| Go   | New   | Find   | Notify   | Tools   | Reply   |   | 
| Has Achieved Nirvana  | 
 I bought a bunch of carrots, some celery packed in cellophane and a bunch of onions at TJ about a week ago. We got busy and I haven’t looked at them since.  I went to use them tonight and was surprised to see the onions OK, but the carrots are going limp and the celery is rotting at the base. Is this a thing in the Midwest? Longer shipping times, etc.? I’m used to carrots and celery lasting weeks in the fridge - sometimes a month or more. Or did TJ pick up a badly handled batch? 
 | ||
| 
 | 
| Minor Deity  | 
 Chances are they were picked long before they were even shipped to your store.   Welcome to the cold weather part of the world! Does it have a growing location? 
 | |||
| 
 | 
| Has Achieved Nirvana  | 
 Long time Midwesterner here, and I routinely keep carrots and celery for weeks, sometimes longer. I think you got a bad bunch of produce. 
 | |||
| 
 | 
| Has Achieved Nirvana  | 
 I didn’t look. Maybe I should start. 
 | |||
| 
 | 
| Has Achieved Nirvana  | 
 And we always make it a point to buy TJ's celery hearts, which are packaged under the Josie's label. 
 | |||
| 
 | 
| Has Achieved Nirvana  | 
 I don’t usually buy produce cut and wrapped like that because I use the leaves and such for stock. Maybe I’ll try a different store.  I don’t much care for the local TJ anyway. It’s in a chi-chi mall that charges for parking and the parking structure is too tight for my truck. TJ is fun, but not that much fun… 
 | |||
| 
 | 
| Has Achieved Nirvana  | 
 May as well ask another question. Dinner last night was at the in-laws and was delicious as always. She served baked potatoes and they were great, but they were white potatoes - maybe Irish Rose.  Very different from the Russets I’m used to. Softer, more dense. Not fluffy. Is this a thing? 
 | |||
| 
 | 
| Minor Deity  | 
 White potatoes are a little softer. Don't see them very often. usually use Yukon Gold for mashed.  WTG's right - you just got bad produce. Carrots in particular last virtually forever. I've cooked them after a month or so in the crisper. Celery goes bad faster. 
 | |||
| 
 | 
| Has Achieved Nirvana  | 
 I had trouble finding white potatoes at the regular chain grocery stores.  My mom used to like white potatoes boiled as a side to cold borscht, and the only place I could routinely find them was at the Polish deli/market not far from her house.    We don't eat a lot of baked potatoes, but when we do I always buy russets. But for me, they have to have thick brown skin and lately what's been at Mariano's has lighter color skin that's quite thin. I love to eat the inside of the potato and then pop the empty skin in the oven to let it crisp up before I put more butter, sour cream, and chives in it and fold it lengthwise to eat. What's an Irish Rose potato? 
 | |||
| 
 | 
| Beatification Candidate  | 
 I like to eat my baked potatoes complete as I go, cutting off bites including the skins.  I think my habits changed as an adult.  When I was a boy, I'd extract the potato from the skin, mash it with my fork, and add butter before I ate it.  Then, I'd take the skin, add a little butter, and eat the skin. Maybe it's a function of getting more ingredienats in a loaded baked potato that led me to eat it all as I go. We don't eat baked potatoes at home very often. Mostly, our potatoes are russets or Yukon Golds and they end up as mashed, boiled, scalloped, or some other variety of cooked potato. I have a small list of superlatives for foods that I keep in my mind. My best baked potato was a big Idaho baked potato in an Amtrak diner somewhere between Minneapolis and Chicago. Big Al 
 | |||
| 
 | 
| Foregoing Practicing to Post Minor Deity  | 
 Yes, carrots and celery should last longer than that, even away from California.  I might buy one or two produce items from our local TJ’s but there are better local options for produce. 
 | |||
| 
 | 
| Unrepentant Dork Gadfly  | 
 Carrots last a long time (though we have a carrot processing place really close to us so likely they are grown nearby even in winter as they can store them for a long time). Celery is dicier.  I have wrapped it in aluminum foil if I need to keep it more than a week. For some reason that keeps it crisp. And Russets are the only potato suitable for baking. 
 | |||
| 
 | 
| Minor Deity  | 
 I don't know about the celery but sounds to me like the carrots froze  and defrosted. 
 | |||
| 
 | 
| Minor Deity  | 
 We've gotten very fond of baked sweet potatoes.  The skin is not as delicious as a russet, but still very tasty with a little (ok a lot) butter, s&p.  Mashed sweets are great too. The other day I did not have quite enough of either kind so I mixed russets and sweets and it was delicious. 
 | |||
| 
 | 
| Has Achieved Nirvana  | 
 
 That’s what Mom called them but the Google tells me they are actually “White Rose” potatoes. 
 | |||
| 
 | 
| Powered by Social Strata | Page 1 2 | 
|  | Please Wait. Your request is being processed... | 
| 
 | 

