Why Organic Food Is Better
I still have one more bone to pick with the Stanford University organic food study I told
you about previously. And it concerns the primary reason we eat food in the first place: nutrients.
Stanford researchers found little difference in nutritional values between organics and conventionally grown
foods.
First of all, this doesn't size up with other studies we've seen over the years. There's a lot of evidence that
organic foods do have more nutrients.
Secondly, organic consumers are primarily looking for less exposure to pesticides, herbicides, and genetically
modified organisms. So when nutrients are boosted — even a modest amount — that's an added bonus.
But since the Stanford researchers treat the nutrient issue as if it's a deal breaker, then I'm fired up to rise to
the challenge.
Dial it back
The Stanford team examined 223 field studies that tested nutrient and contaminant levels.
That's a lot of studies. And it sounds impressive. But that large number is exactly why it's not impressive.
Think about it... Different farmers use different seeds. Their farms have different soils. Weather conditions vary.
Irrigation varies. Maturity of plants at harvest time varies.
Also, for an organic farm, proximity to a non-organic farm often affects crop quality. And environmental issues can
throw curveballs. In one season, insects or weeds may be plentiful. In another season, not so much.
So consider all these variables. And consider that the 223 field studies involved a wide variety of fruits,
vegetables, and grains.
Finally, consider the researchers. Every research team designs its own methods to analyse data. One team's methods
can vary widely from those of another team. And those variations might produce much different results.
You get the idea. The study is ambitious. But it's too much. The weight of all these variables is ungainly. It's
comparing apples to oranges to broccoli. So let's keep it simple.
Here's a study I told you about several years ago…
US researchers at the University of California-Davis grew kiwifruits with either organic or conventional
methods.
All the kiwis grew at the same time on the same farm. Both crops grew in the same type of soil, under the same
environmental conditions. And researchers harvested them at the same stage of maturity.
The researchers reported that the organic crop had higher levels of minerals, ascorbic acid, and phenol content.
The result: "A higher antioxidant activity."
There you go. Simple. It's not the last word in organics vs. conventional. But I'll take this result over a mash up
of 223 results.
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