If youāve ever soaked berries in salt water and suddenly noticed tiny white āwormsā or wiggling specks coming out, your first reaction is probably shockāand maybe even disgust. Itās one of those moments that makes you question everything you just bought from the store or picked from the market.
But before you throw the whole container in the trash, itās important to understand what youāre actually seeing, why it happens, and whether those berries are truly unsafe to eat.
The reality is more surprisingāand a lot less scaryāthan most people think.
š« What Are Those White Wiggling Things?
In most cases, those tiny moving organisms are fruit fly larvae or similar microscopic insect larvae. These are extremely small, white, and often nearly invisible inside the fruit until exposed.
Berries like strawberries, raspberries, and blackberries are especially vulnerable because:
- They grow close to the ground
- They have soft, porous surfaces
- They ripen quickly
- They are often exposed to fruit flies before harvesting
Fruit flies can lay eggs on ripe fruit in nature, and sometimes this happens before the fruit is even picked or packaged. Once you soak the berries in salt water, the change in environment (salty, low oxygen) causes these larvae to move out of the fruit and become visible.
Itās not pleasantābut itās a known and documented occurrence in fresh produce.
š§ Why Salt Water Makes Them Come Out
Salt water doesnāt ācreateā anything inside your berriesāit simply reveals what was already there.
When berries are soaked in salt water:
- The salty environment irritates small insects
- Oxygen levels decrease for organisms inside the fruit
- Larvae naturally move toward the surface to escape
- You suddenly see movement that was previously hidden
Thatās why many people believe salt soaking āfinds bugsāāit doesnāt add them, it exposes them.
ā ļø Should You Throw the Berries Away?