As more people moved into cities and further away from food sources, household refrigerators became a necessity. So in 1834, the world got its first working vapor-compression refrigeration system. The first commercial ice-making machine was invented in 1854. And in 1913, refrigerators for home use were introduced.
But as we learned how to preserve our resources more efficiently, we got more and more creative with it, too. So when Reddit user Monk_Never_Dies asked everyone on the platform, "What is something commonly refrigerated, [but] actually doesn't need to be?" the replies came flying in. Here are some of the most popular ones.
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People who put honey in the fridge should be charged as criminals
Nutella in the fridge should be a major felony. Who tf wants rock hard Nutella?
Saw this somewhere that someone would spread Nutella on the parchment paper. About a dozen or more, they shaped them in a nice thinly board. Chilled it overnight, then they used it to crackle its bits for ice cream. For me I would have eaten it in one sitting.
Tomatoes. They'll stay edible longer in the fridge, but they'll instantly lose all their flavor when chilled.
My mother grew up relatively poor and so has it ingrained to never risk wasting food. She'll always refrigerate tomatoes (and even bananas!) despite my attempts to convince her otherwise.
Bread. We put it in the fridge bc my precious little douche bags (cats) like to take chomps out of the bag.
I leave avocados out until they’re the perfect ripeness, then I put them in the fridge and they last ages in the perfect state
Peanut butter. Why people do it, I don't know.
We buy the kind you have to stir- just peanuts, no hydrogenated oils, sugar etc-and it will separate if we don't keep it in the fridge.
Store-bought mayonnaise.
I was raised in the South, and my mother (born in 1924) was kind of obsessed with the idea that mayonnaise left out of the refrigerator would "turn" and grow a bunch of salmonella. We were repeatedly cautioned to be sure to return the mayonnaise jar to the fridge immediately. (When Mom was a girl, mayonnaise was homemade out of raw egg yolks, lemon juice, salt and cooking oil.)
Then I took a food safety course (I was an RN and got assigned to be the safety inspector at my hospital) and to my great surprise the county food safety instructor told us that unrefrigerated commercial mayonnaise only very rarely was ever a problem.
I still don't trust it though. (My mama never steered me wrong, I don't care *what* the county food safety guy says.)
Just checked my mayo jar and it says to refrigerate after opening. I think I'll follow the directions.
Onions or potatoes. Honestly most produce doesn’t necessarily need to go in the fridge but it does help it last longer
Eggs - in the US you have to refrigerate eggs. You don't always in Europe.
When I got married my wife showed me that butter can just sit there right on the counter, even right next to the stove, forever. What is this conspiracy to make people think butter needs to be refrigerated? Is it by the margarine makers to sell their stuff as a softer alternative to butter?
"What is this conspiracy to make people think butter needs to be refrigerated?" My guy I live in Australia if I leave the butter out its gonna be a butter puddle.
The only acceptable reason. Refrigerated butter is near impossible to spread
Load More Replies...Butter doesn't need to be refrigerated, but exposure to oxygen/light/heat can cause issues. That's why covered, opaque butter dishes exist.
Especially the kind you put a little water in to seal out air. But be sure to change out the water!
Load More Replies...Get a French Butter Bell from Amazon! I’m not kidding ! Your butter stays soft and there is no mold or rancid flavor…butter bell. The French have using them for a few hundred years.
Marie, just googled this and looks like a great idea! Thanks for sharing 😃
Load More Replies...Depends on the temperature. I can have butter in a dish out in my kitchen about 6 months of the year, other 6 I would have a warm butter puddle if it wasn't kept in the fridge
I'd say same, but we found butter bells work for us during those times. It's getting cold in the house again and now the butter bell isn't much more spreadable than fridge butter so I guess we'll have to figure something else out for next few months 😂
Load More Replies...Unsalted butter left at room temperature will start to go rancid in just a few hours.
Really? We keep a stick out on the counter during the cooler months & have never had an issue with it going rancid.
Load More Replies...No conspiracy, just the fact that it's a milk product, you'd think butter needs refrigeration
Hell, it goes rancid in room temps everywhere if you don't use it fast enough. Leaving it next to the stove is just asking for trouble. Also, cats *love* butter.
Load More Replies...I like margarine and butter. I've kept butter out of the fridge without any issues. I don't believe there's a conspiracy. It could be due to the fact that butter is dairy and dairy should be refrigerated.
It's called "melting." Also good quality butter can go rancid over time, if you don't eat a lot of butter. Better have a good stout butter dish if you have cats in your house, too.
The humidity in Texas + butter = butter walls, butter cabinets, butter stove, butter sink. NOPE
Refrigerate in Summer, I have had butter liquify in the 10 minutes its been out of the fridge during our Australian summer lol
If I leave butter out on the counter then I will find cat-sized tongue prints in it.
You must eat butter faster than it will go bad. I've had it get moldy.
I live in Australia, butter left out on the kitchen bench is soup in about 2 minutes
We have had some 90° days in northern Wisconsin in the summer, butter has to go in the fridge.
Butter will go rancid if left uncovered and at room temperature too long. It does keep longer on the counter if in an air tight container.
I have always kept butter and margarine in the fridge, as did my parents and grandparents. Butter mixed with a bit of vegetable oil is sold in tubs and soft enough to spread right out of the fridge.
Kerrygold makes a spreadable butter with no oil. I do pull it out of the fridge a few minutes before I need it just so it gets gets really soft, like when my grandmother kept butter in a butter dish on the counter soft. It's a little pricey, but the flavor is very good so I don't need as much.
Load More Replies...I keep salted covered in a butter dish in the cupboard and unsalted plastic wrapped in the fridge so it doesn't take on any weird flavor
Depends on the consistency. Because lately they've added percentage of how much oils are used. The less it has, the more solid form it be as. Sadly the labels can be missed because of where they placed it at and how small it is.
If it has oil in it then it isn't butter. Spreadable butter does exist and has a different proportion of fat types in it, but it's all just from cream, no oil.
Load More Replies...YES!!! I don't know where you live,, or wat sort of butter you buy. But reallo butter melts to slop at normal room temperatures, and to Ghee in hot weather. Not to mention that it is also a magnet for cockroaches, flies and ants. (PS we are not dirty, they are bush cockroache that fly in or crawls in thropugh tiny gaps -- like around the door of the fluscreesw door or under the doors) to get into the house. Yeah we can use poisons and them we have 'silent spring" all year!!) Or I suspect that your wife is buying cheap cooking margarine and not telling you about it.
It goes bad in a couple of weeks. I leave mine out also but a few times when I didn't use it often it went bad.
We always kept our butter out when I was a kid in PA. Now I use one of those butter dishes with water in the base. I live in FL now and I have yet to have my butter go rancid.
If you don't eat it quickly enough it goes rancid. It can even grow mould. I have personal experience of this.
My dad always left the butter out in one of those 'coffin-like- containers. A few years later I noticed my super health foodie friend also left hers out, so it's gotta be ok, right? *This was real butter sticks, not margarine
This is intresting....Ive always known to keep this in the refrigerator.....
My family leaves a stick of butter out next to the toaster, but we store the rest in the fridge, Idk why
As long as the temperature isn't that of the devil's arsehole, butter can theoretically stay at room temperature in airtight containers (like good quality Tupperware bowls) as long as needed. Makes spreading it significantly easier. The only real use for cold butter is baking or if you need precisely cut measurements from a stick.
We left it in a container on the counter but it was not a water sealed air tight butter bell and black mold grew on the side of the bowl.
For me..butter in frig always. Never used to worry about until we moved to texas. Not really heat concern with AC but bugs....ants here like odd foods like butter. Yuk. No matter how clean you are them little nuggets find food.
Butter can go rancid if left out long enough, but most people eat it before that happens.
Since I use a lot of butter everyday, I find it better to leave it out but, I keep it covered and away from heat.
Beware of unsalted butter. It doesn't have the safety of salt preservation and can go off much sooner than expected.
This one's also going to be highly variable. Climate and frequency of use are going to be major players. I live where it's summer all year 'round, and you would think butter out on the counter would be a big NO, but we go through it rather quickly, so in our case, it's a yes.
I love cold slabs of butter on cold toast. But will put some out for mashed potatoes and veggies.
The longer I keep butter out, the more slippery it will become and the more it will melt
Bananas
Bananas are good frozen, covered in chocolate sauce, and rolled in cereal crumbs.
Molasses
In the refrigerator, Grandma's molasses turns to "sludge."
Ketchup but I like mine cold
Depends. Once the bottle is opened it will het sour over time. I used to put mine in the fridge, but thats not necessary anymore since we have kids.
Maple syrup
Growing up it was always in the fridge. When my husband and I met he questioned me on it. I had no idea it wasn’t needed.
Maple syrup definitely needs to be refrigerated, says a woman who was also told this and watched mold grow on a $40 bottle of pure maple syrup. Pancake syrup does not.
Keeping onions in the fridge greatly reduces tears when cutting onions
Sharp knives are a better way to cut down on the tears. The more you damage the onion, the more it makes your eyes water.
Hot sauce. All the restaurants leave it out but I feel like most people stick it in the fridge.
I leave Louisiana style, like Crystal's for example, out after opening but all the other stuff goes in the fridge. Louisiana style has so much vinegar and pepper it's not gonna turn.
Strawberries go bad much faster once refrigerated. Grocery stores greatly reduce shelf life by refrigerating them before you even get the chance to buy the darn berries
Strawberries tend to go bad because of mold around here, so refrigeration slows that down.
Pineapples, my mom tried to refrigerate a whole pineapple once and i had to lecture her about how you are supposed to leave them out
Pepto Bismol. It doesn’t need to be refrigerated but it tastes just awful if it isn’t.
It tastes like pink liquidated chalk, no matter what temperature it is.
Most cheeses are fine to be left out - you just cut away any moldy/dried-out bits, and you’re good to go. NOTE: this does not apply to intentionally moldy cheeses like blues and Gorgonzola, or softer cheese like Brie. It’s for hard cheeses only (Parmesan, cheddar, etc.), which can still last longer when refrigerated too
I don't know if its commonly refrigerated but I do remember getting in an argument with my college roommate about needing to refrigerate jelly/jam.
You don't. It'll last a long long long time in the pantry.
Only if it’s not opened! Don’t do this with open jam or jelly. Especially if you’re double dipping your knife between spreads.
Orange juice. I found out they don't refrigerate it over in France. That freaked me out.
This list doesn't take climate into consideration. I'm Australian, it's hot, fruit, vegetables, bread and condiments don't last in the heat so they have to be refrigerated. I'm more than happy to loose a bit of flavor so my food lasts longer.
Plus a greater risk for nasty bugs if you leave those things out in warmer climates.
Load More Replies...In Europe it's quite easy: whatever is refrigerated in the supermarket, you keep in the fridge. Everything that isn't, stays out. When opened, check the label where to store it.
SO many of these foods will last a while out of the fridge, but (1) they won't last nearly as long as if they're refrigerated, and (2) can go dangerously bad if something non-sterile has been introduced (like a knife or a spoon that has some food traces on it) and (3) even airborne particles can get at them.
Another post stolen from Reddit. This is not journalism, it’s plagiarism and it’s lazy.
Most of the posts here originally came from other sources. There even once was a post that went from Reddit to here to Twitter and back here lol
Load More Replies...A huge difference in storing closed jars, tins and cartons, and storing it once opened. Honey, peanut butter etc are exceptions. Produce, like onions, may be stored in a cellar if you have one (but they’ll be fine at most temps). Greens: in the fridge. Tomatoes: room temperature. Bread: in your belly.
I can only eat slow sourdough artisan bread because I get unmentionable side effects otherwise. For old sourdough sprinkle with water and microwave for 20s
Load More Replies..."It doesn't do anything but helps it last longer" Yeah, that's why I put it in the fridge...
This list is stupid and wrong. The climate is not taken into account. The special features of the kitchens are also not taken into account. Do you have a cool, dark pantry? Perfect. Don't have a cool, dark pantry? So you have to store a lot of things in the fridge. In addition, the storage also depends on consumption, if you drink a liter of milk a day, the opened pack does not have to be put in the fridge. The fridge is a cool and dark place (when the lights in the fridge actually go out!), such a place keeps food from spoiling quickly.
Well the basis of the list is accurate. Very accurate. Personal taste buds play a big roll though. Just because you don't have to refrigerate something doesn't mean that it doesn't taste better when it comes out of a nice cold fridge
Load More Replies...Wow this list's entries were mainly written by people who must also appear on a "your worst bout of food poisoning" list.
Now that is a celebrity cooking show I'd watch. This week we have two celebrities cook a 5 course meal and the judges will decide if it's safe to eat, inedible or "stomach pump time".
Load More Replies...While not valid in all cases, in general tropical fruits should not go inside a fridge.
I THINK it also dep3ends on how close the shops are and how often you do the shopping. If you 'work in town' and stop off to buy things on the way home -- no real need for most refrigeration. However some things out of the fridge will not keep out of the fridge more than a few days. (And that is not counting cockroach, and fly contamination.) it can get very expensive making special trips of over and hour just to get a handful of groceries But it gets fearfully expensive to need to go to the shops daily if it is half an hour or more drive away. However some things out of the fridge will not keep out of the fridge more than a few days. (And that is not counting cockroach, and fly contamination/)
The other one: if you wash your produce you have to refrigerate it or use it immediately. The bacterial ecosystem on them protects it from fungi and oxidation that starts the rotting. That bacteria might be harmful to you which is why you should always wash your produce before use, but as soon as it gets home is unnecessary. (Edit: spelling error)
Did I miss the one about not refrigerating the bodies of their enemies...*rolls eyes
I just laughed thru this whole thing. We haven't had a refrigerator in over a year and a half. We just can't stock up on food like we could with a working fridge and we don't buy milk by the gallon during the hotter months. Anything that needs to stay cool goes in a cooler-no, we don't always have ice either. Neither of us has gotten sick or even had a tummy ache. So my point is, nothing needs refrigerated if you use it in a timely manner. Don't get me wrong, I miss having the option to refrigerate but what I miss most is having a freezer to keep ice in! Edited to add: This way of living might not work in humid environments since mold loves that sort of climate. We live in the desert.
A lot of these things seem to be saying that the items don't HAVE to be refrigerated. Yes, you're correct, they don't HAVE to be, but that doesn't mean choosing not to refrigerate has no effect. In many cases, it makes the items last longer or slows down the spoiling process. That's kind of the purpose.
For most of the condiments, they taste better could, and it's nice to have them all in one place. Plus, I don't have much cabinet space, and there's not much else that would fit in most door shelves anyway.
I heard of some people putting it in the freezer, but never the fridge.
Load More Replies...This list doesn't take climate into consideration. I'm Australian, it's hot, fruit, vegetables, bread and condiments don't last in the heat so they have to be refrigerated. I'm more than happy to loose a bit of flavor so my food lasts longer.
Plus a greater risk for nasty bugs if you leave those things out in warmer climates.
Load More Replies...In Europe it's quite easy: whatever is refrigerated in the supermarket, you keep in the fridge. Everything that isn't, stays out. When opened, check the label where to store it.
SO many of these foods will last a while out of the fridge, but (1) they won't last nearly as long as if they're refrigerated, and (2) can go dangerously bad if something non-sterile has been introduced (like a knife or a spoon that has some food traces on it) and (3) even airborne particles can get at them.
Another post stolen from Reddit. This is not journalism, it’s plagiarism and it’s lazy.
Most of the posts here originally came from other sources. There even once was a post that went from Reddit to here to Twitter and back here lol
Load More Replies...A huge difference in storing closed jars, tins and cartons, and storing it once opened. Honey, peanut butter etc are exceptions. Produce, like onions, may be stored in a cellar if you have one (but they’ll be fine at most temps). Greens: in the fridge. Tomatoes: room temperature. Bread: in your belly.
I can only eat slow sourdough artisan bread because I get unmentionable side effects otherwise. For old sourdough sprinkle with water and microwave for 20s
Load More Replies..."It doesn't do anything but helps it last longer" Yeah, that's why I put it in the fridge...
This list is stupid and wrong. The climate is not taken into account. The special features of the kitchens are also not taken into account. Do you have a cool, dark pantry? Perfect. Don't have a cool, dark pantry? So you have to store a lot of things in the fridge. In addition, the storage also depends on consumption, if you drink a liter of milk a day, the opened pack does not have to be put in the fridge. The fridge is a cool and dark place (when the lights in the fridge actually go out!), such a place keeps food from spoiling quickly.
Well the basis of the list is accurate. Very accurate. Personal taste buds play a big roll though. Just because you don't have to refrigerate something doesn't mean that it doesn't taste better when it comes out of a nice cold fridge
Load More Replies...Wow this list's entries were mainly written by people who must also appear on a "your worst bout of food poisoning" list.
Now that is a celebrity cooking show I'd watch. This week we have two celebrities cook a 5 course meal and the judges will decide if it's safe to eat, inedible or "stomach pump time".
Load More Replies...While not valid in all cases, in general tropical fruits should not go inside a fridge.
I THINK it also dep3ends on how close the shops are and how often you do the shopping. If you 'work in town' and stop off to buy things on the way home -- no real need for most refrigeration. However some things out of the fridge will not keep out of the fridge more than a few days. (And that is not counting cockroach, and fly contamination.) it can get very expensive making special trips of over and hour just to get a handful of groceries But it gets fearfully expensive to need to go to the shops daily if it is half an hour or more drive away. However some things out of the fridge will not keep out of the fridge more than a few days. (And that is not counting cockroach, and fly contamination/)
The other one: if you wash your produce you have to refrigerate it or use it immediately. The bacterial ecosystem on them protects it from fungi and oxidation that starts the rotting. That bacteria might be harmful to you which is why you should always wash your produce before use, but as soon as it gets home is unnecessary. (Edit: spelling error)
Did I miss the one about not refrigerating the bodies of their enemies...*rolls eyes
I just laughed thru this whole thing. We haven't had a refrigerator in over a year and a half. We just can't stock up on food like we could with a working fridge and we don't buy milk by the gallon during the hotter months. Anything that needs to stay cool goes in a cooler-no, we don't always have ice either. Neither of us has gotten sick or even had a tummy ache. So my point is, nothing needs refrigerated if you use it in a timely manner. Don't get me wrong, I miss having the option to refrigerate but what I miss most is having a freezer to keep ice in! Edited to add: This way of living might not work in humid environments since mold loves that sort of climate. We live in the desert.
A lot of these things seem to be saying that the items don't HAVE to be refrigerated. Yes, you're correct, they don't HAVE to be, but that doesn't mean choosing not to refrigerate has no effect. In many cases, it makes the items last longer or slows down the spoiling process. That's kind of the purpose.
For most of the condiments, they taste better could, and it's nice to have them all in one place. Plus, I don't have much cabinet space, and there's not much else that would fit in most door shelves anyway.
I heard of some people putting it in the freezer, but never the fridge.
Load More Replies...