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Avoiding the Dirty Dozen: How to Afford Organic Produce


In the vegan cooking classes I teach and the outreach I do, I am often asked how to incorporate "organic" food into our diets without breaking the bank. Since I rarely have a simple answer, I usually start off by saying what I think is a really important thing to keep

Keep in mind that the typical consumer is NOT paying the true cost of food. The meat, dairy, and egg industries, in particular, enjoy many government subsidies, which keep the cost of these unhealthful products artificially low. The same goes for produce laden with chemical fertilizers and pesticides. Also, organic fruits and veggies are usually not grown on an industrial scale, so efficiencies aren’t as great. Also, as pointed out in a recent article on the subject, "there are also significant costs involved in switching farmland from nonorganic to organic status. And there’s a lot more manual labor involved, such as weeding by hand."

So it’s not that organic is expensive; it’s the non-organic is cheap.

I’m always struck by the fact that so many people think organically grown food is some new-fangled, trendy idea. To grow plant foods with the least amount of chemicals as possible is to return to a time before industrical agriculture. Supporting local farmers is a very old ideal. As consumers, we should be shocked that an apple from clear across the world costs less than an apple grown a few hours from our home. When you go to a farmer’s market and buy directly from that farmer, you’re paying the true cost of that food.

Buying local and organic is the best thing you can do for so many reasons. First of all, the taste is absolutely superior, because the fruits and vegetables are grown with flavor in mind. When you buy produce that has been shipped in from all over the world, that produce is grown not with taste and flavor as the first priority but rather the ability to withstand the long shipments and sit on the shelf for long periods of time.

Also, when you purchase local produce, you’re purchasing produce that is seasonal - grown according to the climate of the region in which you live. And seasonal veggies are generally cheaper than purchasing out of season fruits and vegetables. But cost doesn’t refer only to dollars. As with the health costs that comes from eating an animal-based diet, there are also environmental costs, and when you buy locally at a farmer’s market or through something like Community Supported Agriculture, it means you’re paying for food that was driven down from a couple hours away as opposed to shipped from thousands of miles away. That’s a huge savings in terms of the resources required to get that food to your table – resources that include oil and electricity.

In terms of organic produce, when you purchase organic, you’re supporting a growing system that works with the Earth rather than against it. You’re paying for sustainable growing methods that enrich rather than deplete the soil. When you purchase out-of-season produce that was shipped in from other countries, there concerns about food safety, as well. The growing standards in other countries may not be the same as those in the U.S. or more specifically as high as those of the farmers you can talk to at the markets. I mean you can find out exactly how they grow their food, and in many cases you can also visit the farm yourself.

Having said all this, as we adjust to paying the true cost of food, it’s helpful to know which fruits and vegetables are the most highly sprayed so we can make informed decisions when we simply cannot purchase organic. Certain produce, termed the "Dirty Dozen" by the Environmental Working Group, is so highly sprayed with toxic chemicals that, many experts recommend eating them only when they’re organic. These include:

  • Apples
  • Cherries
  • Grapes, imported (Chili)
  • Nectarines
  • Peaches
  • Pears
  • Raspberries
  • Strawberries
  • Bell peppers
  • Celery
  • Potatoes
  • Spinach

The U.S. Department of Agriculture found that even after washing, some fruits and vegetables consistently carry much higher levels of pesticide residue than others. The produce you can get away with purchasing as non-organic includes:

  • Bananas (though I do recommend purchasing "Fair Trade" bananas)
  • Kiwi
  • Mangos
  • Papaya
  • Pineapples
  • Asparagus
  • Avocado
  • Broccoli
  • Cauliflower
  • Corn
  • Onions
  • Peas

When I have the opportunity, I do tend to purchase many of these as organic anyway, mainly because I shop at farmer’s markets and also because I want to support local, organic farmers. But it’s helpful to have this list on hand (or in your memory) to help you make the best choices possible.

To make it even easier for you, the Environmental Working Group has a handy little guide called Pesticides in Produce that you can either download from their website Food News, or order a wallet-size version of to keep with you at all times.

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3 Responses to “Avoiding the Dirty Dozen: How to Afford Organic Produce”

  1. Unregistered User Says:

    Other foods that are best when organic: rapeseed (ie canola oil), corn, and soy. Right now when a product is organic it also means that the product is not genetically modified. In the case of these three items, unless it says specifically that it’s organic, it’s likely to be GMO.

  2. Vegan from frisco Says:

    I agree but should point out that most organic farmers are not vegean and are putting things like manures or other animal farm waste products into the soil.

    Besides ethical problems, this is a concern of health since things like blood meal, bone meal, or manures could harbor prion diseases like mad cow. There is no requirements that such amendments come from organic sources either, and the amendment could originate from a factory farm.
    I find it disturbing that the beet or carrot I eat may have been in contact with blood or bone meal from a rendering plant.

    I raise the issue not as a criticism of organic since non-organic farmers use such amendments also. I wish to heighten awareness and hopefully encourage farmers to raise crops without use of animal products. There is such a thing as “veganic” farming. Using non-animal source composts work just as well.

    I contacted a large organic grower who said they don t use blood meal for the reason I gave, but did not reply when I asked them if they used manure. Manures might contain prions since what goes in one end comes out the other. Very thorough composting may destroy viruses but not prions, which are virtually indestructible.

    When you visit the farmers market, if possible ask the farmer if they know what soil amendments were used and encourage them to use non-animal source fertilizer.

  3. carol Says:

    gee it’s hard here in upstate NY where it is apple country. Not many are organic at all but the apples are soo soo good, fresh, great varieties that I cannot not eat them even if there are pesticides. I also like supporting my local farmers who are running small family oriented farms that have often been in the family for a long time. It’s fall, it’s apple time, it’s part of life here though I try to buy organic often. I am a vegetarian / vegan so I think I make up for the impact on the environment / earth as far as pesticide use… hopefully my health can withstand it too.

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