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This Is the Only 'Fast' Way to Ripen an Avocado

Leave it to science and a paper bag to show you the absolute fastest way to ripen an avocado.
Green avocados scattered on a tan tablecloth.
Credit: Brent Hofacker - Shutterstock

Avocados have a fan club filled with people who hate to love them. They taste great; they can be sliced, mashed, or blended; and the can be used to make everything from salad dressings to ice cream. But they like to play coy. Perfectly ripe for seemingly mere minutes, avocados spend most of their time on the countertop either rock solid or rotten.

This unfortunate fact has given rise to a great number of “quick ripening” avocado hacks. If you’re excited to hear all of them, take a minute to enjoy that feeling. Ah, that was nice. Anyway, most of those hacks don’t work. Turns out, there is only one way to quickly ripen an avocado.

How to ripen an avocado fast

Outside of letting the fruit ripen on its own for a few days, there’s a singular way to speed up your avocado’s ripening. And keep in mind: It’s faster, but it still ain’t fast.

What you have to do is put the avocado in a paper bag, or any closed off space, ideally, with another climacteric fruit that’s already ripe (like an apple or a banana). Paper is suggested because it absorbs possible mold-causing moisture, however it’s only going to be in there for a day, so mold is unlikely to grow on the avocado’s skin. (And you can always throw a napkin or paper towel into a plastic bag if you’re out of paper.) Depending on the avocado’s current state of ripeness before going in “time-out,” it will be ripe in 12-24 hours, and the other fruit will have advanced, too.

Every other “ripening” hack I have come across turns out to be a softening hack. You have to consider what you really want from your little green goddess—ripeness, or for the damn thing to just be soft already.

Why the paper bag ripening method works

As the University of Maryland Extension details, a number of characteristic changes occur when a fruit ripens, and softening is only one of them.

The firmness of the fruit flesh typically softens, the sugar content rises, and acid levels are reduced. Aroma volatiles are released, and the true flavor of the fruit develops. The color of fruit typically darkens, the skin and flesh soften, and the green background color fades.

The only way to truly effect a fruit’s ripening is to trigger the biological process chemically with ethylene. Ethylene is a plant hormone that signals the ripening process, and no, you don’t need to buy it off Amazon. This is where the paper bag comes in. Climacteric fruits are fruits that can ripen after being removed from the plant. That is, they can be harvested before ripeness and will continue to ripen in storage because they will naturally give off ethylene. An unripe fruit gives off low concentrations of ethylene, but as it matures, the ethylene, among other things, will trigger other developmental processes; eventually the fruit will begin to give off higher and higher concentrations of ethylene gas.

Since the avocado is already giving off ethylene, putting it in an enclosed space (like a paper bag, plastic bag, or cardboard box) locks in the ethylene so it surrounds the fruit, signaling it to release yet more ethylene. Left on the counter, this important ripening gas is lost to the surrounding air.

If the avocado is particularly green, adding a fruit that is already ripe and giving off advanced levels of ethylene gas gives the avocado a jump start. Be warned: that other fruit will also be affected by the ethylene container, and will likely become overripe. The avocado benefits from the advanced life stage of the other fruit to reach the top of its game, while the innocent helper-fruit shrivels into mush. So put your avocado in a bag and check on it every eight to 10 hours, to see how ripe it is, then take it out to slow down the rate of ripening.

The ethylene container trick will work with any climacteric fruit (hard peaches, I’m talkin’ to you), and will actually ripen the fruit’s texture, color and, most importantly, the flavor. If you’ve ever ordered a dish that includes sliced avocado and gotten underripe pieces, you know how disappointing it can be. At my current life stage, I can chew on firm foods just fine, but unripe avocado tastes like watery nothingness.

Softness and ripeness aren’t the same thing

Avocado softening tricks (like pouring on salt, putting it in the oven, or simply annihilating it in a food processor), might allow you to mash the fruit up, but the flavor will remain the same: lacking.

If you’ve organized a football Sunday gathering and you were in charge of the guacamole, my best advice is to give yourself at least 24 hours of avocado-in-a-bag time. If you don’t have that much time, you’re better off grabbing a couple tubs of Sabras and secretly scooping it into your own Tupperware.