Mixed storage of fruits and vegetables

Page last updated: Wednesday, 10 August 2016 - 8:07am

Please note: This content may be out of date and is currently under review.

When different fruits and vegetables are stored together, one foodstuff may be tainted by odours given off by another. A second important problem is that optimum storage temperatures and relative humidities for different produce vary widely.

To store mixed fruits and vegetables for short periods, you should consider their temperature requirements, potential for tainting, and ethylene sensitivity of the products being stored.

Introduction

If mixed storage of fruits and vegetables cannot be avoided, use it only for short periods — a few days to a week — and store only those fruits and vegetables that are compatible. Longer mixed storage should not be used because of:

  • tainting from odours
  • effects of ethylene on quality
  • incompatible common temperature and relative humidity requirements.

Four practical storage environments for holding fruits and vegetables in mixed storage for short periods only are for:

  • temperate fruits and vegetables not sensitive to cold
  • fruits and vegetables moderately sensitive to cold
  • most tropical fruit and vegetables sensitive to cold
  • open storage — where foodstuffs can be stored but with some reduction of storage life.

Temperature

Some fruits and vegetables are sensitive to low temperatures which cause 'chilling injury' if they are stored below their critical temperature.

Tainting

The transfer of odours between produce in the same room can be a problem.

Do not store:

  • apples and pears with celery, cabbage, carrot, potato or onion
  • celery and carrots with onions
  • onion, garlic, citrus or potato with any other type of produce.

For example, apples and pears take on a disagreeable colour and taste when stored with potatoes. The odour of apple, citrus, onion, garlic and some tropical fruit — for example, jackfruit and durian — is readily absorbed by other produce.

Sensitivity to ethylene

Ethylene gas (C2H4) is a hormone that stimulates fruit ripening and senescence. It also has a harmful effect on vegetables, for example, yellowing of broccoli and pitting of lettuce. Do not store ethylene-producing products and ethylene-sensitive products together.

Lettuce, carrots, broccoli and some flowers deteriorate rapidly if stored with pears, apples, bananas, avocados, peaches, plums and other produce that give off ethylene.

Temperate fruits and vegetables not sensitive to cold

Store at 0oC and 90-100% relative humidity.

Products such as apples and apricots produce ethylene and those that are sensitive to ethylene such as artichokes and asparagus should not be stored together. Items in the third column in the table below can be stored for short periods with those in either of the first two columns.

Fruits and vegetables not sensitive to cold
Ethylene producers Sensitive to ethylene Able to be stored with
others for short periods
Apple Artichoke Beetroot
Apricot Asparagus Cherry
Fig Broccoli Coconut
Kiwifruit - ripe Brussels sprout Grapes
Nectarine Cabbage Kohl rabi
Peach Cauliflower Lychee
Pear Celery Mushroom
Plum Sweetcorn Parsnip
  Endive Pea
  Kiwifruit - unripe Persimmon
  Leafy greens - kale, Swiss chard Radish
  Leek

Vegetables – fresh precut

  Lettuce

Turnip

  Oranges  
  Parsley  
  Rhubarb  
  Silverbeet  
  Strawberries  

Fruits and vegetables moderately sensitive to cold

Store at 7-10oC and 90-100% relative humidity.

Products such as avocados, honeydew melons etc. produce ethylene, and those that are sensitive to ethylene such as French beans and cucumbers, should not be stored with them. Items in the third column in the table below such as most citrus can be stored for short periods with those in either of the first two columns.

Fruit and vegetables moderately sensitive to cold

Ethylene producers

Sensitive to ethylene

Able to be stored with
others for short periods

Avocado Beans (French) Chilli peppers
Honeydew melon Capsicum (sweet pepper) Cumquat
Guava Cucumber Eggplant
Passionfruit Okra Lemon
Rockmelon (cantaloupe) Olive Lime
Tomato (coloured) Squash (button) Mandarin
  Tamarillo Orange
  Zucchini Tangelo
    Water chestnut
    Watermelon

Tropical fruits and vegetables sensitive to cold

Store at 13oC and 85-90% relative humidity.

Products such as bananas and mangoes produce ethylene, and those that are sensitive to ethylene such as potatoes, should not be stored together. Items in the third column in the table below such as pumpkins can be stored for short periods with those in either of the first two columns.

Tropical fruits and vegetables sensitive to cold

Ethylene producers

Sensitive to ethylene

Able to be stored with
others for short periods

Banana Breadfruit Ginger
Cherimoya Jackfruit Grapefruit
Guava Potatoes Lemon
Mango   Mangosteen
Pawpaw   Pumpkin
Plantain   Soursop
Rambutan   Squash (hard shell)
Tomato (mature green)    

Open storage

Produce suitable for open storage
Garlic
Nuts
Onion
Potato
Shallot (dried)

These products are ethylene-sensitive.

Acknowledgment

The original information for this web page was prepared by Dr Soon Chye Tan.

 

Contact information

Pest and Disease Information Service (PaDIS)
+61 (0)8 9368 3080