How to Cut Pineapples and Food Safety Thoughts

This is not a recipe or detailed nutrition article, but, it’s definitely practical. Pineapples are in season. A cup has 2 grams of fiber and provides more than 100% of the daily value of vitamin C. They are juicy, sweet, and cool. Who doesn’t like pineapples?

The problem for many of us might be the cutting. Oh yeah, you have good intentions about cutting up this fruit when you see it beautifully and temptingly sitting in your grocer. You bring it home, get lazy, forget about it, and the reasons go on.

I’m not going to suggest buying chopped pineapple. They are more expensive, plus you are using plastic packaging you can skip to save the environment (Earth Day was only few days ago!).

Learn how to identify the REAL causes of your gut problems.

Download My Free Guide.

Keep in a visible place on your counter top. Wait until the skin turns more yellow than green, but don’t wait too long because it can rot in 4 or 5 days. When you’re ready to make dinner, lunch, or anything else, tag cutting up your pineapple along.

Personally, give me a sharp chef knife and a large cutting board, and I’ll chop, slice, or cut anything (although I’m looking for a food processor–do you recommend one?). There are pineapple corers in the market though and they seem to have good reviews. Here’s how I do it:

Cut off the top
Cut off the skin. Start by a thin layer so you reserve as much of the fruit then cut out any rough parts of the skin left. Then wash the cutting board and knife before you move on. You might introduce any germs from the out to the inside of the fruit.
Cut the pineapple lengthwise in half. Cut each side into four long strips
Take out the dry core
Chop as thick or thin as you like. I keep them thick so they are easier to eat for a snack, and if I need to use them for cooking or give them to my son, I can cut them smaller later. Keep refrigerated.
Aren’t fruits just so yummy?

Speaking of food safety, I recently read a post by fellow RD and blogger (the Candid RD)  Gina about refrigerator safety and we all need to know the information she has. How much do you pay attention to refrigerator and food safety in your kitchen?

And…

Is it just me being picky or do some of the Food Network chefs need some food safety training? I was watching Giada De Laurentiis and Ina Garten (Barefoot Contessa) the other day, and they both touched raw meat or eggs, then the oil or wine bottle, then the spatula without washing their hands. It was a one shot continuous scene–they didn’t cut and edit so the chef can wash her hands! Food contamination alert! I mean, this is the first thing we learn in food preparation class: “separate, don’t contaminate!” I ALWAYS wash my hands after touching any raw mean, chicken, or fish and before touching anything else. What do you do?

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE​

Nour’s guidance and expertise was the key to dramatically halting our son’s [Crohn’s] disease progression! His pediatric gastroenterologist is now in agreement of our choice to treat solely with diet and supplements. All his labs have improved and his inflammatory markers are so low they are practically nonexistent.

Before working with Nour, I experienced intestinal pain off and on for for 54 years with minimal success on medications. I have benefited 100% from Nour’s program as I am now pain free!

A lot of time and money was wasted on foods that I thought would help my digestive struggles [diarrhea, bloating, hunger], but in fact I was making it worse. The main benefit is getting a handle on what negatively affects my digestive symptom. Doing a total 180 to my eating habits has been pretty amazing.

Scroll to Top

Learn how to identify the REAL CAUSES of your gut problems.

Fill out the form below, and we will send the guide to your email.

Get My Free Guide

Fill out the form below, and we will send the guide to your email.