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Picking and Choosing Organic Fruit and Vegetables

Avoid Pesticides Organic Fruit and Vegetable SelectorWhether you are preg­nant, breast feed­ing, start­ing the wean­ing process or hid­ing veg­eta­bles in your tod­dlers meals, fruit and veg­eta­bles are para­mount to rais­ing a healthy child. In the UK we are advised to eat 5 por­tions a day from a wide range of fruit and veg­eta­bles, but should we be buy­ing organic?

Mind­ful Mum has cre­ated the fol­low­ing guide to pick­ing and choos­ing organic fruit and veg­eta­bles. The guide is based on ‘buy­ing organic’ when the pes­ti­cide residues in a par­tic­u­lar food are high. There is no need to go organic when the food does not con­tain high lev­els of pesticides.

Which foods do I need to buy organic and which do I not need to buy organic?

See list of fruit and veg­eta­bles with the high­est and low­est lev­els of pes­ti­cides below.

Down­load What to Buy Organic Guide (218), print & pin it to your fridge or cut out and keep it in your purse for when you go shopping.

Guide to Buying Organic in UK

The list is based on food sam­pled by the Pes­ti­cide Residue Com­mit­tee and assessed by PAN UK for years 2000-05. The down­load­able guide, What to Buy Organic Guide (218), includes sources and a review of the most recent PRC report to high­light where spe­cific sam­ples of food have higher or lower lev­els of pes­ti­cides since PAN UK’s ini­tial analysis.

Why do I need to con­sider organic pro­duce?

For Mind­ful Mums one of the key rea­sons for choos­ing organic fruit and veg­eta­bles is that they are as close as pos­si­ble to being free of all chem­i­cal residues and poten­tial tox­ins. Wash­ing and peel­ing removes bac­te­ria and can remove some residue but some pes­ti­cides are sys­temic which means they are within the fruit or vegetables.

Pop­u­lar children’s fruit and veg­eta­bles such as apples, pears, oranges and car­rots are reg­u­larly found to con­tain a cock­tail of pes­ti­cide residues. In the 2009 Q2 report, 36 out of 39 pears sam­pled con­tained pes­ti­cide residues, 30 con­tained mul­ti­ple residues and 2 sam­ples had an intake of pes­ti­cides, Chlorme­quat, for the crit­i­cal group (tod­dler) above the ARfD (Acute Ref­er­ence Dose — the amount of a chem­i­cal that can be taken in at one meal or on one day with­out appre­cia­ble health risk of  health to the consumer.)

Other rea­sons for buy­ing organic include: bet­ter taste,  more nutri­ents and con­cerns regard­ing the impact of inten­sive farm­ing meth­ods and chem­i­cals on our wildlife and countryside.

Why do I need to eat 5 A Day?

5 A DAY is based on advice from the World Health Orga­ni­za­tion, which rec­om­mends eat­ing a min­i­mum of 400g of fruit and veg­eta­bles a day to lower the risk of seri­ous health prob­lems, such as heart dis­ease, stroke, type 2 dia­betes and obe­sity.  The major­ity of fruit and veg­eta­bles count towards your 5 A DAY. How­ever, pota­toes and cas­sava don’t count because they mainly con­tribute starch to the diet.

Why do we use pesticides?

After the Sec­ond World War the use of chem­i­cals in food pro­duc­tion became stan­dard. Pes­ti­cides were used to kill insects that dam­aged crops, her­bi­cides to kill weeds that choked them, fungi­cides to cure dis­eases and fer­tilis­ers to help main­tain the fer­til­ity of large scale farms. Sup­ported by mod­ern mech­a­ni­sa­tion the farm­ing indus­try was able to pro­duce plen­ti­ful and cheap food. These inten­sive farm­ing meth­ods became stan­dard and by the 1980’s we were using hun­dreds of chem­i­cals in not only the pro­duc­tion of our food but also to pre­serve, trans­port and store food.

The draw­backs of using pes­ti­cides have become more appar­ent over the last 20 years. These include; con­t­a­m­i­na­tion of poten­tially toxic chem­i­cals in our food, the destruc­tion of wildlife and pol­lu­tion of rivers. Pes­ti­cides can’t tell the dif­fer­ence between bad insects and good insects such as bees which pol­li­nate. Fur­ther­more, it has been dis­cov­ered that pests and dis­eases are becom­ing more resis­tant to the chem­i­cals used. It can take as lit­tle as two years for a pest to develop resis­tance to a new chemical.

Sources:
NHS Choices, 5 A Day website www.nhs.uk
Judith Wills, The Food Bible, 2007, p71
Pesticide Residue Committee, Reports 2009 www.pesticides.gov.uk
Food Standards Agency, Chemical Safety, Pesticides in Food www.food.gov.uk
Pesticide Action Network (PAN UK) Residues In Fruit and Vegetables 2000-2005,www.pan-uk.org
Advisory Committee on Pesticides, www.pesticides.gov.uk
Chemical Regulation Directorate (CRD), www.pesticides.gov.uk/
EC Maximum Residue Regulation (396/2005/EC),www.pesticides.gov.uk/prc.asp?id=2512
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  • Very useful thanks so much!
  • This is a really useful guide. Generally I prefer to buy locally wherever possible rather than organically specifically but this guide has given me food for thought.

    Thanks for sharing it.
  • That is a great resource - thanks!
  • John Mack
    Amazing, amazing, amazing - thank you so much for this report !!! I've been wondering / searching for ages, as to which veg / fruit I can buy as 'non-organic' = and now I know! This is a tremendous help and will allow our family to eat more fruit & veg, safe in the knowledge that we're not killing our family in the process ! Thank you so much.
  • Great handy guide, well done you!
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