Conventional vs. Organic Produce: Big Differences In Nutrient Content!

This article in Time Magazine caught the attention of produce farmers and consumers alike. This attention-grabbing quote is from the February 18, 2009, issue, and even more relevant today.
If you’re still not buying the whole “organic-is-better” argument, this study might convince you otherwise.
The article explains how produce grown today is larger than that of 50 years ago, but contains drastically fewer nutrients. This is because varieties have been bred for size, rapid maturity, and tolerance to pesticides, rather than nutritional content. If it looks good on the store shelves, people will buy it, not knowing it is nutritionally inferior.
Organic foods are the exception to this trend. They contain higher amounts of minerals and vitamins than their conventionally grown counterparts. Heirloom varieties are even more intriguing because they haven’t been bred to look impressive to customers in a grocery store. Organic produce has also not been treated with chemicals and therefore doesn’t contain dangerous pesticide residues.
Fruits and vegetables used to be just that – fruits and vegetables. But consumers nowadays have so much more to consider than their parents’ generation did. The price is no longer an accurate gauge of how much time or effort went into growing the crops, but could just as easily reflect high transport costs for produce grown far away from your local store. Now we also see that how a piece of produce looks in the store is no longer enough information to make a good decision on how nourishing it is. And with GMO produce appearing in stores on a regular basis now, many consumers are fed up and rejecting the whole system. Organics aren’t just for hippies anymore!
About the author: Jennifer Needham, gardening geek and nutrition educator, is an eclectic homeschooling mom to 5 kids. Visit her blog here: Nutrition Education for Healthy Kids
Tagged with: organic gardening • organic tomatoes
Filed under: Gardening
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Oh wow. I had no idea that organic produce had more nutrients than their chemically treated counterparts. I just assumed that the only difference was the lack of chemicals. I’m a vegetarian and extremely conscious about what I put into my body so I will definitely take not of this tid bit of info…thank!
Growing up and an homesteader, unfortunately my family wasn’t organic, gave me my roots in gardening. It wasn’t until I started my own garden that I became organic and grew heirloom plants. When I drive by home gardens that are lush and vibrant I might get a pang of jealousy but then I realize that theirs is grown with chemical and the result is void of nutrients. The GMO process makes me sad for the future of our food sources and I hope to see this trend reverse itself.