I know, cool dry place, and it depends on your climate, etc. But what is your experience?

  • Drusas@fedia.io
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    1 day ago

    I don’t think I’ve ever had a potato become moldy. On the rare occasion that they go bad, they just get kind of shrivelly.

  • Admiral Patrick@dubvee.org
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    I don’t think I’ve ever had them mold/rot on me (unless they were in plastic packaging). They usually start growing before that, and I’ll sometimes plant them lol.

    • geosh@lemmy.worldOP
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      I’d get them in plastic, and try to cut the top side of the bag all open within a few days, and often I get through them all without problems but sometimes not.

      I do now have a plastic container I could dump them in that could be an improvement. I’ve thought of cardboard boxes but I imagine spores getting into the cardboard for the next potatoes and maybe moisture from the potatoes being a problem.

      My mother kept potatoes in a plastic container in a cabinet, but I don’t know how well they kept or how quickly we used them up.

      • Admiral Patrick@dubvee.org
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        We grew all kinds of vegetables growing up, and potatoes were one of them. We kept them in a big wooden bin in the cellar and they very rarely, if ever, rotted between seasons. Would use what was left over in the spring for planting (a lot of them were already growing by that point lol).

        Moisture is an issue. Dogs knocked their water dish over, and some of it went under the door into the pantry where a bag of potatoes was sitting. I didn’t notice it for several days, and those did rot. Rotting releases more moisture which spoils any adjacent, and so forth.

        So I guess as long as they stay cool and dry, they’re golden. Though once they start sprouting they’re less ideal to use for cooking (and difficult to peel, too).

    • bobs_monkey@lemm.ee
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      I actually just had my first bag of potatoes go bad on me, while others have lasted months. What is the deal with plastic packaging in this situation?

      • Admiral Patrick@dubvee.org
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        1 day ago

        I have no idea, TBH. I’ve always bought them in bags where they could “breathe”, and those all eventually start growing (rather than rotting/going bad) if I forget about them in the pantry for too long. The only ones I’ve ever bought that were plastic-wrapped were big, baking potatoes. Maybe it keeps them from sprouting for a bit longer?

        • bobs_monkey@lemm.ee
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          Eh maybe it’s a moisture thing, where locking in the moisture saturates them in their own funk? Cause yeah I’m with ya, I usually buy the mesh bags and they’ll keep until they start gaining sentience.

  • dream_weasel@sh.itjust.works
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    21 hours ago

    Months. Most of the time the potatoes go Eldritch horror and start looking for soil before they get in any way bad. I’ve had a few shrivel, but I’ve never had a moldy potato I had to throw away.

    I also don’t eat potatoes very often. The ones In buy tend to serve a long sentence.

  • bittersweets@lemmy.world
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    As a child my family would store potatoes in our cellar all winter into the next year where we would plant them again. Staying between 45-50°F, with high humidity, good ventilation, and no light will make them last 6 months or more.

    • geosh@lemmy.worldOP
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      How did they store them? The only cellar I’ve ever been in was of the house we lived in when I was a little kid, and I remember it as so wet and filled with spiders, and maybe the average cellar isn’t quite like that.

  • just_another_person@lemmy.world
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    Practically impossible to say. You never know how old potatoes you get from the store might be. Maybe a few days, maybe a few weeks. I’ve had freshly harvested and cleaned potatoes go months before showing new root growth on the outside, but I’ve had a new bag of potatoes have one or two turn moldy in a few days.

  • daddybutter@lemmy.world
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    I live in a desert so extremely low humidity and the pantry area is often over 80. I’ve used potatoes over a month after buying them many times. I still use them for myself if they have small sprouts. I usually don’t see mold until closer to two months in. If I’m cooking for others I’ll buy fresh. Our local grocer has a very small selection of produce so I tend to buy a bunch of the nicer ones if I see they’ve restocked since the next grocery store is about an hour away. When I lived in the city though I’d only buy what I planned on using within the next couple days. More trips but always fresh.