Get This: Target to Start Selling Organic Food

Check out the list of links that should be on your radar today:

Soon you’ll be able to get store-brand organic groceries at Target! [USA Today]

Hillary Clinton just joined the Twitterverse. Let’s welcome @HillaryClinton to the dance floor. [Daily Intelligencer]

Get excited: Sarah Jessica Parker is partnering with the CEO of Manolo Blahnik to launch her own line of shoes and bags. [Vogue Daily]

Forty percent of designated drivers have some alcohol before getting behind the wheel—and 20 percent of them have had enough booze to impair their driving, according to a new study. [CBS News]

When you’re bummed out, it can be harder to tell how much fat a food has based solely on taste. Play it safe by reaching for healthy foods that satisfy your cravings. [The Daily Meal]

More than a quarter of men under 40 have suffered from ED—and nearly half of those have a severe case of it. [UPI]

Want to feel better about those tasks you’ve been putting off? Kanye West’s new album, Yeesus, is scheduled to come out a week from tomorrow…and it’s still not finished yet. [The Atlantic Wire]

Fitness apps have gone to the dogs. A special app that tracks how much exercise your pet gets debuted last week. [Reuters]

Brides are no longer just paying a ton of money to buy their wedding dresses. They’re also shelling out cash to have a photographer take pictures of them while they trash said insanely expensive dress. #WeDon’tGetIt [Racked]

photo: iStockphoto/Thinkstock

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Is Organic Fruit Grown with Antibiotics?

When you cough up the cash for organic produce, you expect that it’s all natural. In reality, certain organic fruit farmers use antibiotics just like their conventional counterparts—but not for long: The National Organic Standards Board (NOSB) recently voted to end an exemption that allows organic apple and pear farmers to use the antibiotic oxytetracycline on their orchards.

The USDA organic seal is typically reserved for food that’s raised or grown without synthetic fertilizers and pesticides, says Sam Jones-Ellard, a spokesperson for the USDA. But currently, apple and pear growers are permitted to use oxytetracycline as a last line of defense in fighting fire blight, a bacterial plant infection that eats away at trees and can easily wipe out a whole orchard. Because it can take years to grow an apple or pear tree that produces fruit, untreated fire blight can put an organic farm out of business.

The USDA expected growers to come up with a natural way to curb fire blight by 2014, when the exemption implemented in 2002 is scheduled to expire. Unfortunately, experts haven’t found a fire blight cure yet. So while the upcoming ban is good news for organic fruit eaters who want to get what they pay for (naturally-grown fruit), NOSB’s decision puts pressure on growers to find a truly organic solution, fast.

In the meantime, there’s no need to panic about eating the teensy amount of oxytetracycline found in some organically grown apples and pears, says Jones-Ellard, since these fruits contain at least 50,000 times less oxytetracycline than what you’d get if you were on a typical antibiotic prescription. So go ahead and crunch away on your organic apples and pears—with the knowledge that antibiotic-free fruit is coming your way soon.

photo: iStockphoto/Thinkstock

More from WH:
Do You Really Need Antibiotics for That?
Alert: Antibiotics Won’t Cure THIS
The 15 Cleanest Fruits and Veggies

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Another Reason to Love Organic Tomatoes

Bigger isn’t necessarily better—at least when it comes to tomatoes. According to a new study published in the journal PLOS ONE, organic tomatoes are smaller than conventionally-grown tomatoes. But what they lack in size they make up for in nutrients: Organic tomatoes are packed with more vitamins and minerals than their conventionally-grown counterparts.

Researchers from the Federal University of Ceara in Brazil evaluated both organic and conventional tomatoes (from 30 different plants each) at three different stages of maturity: immature, mature, and at harvesting stage. In the final state, they discovered that organic tomatoes contain 55 percent more vitamin C and 139 percent more phenolic content—compounds that may help fight disease. Exactly why this might be the case is unclear. “Conventional farmers use fertilizer and synthetic pesticides and herbicides, whereas organic  farmers often rotate the crops, manage the weeds, and use environmentally-generated compounds,” says Lisa Young, PhD, RD, CDN, a nutritionist who was not involved in the study. All of these factors might affect the nutritional outcome of the crops, Young says.

The findings are a great excuse to load up on organic tomatoes the next time you hit the grocery store. Here are plenty of great recipes that’ll help you put them to good use:

Winter Tomato Soup

Balsamic Tomato and Roasted Pepper Salad

Linguine with Fresh Tomato Sauce

Grilled Cheese and Tomato

Halibut with Tomatoes and Olives

Marinated Tomato and Mozzarella Pasta

Tomato Shrimp Risotto

Rustic Tomato and Roasted Corn Pizza

photo: iStockphoto/Thinkstock

More from WH:
Antioxidants: The 13 Healthiest Foods
How to Boost Your Mood with Food
10 (More) Things You Can Do with Tomatoes
Want a flatter belly, thinner thighs, and toned arms? To transform your body, buy The Spartacus Workout 2-DVD program now!

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Is Organic Really Better?

 
organic foodA recent organic foods study out of Stanford University elicited news headlines like this: Organic Food No More Nutritious Than Non-Organic, Study Questions How Much Better Organic Food Is, and Stanford Scientists Cast Doubt on Advantages of Organic Meat and Produce. Those headlines alone may make you wonder, “Is organic really worth it?”

While the study, which was published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, could sway some people to bypass the organic aisle during their next supermarket trip, critics of the study say it fails to address the huge public health perks associated with organic food. “The study highlighted the lack of nutritional differences between organic and conventional foods. We think this is a misleading framework for evaluating the benefits of organic foods,” explains Sonya Lunder, senior research analyst at Environmental Working Group, a consumer watchdog group focused on protecting human and environmental health. “The nutritional component is not the reason most consumers choose organic.”

See all of the nasty stuff you avoid when you choose organic…

1. Pesticides in the Food Chain
The facts: While not a main point of the Stanford study, researchers did conclude that organic food contained significantly lower levels of pesticide residues, something previous research suggests could help protect kids from autism and ADHD, among other ills. United States Department of Agriculture testing routinely finds pesticide residues considered unsafe for children on conventionally grown—not organic—produce samples, including apples, peaches, plums, pears, grapes, blueberries, strawberries, and raisins. “Parents don’t want their children to serve as human guinea pigs for chemical corporations,” says Charlotte Vallaeys, director of farm and food policy for The Cornucopia Institute, an organic watchdog group.

The organic advantage: Eating organic coincides with a massive drop in disease-causing pesticides in your body. “The enormous benefit of eating organic produce is that it reduces pesticide exposure by 90 percent. This has been proven in studies conducted at Harvard, the University of Washington, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,” explains pediatrician Phil Landrigan, MD, professor and chair of Preventive Medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York City. “Reduction of exposure to pesticides reduces risk of neurological injury and certain cancers. I advise my patients to choose organic whenever possible.”

2. Killer Superbug Infections
The facts: Antibiotic-resistant superbugs kill more than 90,000 people a year, with MRSA alone killing more people in American than AIDS. The overuse of antibiotics in farming helps spur the growth of these hard-to-kill and sometimes-fatal infections. Tests of supermarket meats routinely find superbug germs, meaning that improperly cooking the meat or failing to wipe off your countertop correctly could put you in a life-threatening situation.

The organic advantage: Antibiotic-resistant superbug germs are far less likely to be found on organic meat because organic bans the use of antibiotics. You’re more than 30 percent less likely to come in contact with superbugs in the meat supply when you choose organic.

3. Poisonous Rain
The facts: More than 17,000 pesticide products are on the market, yet the Environmental Protection Agency has required testing for less than 1 percent of the chemicals currently used in commerce. Even tiny amounts of America’s most popular weed killer glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup, can damage DNA and kill cells, and have been linked to infertility and certain cancers. Farmers spray so much glyphosate that it’s taken up into the air and returns to the soil in chemical-laced rain, according to U.S. Geological Service research.

The organic advantage: Organic bans the use of chemical pesticides, keeping them not just out of your food, but also your community’s water, air, and rain.

4. Human Sewage Sludge
The facts: It’s perfectly legal for nonorganic farmers to douse human sewage sludge taken from municipal water treatment plants to fertilize nonorganic fields. The sludge could contain whatever morgues, residences, and industrial parks decide to put down the drain. Scientists have detected shampoo chemicals in nonorganic tomatoes and hypothesize that sewage sludge is partly to blame.

The organic advantage: Organic certification bans the use of sewage sludge. Organic fertilizing methods rely more on regulated compost or cover crops—plants grown during the off season and tilled or crimped back onto the soil.

5. GMOs
The facts: Scientists have never studied the long-term health effects of eating genetically engineered material, but that hasn’t stopped nonorganic farmers from planting GMO crops since the 1990s. Most GMOs are manipulated to withstand high doses of chemical pesticides—some of which wind up inside of the food we eat. Currently, up to 90 percent of nonorganic processed foods contain GMO material.

The organic advantage: Preliminary research suggests GMOs could be causing digestive disease, accelerated aging, obesity, and a rise in food allergies. Organic explicitly bans the use of GMOs.

6. The Drugged Meat Market
The facts: About 80 percent of all antibiotics used in this country go to feed conventional livestock because it not only prevents disease, but helps fatten the animals up faster. North Carolina livestock alone ingest more antibiotics annually than the entire U.S. human population. USDA researchers routinely detect antibiotics in meat, and new science suggests that could be making humans gain weight, too.

The organic advantage: Organic bans the use of antibiotics. It also bans the use of feeding animal byproducts to livestock, and requires that farm animals eat food grown without pesticides and GMO seeds.

7. Freaky Food Additives
The facts: Conventional processed foods are little packaged science experiments, and your family members are guinea pigs. We could be paying a big price for flashy foods—certain food dyes are linked to brain cell damage and ADHD.

The organic advantage: Instead of using chemicals derived from petrochemicals, organic manufacturers often turn to natural colorants like beet juice.

8. Unstable Food Prices
The facts: The worst drought to hit America in a half decade is decimating U.S. crops, particularly corn, causing unstable food prices. Although chemically dependent GMO crops are advertised as being drought tolerant, researchers have found that adding chemicals to the soil actually makes it harder for plants to get through extended dry periods unscathed.

The organic advantage: Long-term experiments at the Rodale Institute, an organic research farm in Pennsylvania, found that, during normal weather, organic and conventional farming produce about the same amount of food [Editor’s note: Rodale is the publisher of Women’s Health]. But when weather starts to act up, organic wins out, producing 30 percent more in years of drought. That’s because organic soil is alive with beneficial bacteria, and the soil acts like a sponge to hold water in reserve during drought. (The healthy soil also helps prevent flooding.)

photo: Stockbyte/Thinkstock

 
More from WH:
The World of Genetically Modified Food
How To Decode Meat Labels
Your Gym’s Dirty Secrets
 
 
 
 

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