You won’t believe which of these food hacks actually works!

  • By Nancy Stohs Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
  • Tuesday, June 21, 2016 3:51pm
  • Life

You’d think by now all the tricks to faster, easier and ultimately better food preparation would have been discovered.

Not so, if social media can be believed. My Facebook feed is punctuated on a regular basis by “awesome,” “amazing” and “mind-blowing” cooking hacks accompanied by a video, before-and-after photos and usually plenty of capital letters and exclamation marks. (You MUST try this!!)

Inspired by both curiosity and skepticism, I decided to put a new batch of these hacks to the test.

Thumbs up

Keeping avocados from browning. The trick? Store a cut avocado in an airtight container with a few onion slices. Supposedly, sulfur compounds from the onion will oxidize and keep the green surface from browning.

I did this, parked it in the fridge and kind of forgot about it for 24 hours. And wow, it was still pretty green. The avocado smelled faintly of onion but didn’t taste onion-y.

The next day, it was still primarily green. I packed a mixed-greens salad for lunch that morning, topped with chunks of avocado, and then threw a few onion slices on top. At lunchtime, the avocado was as green as when I’d chopped it.

Speed-ripening bananas. When you want banana bread, you can never find overripe bananas, am I right?

So here’s what you do. Bake your underripe bananas (even tinged with green, as mine were) in a 350-degree oven for 5 to 7 minutes.

I baked mine 7 minutes, during which time the peel turned mostly black (upon cooling, they were fully black). I peeled them and, voila — they were indeed banana-bread ready.

Speed-ripening avocados. Wrap the avocado in aluminum foil, place in a 200-degree oven until soft, and then cool in the fridge.

The directions said 10 minutes but added that it could take up to 1 hour, depending on how hard the avocado was. Well, my avocado was large and rock hard, so I left it in the oven for an hour. It never felt soft to the squeeze, but I placed it in the fridge as instructed to let it cool.

To my surprise, when I cut into it later, it was soft — though it still had that “green” taste to it, not that rich taste of a counter-ripened fruit. But for a batch of guac, with a multitude of flavors added? Or a salad with other ingredients? This is a viable solution.

Silk-free corn shucking. You really want to spend all that time picking silks out of a dozen ears of fresh corn? Didn’t think so.

Instead of trying to shuck off husk and silks all at once, peel away all the outer husks a layer at a time until you’re left with pretty much only the silky tassel. Then get a good grip on the tassel and pull it off with one tug. Success — my ears had just one or two silks left behind.

Removing bits of eggshell. You know how when you reach into a broken egg to extract a piece of shell, it seems to run the other direction? The trick here is to wet your finger first. Instant eggshell magnet!

Easier cheese grating. The trick: Coat the grater surface with vegetable oil spray before grating.

Well, this was a no-brainer. My chunk of 1-year aged cheddar slid across the surface, fewer shreds stuck in the holes, and the grater was easier to clean.

Faster pasta cooking. Soak pasta in a bowl of water for an hour, and then just drop it in boiling water for 60 seconds, and it’s ready to eat.

My elbow macaroni soaked for exactly 1 hour, but it took 2 minutes in boiling water to be properly al dente. Still, that’s faster than the 7 to 8 minutes the box tells you, for really no effort on your part.

Thumbs down

Easier peeling of hard-cooked eggs. Add a teaspoon of baking soda to the water before cooking the eggs, then let them cool and peel them. Supposedly, the baking soda makes the cooking water more alkaline, which helps loosen the bond between the white and the shell.

Don’t waste your baking soda.

My eight eggs consisted of four old ones, two newer eggs and two from a carton I had just purchased. And when I shelled them, exactly four peeled easily, two semi-easily and two were very difficult (read: pockmarked, with a bunch of egg that came off with pieces of shell).

I have yet to find any better way to make hard-cooked eggs easy to peel than simply: Use old eggs.

Keeping cut apples from browning. Slice an apple, then reassemble it around the core and wrap with a rubber band, this hack instructs.

First of all, for this to work, you have to use one of those apple slicer tools to end up with a core in one piece.

I tried this with three varieties: Granny Smith, Honeycrisp and Golden Delicious. Five hours later, there was some brown on all the pieces, though they weren’t terrible.

But why would you even do this? I suppose it makes sense for a brown bag lunch, when you don’t want to cut up an apple at work. If you cut and rubber-band it in the morning, it will have only a few hours to start to turn brown.

Easier fridge cleaning.It sounded good in theory: Cover refrigerator shelves with Press ‘n’ Seal wrap, then peel off and replace the wrap when the shelf needs cleaning.

But then I tried it.

A, the wrap wasn’t wide enough to cover my clear plastic slide-out shelves. And B, it didn’t stick! At all!

And then I remembered that the real hassle of cleaning the fridge isn’t the wipe-down — that’s NBD. It’s the clearing out of all the food and containers, which you would have to do regardless.

— Sources: purewow.com, sweetandsavoryfood.com, chowhound.com, lifehack.org, 30secondmom.com, onegoodthingbyjillee.com

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Life

Travis Furlanic shows the fluorescent properties of sulfur tuft mushrooms during a Whidbey Wild Mushroom Tour at Tilth Farmers Market on Saturday, April 27, 2024 in Langley, Washington. (Annie Barker / The Herald)
On Whidbey Island, local fungi forager offers educational mushroom tours

Every spring and fall, Travis Furlanic guides groups through county parks. His priority, he said, is education.

Modern-day Madrid is a pedestrian mecca filled with outdoor delights

In the evenings, walk the city’s car-free streets alongside the Madrileños. Then, spend your days exploring their parks.

Penny Clark, owner of Travel Time of Everett Inc., at her home office on Tuesday, April 23, 2024 in Arlington, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
In a changing industry, travel agents ‘so busy’ navigating modern travel

While online travel tools are everywhere, travel advisers still prove useful — and popular, says Penny Clark, of Travel Time in Arlington.

Emma Corbilla Doody and her husband, Don Doody, inside  their octagonal library at the center of their octagon home on Thursday, May 2, 2024 in Sultan, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Is this Sultan octagon the ugliest house in America?

Emma Corbilla Doody and Don Doody bought the home for $920,000 last year. Not long after, HGTV came calling.

Burnout is a slow burn. Keep your cool by snuffing out hotspots early

It’s important to recognize the symptoms before they take root. Fully formed, they can take the joy out of work and life.

Budget charges me a $125 cleaning fee for the wrong vehicle!

After Budget finds animal hairs in Bernard Sia’s rental car, it charges him a $125 cleaning fee. But Sia doesn’t have a pet.

Music, theater and more: What’s happening in Snohomish County

The Grand Kyiv Ballet performs Thursday in Arlington, and Elvis impersonators descend on Everett this Saturday.

An example of delftware, this decorative plate sports polychrome blooms

Delft is a type of tin-glazed earthenware pottery born in Holland. This 16th century English piece sold for $3,997 at auction.

Great Plant Pick: Dwarf Purpleleaf Japanese Barberry

What: Dwarf Purpleleaf Japanese Barberry, or berberis thunbergii f. atropurpurea Concorde, was… Continue reading

Spring plant sales in Snohomish County

Find perennials, vegetable starts, shrubs and more at these sales, which raise money for horticulture scholarships.

Bright orange Azalea Arneson Gem in flower.
Deciduous azaleas just love the Pacific Northwest’s evergreen climate

Each spring, these shrubs put on a flower show with brilliant, varied colors. In fall, their leaves take center stage.

(Daniel Berman for The Washington Post)
The Rick Steves guide to life

The longtime Edmonds resident is trying to bring a dash of the Europe he loves to south Snohomish County.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.