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Lentils

Storage Guide

"A handful of lentils, a world of meals — pennies per bowl."

View All Lentils Recipes

Lentils are the quiet hero of every budget kitchen — a one-pound bag costs less than a dollar, feeds a family of four twice over, and doesn't ask for much in return. They've been filling bellies and stretching paychecks since long before it was trendy.

5
Parts Mapped
Every piece accounted for
40
Total Uses
Nothing wasted
5
Preservation Methods
Year-round supply
Shelf Life (unopened)
2-3 years in original packaging
Shelf Life (opened)
1 year+ in airtight container
Best Storage
Cool, dry, airtight container away from light
Avg Price
$0.89-$1.29/lb (store brand)
Cook Time
15-30 min depending on variety (no soaking needed)
Yield
1 cup dry = about 2.5 cups cooked

💡 Grandmaw's Tips

🌱 Always rinse and pick through dried lentils before cooking — spread them on a light-colored plate and look for tiny pebbles or shriveled ones
🌱 Unlike dried beans, lentils don't need soaking — they cook in 20 minutes flat right out of the bag
🌱 Add salt and acid (lemon, vinegar, tomatoes) at the END of cooking — adding them too early keeps lentils tough
🌱 Red lentils cook fastest (12-15 minutes) and turn to mush on purpose — perfect for thickening
🌱 Green and brown lentils hold their shape (20-25 minutes) — use these when you want texture in salads or bowls
🌱 French green (Le Puy) lentils are the firmest — worth the splurge if you're making a cold lentil salad

Every item below works beautifully with lentils.

🥩 Proteins

Ground beef Chicken thighs Italian sausage Bacon Ham hock Eggs Smoked turkey Chorizo Canned tuna Tofu

🥬 Vegetables

Onion Carrot Celery Potato Tomato Spinach Sweet potato Bell pepper Mushrooms Kale Zucchini Butternut squash

🌿 Herbs

Cilantro Parsley Thyme Bay leaf Rosemary Dill Mint

🧂 Spices

Cumin Turmeric Garlic Smoked paprika Garam masala Curry powder Red pepper flakes Black pepper Coriander Onion powder

🧀 Dairy

Plain yogurt Parmesan Feta Sour cream Cheddar Butter Cream cheese

🫙 Pantry

Rice Olive oil Canned tomatoes Chicken broth Vinegar Bread Coconut milk Tortillas Pasta Tomato paste Lemon juice Soy sauce

Here's how to keep lentils all year long.

🫙 Dry Storage (Uncooked)

2-3 years
Best for: Long-term pantry stocking, emergency food supply
💡 This is the beauty of lentils — they're already preserved. Just keep them dry, sealed, and away from light and they'll outlast just about anything in your pantry.

❄️ Freezing (Cooked)

4-6 months
Best for: Quick weeknight meals, soup starters, taco filling
💡 Cook a big batch on Sunday, portion into 2-cup freezer bags laid flat, and you've got instant protein all month. They thaw in minutes in a hot skillet.

🥫 Pressure Canning (Cooked in Broth)

12-18 months
Best for: Ready-to-eat soup, shelf-stable meal prep
💡 Lentils are low-acid so you MUST pressure can them — no water bath shortcuts here. Can them in seasoned broth and you've got homemade canned soup for pennies.

🌬️ Dehydrating (Cooked)

6-12 months
Best for: Backpacking meals, camping food, lightweight storage
💡 Spread cooked lentils thin on dehydrator trays at 135°F for 6-8 hours. They rehydrate in about 15 minutes with boiling water — perfect for instant soup kits.

🌱 Sprouting

5-7 days (refrigerated)
Best for: Fresh salad topping, sandwich crunch, stir-fries
💡 Sprouting isn't exactly preserving — it's the opposite. You're waking those lentils up. But it stretches your supply by adding volume and fresh nutrition from a handful of dried beans.

Seed to Supper to Seed

Nothing leaves the cycle. Everything comes back around.

🛒
Buy a $1 bag of dried lentils — that's 12+ servings right there
🫙
Store in an airtight container in a cool, dark pantry
🌱
Sprout a handful on the counter for free fresh greens in 3 days
🍲
Cook a big batch — soups, dal, tacos, salads, meat stretcher
❄️
Freeze extra cooked lentils flat in bags for instant weeknight meals
🥫
Pressure can lentil soup for shelf-stable ready meals
💧
Save cooking liquid as free broth or pour on garden as fertilizer
🌿
Plant a few in the garden as a nitrogen-fixing cover crop
🔄
Let some plants go to seed — harvest dried pods for next year's lentils