Bee's Wrap vs Plastic Wrap: 6-Month Real-World Test

Plastic-free food storage that actually works. We used Bee's Wrap daily for 6 months across fruits, vegetables, cheese, and baked goods. Here's what lasted, what failed, and when to still use plastic.

9 min read · Kitchen

The Test

6 months, 3 Bee's Wrap sheets in different sizes, used daily by a household of 2 adults and 1 child. We tracked: cling factor over time, odor retention, washability, structural longevity, and actual food preservation effectiveness compared to plastic wrap.

What Bee's Wrap Does Well

Cheese: Bee's Wrap outperformed plastic wrap. Cheese wrapped in Bee's Wrap maintained acceptable moisture for 5-7 days; plastic wrap for 3-4 days before surface mold appeared. The beeswax allows the cheese to breathe while maintaining humidity.

Fresh herbs: Wrapping parsley, cilantro, and basil stems in damp Bee's Wrap kept them fresh for 10+ days in the fridge. Plastic wrap caused faster wilting due to trapped moisture.

Baked goods: For bread and rolls, Bee's Wrap maintains freshness comparable to plastic wrap for 2-3 days. For longer storage, neither works well — the freezer is required.

Where Bee's Wrap Fails

Meat and fish: We don't recommend Bee's Wrap for raw protein. The antimicrobial properties of beeswax are insufficient to prevent bacterial growth at refrigerator temperatures. Use a container or proper plastic wrap for raw meat.

Liquid foods: Bee's Wrap does not seal like plastic wrap — it adheres via warmth of hands. Soups, sauces, or liquid foods will leak. Not suitable for transporting soups to work.

High-heat environments: Bee's Wrap softens and loses shape above 100°F. Not suitable for covering food going into microwaves or ovens.

When to Still Use Plastic Wrap

  • Covering raw meat or fish in the fridge
  • Transporting liquid foods
  • Microwave use (unless using a specific microwave-safe Bee's Wrap alternative)
  • Freezing raw protein (plastic wrap is more reliable as an airtight seal for freezer storage)