Part-Time Organic
Balancing Your Health and Finances When Buying Upscale Produce
By Dawn Klingensmith CTW Features
Buying everything organic - from milk to mangoes - might be a healthy choice
for your body. But perhaps you've found it's less-than-healthy for your
household budget.
If you can't afford to
go all organic, certain foods take priority over others - especially if your aim
is to avoid pesticides, says nutritionist Carol Anne Wasserman of New York City.
"Pesticides are held in the
skin of foods, so buy organic anything you can't peel," she says. "Berries -
especially strawberries - and mushrooms should really be organic because of
their porous surfaces. Carrots would be more important than bananas. You can
peel both of them, but bananas have a thicker skin. Potatoes and apples are
known to have high pesticide contents, so opt for organic with those foods,
too."
The nonprofit Environmental Working Group reviewed nearly 43,000 laboratory
tests on produce compiled by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration and ranked fruits and vegetables based on
pesticide contamination.
Topping the list of foods with the highest pesticide loads were peaches, apples,
sweet bell peppers, celery, nectarines, strawberries and cherries.
Least contaminated were onions, avocados, frozen sweet corn, pineapples,
mangoes, frozen sweet peas and asparagus. The criteria used to create the list
of 43 fruits and vegetables takes into account how people wash and prepare
produce, and while washing and rinsing may reduce pesticide levels, it doesn't
eliminate them.
Peeling also reduces exposures, but valuable nutrients go down the drain with
the peels, the organization reports.
Kathleen D'Ovidio, assistant professor of food science at Delaware Valley
College, Doylestown, Pa., counters the group's conclusions.
"The USDA makes no claims that organically produced food is safer or more
nutritious than conventionally produced foods," she says, adding that
fertilizers and synthetic pesticides wash off harmlessly and compromise the
planet only when used incorrectly.
D'Ovidio says food-borne illnesses caused by E. coli and other microorganisms
pose a greater threat. "Any food, organic or not, is going to carry the same
risk," she says. "The risk is very, very low, but as we saw with the spinach and
lettuce outbreak, it can occur."
By definition, organic foods are produced according to government-established
production standards. Organic produce is grown without the use of conventional
pesticides or artificial fertilizers and contains no food additives. Organic
beef, pork and poultry come from animals reared without the routine use of
antibiotics and without a trace of growth hormones.
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