying to wait and waiting to hurry. All real love is worth a little work, though. After all that waiting, once your avocados are perfectly ripe, what's the best way to store them to keep them fresh? We tested a simple hack—storing avocados in water—to see if it worked. Here are the results.

How To Store Avocados In Water

While there are certain avocado storage tricks that people swear by—such as the Guac-Lock for keeping leftover guacamole from going bad—I recently came across one on TikTok that I'd never heard of. This hack could be just what you need when working your way through a big bag of avocados from Costco (the hands-down best avocados for your money, by the way).

The method seemed simple enough: You're supposed to submerge whole avocados in cool water in an airtight container and place it in the refrigerator. Leave the container there until you're ready to use. Take it out, dry off the avocados, and enjoy. Luckily, I was heading out on a long weekend trip and had three almost-ripe avocados to conduct a home experiment while I was gone. To measure the success, I left one avocado out on the counter, one in the vegetable drawer in the fridge, and one submerged in a food storage container filled with cold water.

Which Storage Method Works Best For Whole Avocados?

When I left, the avocados were still partially green, but turning dark in some areas. In true fashion of the fabulously reliable Costco avocado section, they were already getting slightly tender to the touch. Not soft, but tender enough to feel my fingers indent when gently squeezing them—perhaps two days away from being near perfectly ripe. I had been storing them previously in the fridge in hopes of adding them slowly into different recipes throughout the week.

Testing Timeline

I began the experiment on Wednesday, a day before I was leaving town. I returned late Sunday and did not check the results until Monday, around five days after embarking on the avocado mission. To say the least, the three avocados had aged quite differently.

Avocado 1: Left On The Counter

The avocado that I left out on the counter was very dark and very squishy. When I cut it open, it was brown on the inside. Ick.

Avocado 2: Refrigerated In Vegetable Drawer

The avocado that I had put in the vegetable drawer in the refrigerator was dark in color, very soft to the touch, and somehow still perfectly green on the inside. Edible, creamy, delicious—I had definitely opened it at the fleeting moment of peak ripeness. Those Costco avocados never disappoint. If left another day, it probably would have started turning brown.

Avocado 3: Stored In Water

To my surprise, the avocado that was submerged whole in water in an airtight container hadn't aged at all. There were no visible changes that I could tell upon first glance. When I cut it in half, it wasn't even ripe enough yet! Visually, it was gorgeous and bright green. However, it was too firm to enjoy, and the seed wouldn't budge from the center. While I was disappointed that it wasn't ready to eat, I was impressed that the storage hack had worked, albeit a little too well. (See below for how it looked inside after five days stored in water.)

Kaitlyn Yarborough
Kaitlyn Yarborough

Testing Cut Avocados

To further test the theory, I placed the avocado halves back into the water face-down to see if it would help them not brown while I waited another day for them to ripen. While it did help rather well with minimal browning, it made the avocado a little slimy-feeling in texture for my personal preference the next day. I don't recommend it.

All in all, I'll probably be using this method in the future when all of my Costco avocados start ripening at the same time and my appetite can't keep up. Next time, I'll be pulling them out of the water for a day or two before I plan to eat them to ensure they have time to fully ripen.

Try These Avocado Recipes

What to do with those perfectly ripe avocados? Here are some recipes that help you take full advantage of them.

Here's to more guac and less rot.

For more Southern Living news, make sure to sign up for our newsletter!

Read the original article on Southern Living.