How to store it
Keep the pouch or jar in a cool, dry place, away from direct sunlight and the stove. A spice cabinet or pantry shelf is right. The kitchen counter near the cooktop is wrong.
If you ordered the pouch, decant into a glass or steel container with a tight lid.
We offer the glass jar option for ₹210 more because glass is the right container for ginger powder over time. The pouch is good for the journey from us to you. Once it reaches your kitchen, the powder is happier in glass or steel. Pour it across, seal the lid, label with the date. You can reuse the same jar with the next batch.
Why moisture is the enemy.
Ginger powder is hygroscopic — it pulls water out of humid air. A wet spoon, a drop of steam, a jar left open by the stove: any of these can introduce moisture. Moist powder clumps, loses aroma faster, and in Indian humidity becomes a risk for ghun (weevils). Use a dry spoon every time. Wipe the rim before closing the lid.
Old Indian kitchen trick for ghun prevention.
Drop two whole cloves or one dried bay leaf into the jar. Both deter weevils without changing the flavour of the ginger. The trick has lived in Indian pantries longer than the spice industry. It works.
Refrigeration in humid weather.
If you live somewhere humid (monsoon coastal cities, Mumbai through July, Kolkata through September), keep the sealed jar in the refrigerator. Cold storage holds the aroma longer and removes the ghun risk entirely. Bring the jar to room temperature for a few minutes before opening to avoid condensation forming on the inside of the lid. Do not freeze the powder. Freezing then thawing introduces water through condensation, which is the opposite of what you want.
Shelf life.
Best within 12 months of harvest. Aroma is strongest in the first 6 months, good through 12 months, acceptable through 18. Past 18 months the powder is still safe but the volatile aromatics have started to thin.
If the aroma fades.
Use the older powder up in slow-cooked dishes where time and heat can revive what dry storage cannot — dal tadka, curry base, chai with cardamom. Save the fresh-batch powder for the morning ginger tea where you want the sharp citrus edge.