Sourcing and storing avocado
Possible Duplicate:
What can I do to help my avocados ripen?
How can I choose good avocados at the supermarket?
I live in the UK and have a difficult time getting hold of good avocados.
They are generally of two types in the shop, hard and tasteless or soft and brown. I sometimes try to buy the hard type, after a while sometimes they are good, sometimes they seem not to ripen and others they are rotten by the time they are soft.
They are not cheap either getting on for a £1 each.
I would really like to know:
How to choose good ones from the shop? Are there types which ripen well, does the shape or color help determine what will ripen well.
How to store while at home? I tend to put in the fruit bowl with Bananas should they be warm or cold in the dark or the light.
Are there good stores in the UK for buying them from (possibly too localized|localised?)
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Get the hard green ones, and store them in a brown paper bag on the counter top until they ripen. Once ripe, you can hold them at that stage in the fridge for a few days. The sad truth about avocado is that it is nearly impossible to buy one to eat "Right Now!".
Now, that being said, the soft brown-skinned ones are fantastic for guacamole or other creamy avocado based dips/spreads.
Buying avocado in the UK is treacherous: likely they have been treated like potatoes and bounced around insuring bruises once ripened.
Try to get them directly from their packing box. Buy the whole box if necessary and split amongst friends once semi-ripe.
Bury each avocado in a sack of flour about an inch or two surrounding. Store away from high heat and humidity -room temp or cooler is great.
A typical Hass (dark alligator skin pear) will ripen this way in 2 - 5 days to barely fork tender. Closely observed final ripening in fruit bowl til desired tenderness is advised. A few hours can be the difference.
Once ripened, they keep up to 5 days in fridge without darkening. Still, give them support/cushioning to avoid bruises and to absorb condensation.
www.ehow.com/how_6975833_ripen-avocados-flour.html
I usually buy green, hard avocados to use them in a couple of weeks. When I'm looking for an almost ready avocado for my guacamole at the supermarket, I look for a not-so-hard one and pop off the stem: this is a tip I found over the internet and it really works. Pulp under the stem should be greenish and not brown or dark, otherwise it's probably rotten. You can usually find your ready-to-enjoy avocado with a couple of pop offs.
Take a look to this link for a more in-depth explanation about popping off the stem: www.nwedible.com/2012/05/never-buy-a-rotten-avocado-again.html
Regarding storage, I put them in a bowl on counter top to let them ripe slowly; in a bag with apples or bananas to speed up things. Once ready, I store them in the fridge. Once opened, I put them in Tupperware: they stay perfectly green.
Keep in mind that if you place fruits near apples or bananas, which naturally produce ethylene, your fruit will generally ripen faster.
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