Posts Tagged ‘organic’

Food, Fitness & Grocery Choices – Part 3: Organic or Conventional?

Tuesday, July 17th, 2012

How are you enjoying this series on making practical, healthy grocery choices?

As a refresher, or if you’re just picking up on the series (Part 1 is here and Part 2 is here), this began as a response to all the folks who’ve asked me, “You’re a fitness professional – how do YOU decipher the double-secret code names on food labels and make healthy choices for your own family?”  Each post in this series walks you through the questions I answer each time I’m faced with a tough choice.

This particular point – organic vs. conventionally-grown – is often the toughest, trickiest, and most emotionally charged of them all.  As if confusing labels and confounding food standards weren’t enough, there are also ethical matters like regional and global ecology and economics.

It’s enough to give me a headache, so I had to simplify it for myself somehow.  When is organic worthwhile?

For me, the answer boils down to this (in order):

when it’s an animal product or by-product,

when it’s one of the Dirty Dozen,

when it’s something you eat several times a week,

when it’s something you eat the skin or roots of (like fruit or carrots)

then it’s worth finding organic.

 

 

(This is how the Dirty Dozen might become more than a dozen, if you consider the last two bullet points above.  If we eat the skin/roots, or eat it often – especially if it’s a kids’ favorite – then I go organic.)

Can’t find the food you want right now?  It’s likely out of season, which means it’s time for a change.  This is especially true for organics, which rely on nature’s rhythms, but it’s also true for conventional produce.  Try something new!   Recipe search websites are perfectly designed for this purpose – search by ingredient at AllRecipes or Epicurious and find a new favorite dish you didn’t even know you loved!

Finally, if I’m still clueless after working through the checklist above,

here’s my bottom line:

“Is the risk of abandoning the nutrients in this food greater than the risk of potential contaminants?”

Sometimes, the answer is “yes.”  Case in point:  my kids are not great lovers of green food. I’m a wee bit ashamed to say it.  I struggle, connive, conspire, and deceive in order to get good green stuff into them.  HOWEVER.  They love my kale chips (comment below if you want the recipe).  Is it worse for their health to never feed them a green food they actually love– or worse to give them conventionally-grown kale?  I risk the ickiness, and I’m not at all ashamed to say that.

Comment, please!  Ask for the kale chip recipe (or others).  Let me know what your bottom-line question is at the grocery.  Share what you’ve learned from this series – or what you think I’ve gotten patently wrong (or right, you know….that wouldn’t hurt my feelings a bit).

Your turn……

Share

Food, Fitness and Good Grocery Choices, Part 2

Tuesday, July 10th, 2012

Ha!  Thought I forgot about you, didn’t you?  There was Part 1, then a guest post, and a week off.  Well, I’m back — with a renewed sense of mission!  Let’s get down to the meat and potatoes, if you will.  Topic #1 in the Food, Fitness and Good Grocery Choices series was Plant or Animal.  Now we’re on to the next question I ask myself in the grocery:  Fresh or Processed?

 

Chances are, if the food you’re about to eat had to come from a factory – if it’s something there’s no way you could make at home – it’s probably not the healthiest choice.  I’m not trying to send us back to the Dark Ages here. I know there are foods you’re capable of making at home, but they would be so inconvenient as to be completely impractical.  When you’re considering one of these foods, try to choose one that’s ancient, or that’s associated with a particular culture.  Think of foods like cheese, yogurt, hummus, butter and the like.

Take a look at the ingredients.  Are there things you don’t recognize, or can’t pronounce?  Does the package make a specific health claim (more Michael Pollan wisdom here)?  Again, if the answers are “yes,” then head back to the produce section to find something better for you.

Confession time: there are some factory foods that I simply don’t want to do without.

Yogurt, butter and cheese come to mind immediately – but there are also things like cereal and pasta. There are plenty of arguments to be made against them altogether (and a few to be made in their favor), but that’s another whole blog topic altogether.   Let’s just say, for this post, that these foods are being used.  If you and your family — like mine — intend to use them, then look first in the health food section. Find “whole grain” in the first three ingredients. Find one without corn syrup, and preferably without other sweeteners.  Look for simplicity –  a short list of ingredients that a second-grader could spell.

So, NOW what do you think? Has your shopping M.O. changed at all?

The next topic: Organic or Conventional – a.k.a. Why The Dirty Dozen Might Not Be So Dirty, and/or Might Be More Than A Dozen.

See you here next week for more.

Share