You just cracked open a jar of relish for burgers and now you are wondering where it lives after today. Back in the pantry or into the fridge? Does relish need to be refrigerated?
The short answer: Unopened commercial relish does not require refrigeration and can stay in the pantry. Once opened, relish should be refrigerated. It is not a strict safety requirement given the high acidity, but refrigeration preserves quality significantly and is the universal recommendation for opened jars.
For a full overview of how condiments and pantry staples compare on storage needs, visit our Complete Food Storage Guide.
Key Takeaways
- Unopened relish: pantry-stable, no refrigeration needed. Store in a cool, dark place.
- Opened relish: refrigerate. Quality degrades much faster at room temperature.
- Refrigerated opened relish holds best quality for up to 1 year.
- Opened relish at room temperature lasts only a few days before quality declines noticeably.
- Homemade relish must be refrigerated immediately and used within 1 to 2 weeks unless properly canned.
Why Unopened Relish Does Not Need Refrigeration
Commercial relish is a pickled product. Like pickles themselves, it is preserved in a high-acid solution of vinegar and salt, sometimes with added sugar. That combination creates an environment where bacteria and mold struggle to grow. The jar is also heat-processed during manufacturing, which kills any remaining microorganisms and creates a vacuum-sealed, sterile environment.
This is why you will often find relish on unrefrigerated grocery store shelves alongside other pickled and canned condiments. An unopened, undamaged jar of commercial relish stored in a cool, dark pantry will stay at best quality for up to 2 years. According to USDA FoodKeeper guidelines, most vinegar-based condiments fall into this shelf-stable category before opening.
Why Opened Relish Belongs in the Fridge
Once you break the seal on a jar of relish, the sterile environment is gone. Air enters, and with it the potential for bacteria, mold, and yeast to begin growing over time. The vinegar’s acidity provides significant protection, but it is not unlimited, and the cold temperature of the refrigerator slows those processes considerably.
An opened jar of relish left at room temperature will hold up for a few days without noticeable harm, but quality degrades faster than most people expect. Color darkens, texture softens, and the bright vinegar and vegetable flavors flatten. Refrigeration keeps all of that in check for months.
The standard guidance from food safety resources including the FDA and USDA is consistent: refrigerate opened condiments. For relish specifically, opened and continuously refrigerated jars hold best quality for up to 1 year.
Quick Storage Reference
| Situation | Where to Store | How Long |
|---|---|---|
| Unopened commercial jar | Cool, dark pantry | Up to 2 years |
| Opened commercial jar | Refrigerator | Up to 1 year |
| Opened jar at room temperature | Not recommended | A few days maximum |
| Homemade relish (not canned) | Refrigerator immediately | 1 to 2 weeks |
| Homemade relish (properly canned) | Cool, dark pantry until opened | 6 to 9 months unopened |
Homemade Relish Needs the Fridge Immediately
If you make relish at home without heat-process canning, it must go into the refrigerator as soon as it has cooled. Homemade relish lacks the commercial heat-processing that makes store-bought jars shelf-stable. Even with vinegar and salt, an uncanned homemade relish at room temperature is a food safety risk.
Refrigerated homemade relish is best used within 1 to 2 weeks. If you want to store it longer, proper water-bath canning is the method. Correctly processed and sealed, homemade canned relish can be stored in the pantry for 6 to 9 months. Once opened, it should go in the fridge and be used within a year, the same as commercial relish.
Storage Best Practices
How to Keep Relish Fresh
Seal the lid tightly after every use. Air exposure is the main driver of quality decline in opened relish. A firm seal each time keeps out both air and refrigerator odors.
Keep it in the original glass jar. Glass does not absorb odors or flavors and creates a better seal than most plastic containers. If you transfer relish to a different container, choose airtight glass.
Always use a clean, dry utensil. Dipping a used spoon or knife into the jar introduces bacteria and moisture, both of which speed up spoilage.
Store in the body of the fridge, not the door. The refrigerator door experiences more temperature fluctuation every time it is opened and closed. The body of the fridge maintains a more consistent cold.
Label the jar with the opening date. A quick mark with a permanent marker on the lid tells you immediately how long the jar has been open.
Check the lid before opening any new jar. A flat or slightly concave lid indicates a proper vacuum seal. A bulging or dome-shaped lid means pressure has built up inside and the jar should be discarded without opening.
Ready to Cook? Try These Recipes
- Chili Cheese Dog Egg Rolls: relish alongside chili and melted cheese inside a crispy wrapper is a serious upgrade on the classic chili dog
- Easy Healthy Coleslaw: dill relish stirred into the dressing adds a briny, tangy note that vinegar alone does not quite replicate
- 10 Unique Burger Recipes: a jar of sweet or dill relish is one of the easiest ways to level up a burger spread
Frequently Asked Questions
I left opened relish out overnight. Is it still good?
One night at room temperature is unlikely to cause a safety problem given relish’s high acidity. However, quality begins to decline more quickly than in the fridge. Give it a smell and check for any unusual changes in color or texture. If it seems normal, put it in the fridge and use it soon. If anything seems off, replace it.
Do sweet relish and dill relish need to be stored differently?
No. Both types should be refrigerated after opening and will last up to 1 year under refrigeration. Sweet relish may hold its flavor profile slightly longer because sugar is less volatile than the aromatic compounds in dill. In practice, both last well within the same general window.
Can I store relish in a plastic container instead of the original jar?
Yes, but glass is better. The original glass jar is ideal because glass does not absorb flavors or odors and creates a good seal. If you need to transfer relish, use an airtight glass container. Plastic containers can absorb vinegar odors over time and may not seal as effectively, which shortens quality life.
Does relish sold unrefrigerated at the store still need to go in the fridge when I get home?
Only after you open it. Commercial relish is shelf-stable before opening, which is why grocery stores stock it at room temperature. Store it in your pantry until you open it. Once the seal is broken, move it to the refrigerator.
Further Reading
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