Attention home cooks: do you, like me, have half a lemon, perhaps encased in a beeswax wrap or clingfilm, sitting in your fridge? Half a cucumber, going dry at one end? Or maybe an open jar of capers, barely used, but well past the two-week recommended refrigeration period? So often, a recipe requires just half an onion, or a third of a block of tofu â especially when cooking for one.
According to the 2024 UN Food Waste Index report, about a fifth of the worldâs food is wasted. Worldwide, households are responsible for the majority of it: about 60% of the 1bn tonnes of food thrown away annually. So how best to keep your leftover food fresh â and for how long does it remain safe to eat?
1. Avocado
Earlier this year, the food magazine Bon Appétit tackled the pressing question of how best to store half an avocado. Its advice was to remove the pit, leave the skin on and place it cut-side down on a plate. Using lemon or lime juice on the cut side, or wrapping the whole thing in clingfilm, can also help to minimise oxidation, which is what causes avocado flesh to turn grey and mushy.
2. Tofu
Firm tofu keeps better than the silken variety for leftovers, according to Amy Poon, the founder of the Chinese restaurant Poonâs London. âTofu should keep for two to three days if stored in a plastic container, submerged in clean, cold water (not the water it comes in), but you should change the water daily,â she says. âYou can also freeze tofu.â
3. Tinned goods
Tins are a big fridge no-no since, once opened, the tin from the can can transfer more quickly to the contents, according to the Food Standards Agency. Many tinned items â such as baked beans or coconut milk â are also available in half-size cans, which may be more suitable for using as part of a meal for one, although they are rarely the most economical option. James Cooper, the deputy director of food policy at the FSA, advises emptying leftover contents into a bowl or airtight container before storing it in the fridge. âUse a clean cover that is suitable for food to protect the contents from drips and spills, and use within two days or freeze if you think this wonât be possible,â he says.
4. Lemon wedges
Often, leftover lemon wedges can simply be served alongside whichever dish they have been partially used to season â but what about for drinks? âCut fruit is a tricky one,â says Will Meredith, a beverage consultant for restaurants including Fenix in Manchester and Tattu (nationwide). âCitrus will oxidise very quickly due to all the sugar and acid â you can only expect to use slices or wedges on the day you cut them. To keep them looking and feeling fresh, place in a bowl filled with crushed or shaved ice â like you see in a fish market.â
5. Pancake batter
Fancy pancakes two days on the trot? Youâre in luck! Joe Fox, the executive head chef for Firmdale Hotels, assures me that batter will keep â âalthough it may separate a little bit, so youâll need to give it a good mixâ, he says. âIâd transfer it straight away into an airtight container or a jam jar in the fridge, otherwise the air can cause it to discolour, which can be off-putting.â
6. Eggs
At least pancakes use whole eggs â what of recipes that require only the yolks or the whites? Rachel Morgan, co-founder of Twelve Triangles bakery in Edinburgh, keeps leftovers in a plastic container or a bowl covered in clingfilm. âWhites Iâve kept for about 10 days in the fridge; yolks tend to keep not so well and form a bit of skin, so if you have any to store I would freeze them instead,â she suggests.
7. Things in brine
I could probably eat a whole jar of olives in one sitting, but capers and cornichons are more persistent fridge-lingerers. How best to make them last? âOnce opened, you want to avoid as much oxygen as possible getting into the jars, as that will create mould and foul odours,â says Meredith. âThe simplest thing is get some baking paper, cut a disc large enough to cover the liquid in the jar and pat it down to create a block between the ingredients and the lid. This will prevent oxygen tainting those lovely olives, pickles or any other jarred goods.â He recommends keeping brined foods refrigerated if possible, but itâs not essential (although the storage instructions may disagree).
8. Juice
This is a complicated one â is your juice fresh? From concentrate? Pasteurised? Some unopened shop-bought juices can be kept for many months, but most have a relatively short shelf life once the seal has been broken. The FSA is strict on this: it recommends âreading the label and following the manufacturerâs instructionsâ â which often means consuming within three to five days. Eat By Date â âa group of contributors from the kitchen and classroom communities who set out to answer the question, âHow long does food really last?ââ â go by brand, advising that refrigerated Welchâs grape juice, for example, is safe to consume seven to 10 days after opening, while Ocean Spray cranberry juice lasts two to three weeks.
9. Non-dairy milk
âThey just keep going, donât they?â says Fox. Anyone who has made the switch from dairy will have noticed that alternative milks often seem to last well beyond the recommended five or so days in the fridge. âYou could decant the milk into a glass bottle but it is kind of designed to be stored in the carton,â he says. âI feel like oat and almond milk last the longest â things like soya turn quicker. If you do store it in glass, you will be better able to see if the milk has split, but a good shake would probably bring it back together; you can taste if itâs gone bad.â
10. Bread
âIf bread gets warm in a bread bin, itâll be more likely to go mouldy, as any moisture in it will condense,â says Morgan. Instead, she keeps hers in a cotton or paper bag. But what if mould has already appeared â just a tiny bit on the crust, perhaps? Can you just slice it off and salvage the rest? âI wouldnât,â she says. Most experts seem to agree, since, although only a few spots may be visible, porous food such as bread can be contaminated beneath the surface â which is enough to put anyone off their toast. However, you can also freeze bread for greater longevity.
11. Cucumber
Is there a way to avoid throwing out that dried-out end slice? âOnce cut, I keep cucumber in an airtight container, lined with a little kitchen paper or a clean tea towel [in the fridge],â says Melissa Hemsley, the author of cookbooks including Feel Good and the forthcoming Real Healthy. âIf you do feel the need to chop off the end, you only need to slice the thinnest round off. Also, cook with cucumber! If your remaining half is a touch less than fresh, I like to stir-fry it with sesame oil, garlic and chilli.â
12. Cheese
From roquefort to red leicester, Hemsley has useful advice about open packets of cheese: âBeeswax wraps or silicone reusable bags are really handy, or seal the packaging with elastic bands,â she suggests. Cheese buyer Dan Bliss wraps her cheese in wax or baking paper, stores it in a plastic container in the fridge â and suggests adding a sugar cube to the pot, to suck up any excess moisture. Unlike bread, if your cheese decides to sprout mould, that doesnât necessarily mean itâs game over â especially if itâs hard cheese.
13. Open packets of wraps/naans
Again, preventing moisture is key to longevity. Morgan wraps open packs of naan or tortilla wraps in clingfilm before storing somewhere dry, while Eat By Date suggests tortillas âgenerally last for a week after their âbest byâ date on the counter and about a month if placed in the fridgeâ.
14. Things in jars
For me, this comprises almost an entire fridge shelf: harissa, tomato puree, pesto, gochujang and curry pastes can all sit for weeks â perhaps longer â used once, then abandoned. I refuse to let them go to waste and yet, according to Leonard Tanyag, the executive chef at Los Mochis London City, I am doing it all wrong if I want them to remain fit for consumption: really, they shouldnât be left in their jars at all. âOnce opened, transfer to an airtight container to maintain their freshness and add some oil on top to prevent air exposure, which makes it last for weeks,â he says. And, of course, you should âalways check or smell the opened paste before use for any signs of spoilageâ.
15. Half an onion
Onions are a little like avocados in terms of maintaining freshness: keep the skin on the half youâre not using, then place cut-side down on a plate in the fridge. âIf you donât know when youâre next going to use the leftover onion, chop it and freeze it,â suggests Hemsley. âThen youâve got it ready to go in a future pasta sauce or soup or stir fry.â
16. Fresh herbs
Whether itâs mint for your mojito or coriander for your tacos, fresh herbs can bring a recipe to life â but they also wilt fast. âWrap them in damp blue cloths or kitchen roll and keep in the fridge,â suggests Meredith. âDoing this will extend the shelf life by several days.â
17. Jams and chutneys
âTry to always use a clean spoon â double dipping will increase the bacteria risk,â explains Fox, who tells me he has a chutney in his fridge from during the pandemic and itâs âstill going, still tastyâ. Lillie OâBrien, the owner of small-batch jam and marmalade makers London Borough of Jam, recommends refrigerating jams and preserves after opening, although âif you are going to eat them quickly and itâs not summer, then they will be fine left on a kitchen bench for a week or twoâ. Products that are lower in preserving agents could go mouldy if left out longer, she says.
18. Salad
âHeads of lettuce generally last much better than bagged leaves,â says Hemsley. Like cucumber, she stores salad in the fridge in an airtight container lined with kitchen paper or a clean tea towel to absorb any excess moisture. âIf salad has gone a bit wilted and sad, you can revive the leaves by putting them in a big bowl of iced water for 10-15 minutes, then drain and dry in a salad spinner,â she suggests. âIf you have a few rogue soggy leaves, remove them so they donât infiltrate the rest of the lettuce.â