ADVANCEDBROWSE SUBJECTS
alive Academy
Alive Forum
Event Calendar
Health Retailer Search
Alive Awards
Alive Web Exclusives
Alive Australia


APEX Awards 2008

Find a store
Subscribe to our Free Newsletter!

Enlarge Font Printer Version Email It to a Friend
Modern Fruits and Veggies in a Nutritional Slump
by author Michelle Hancock

Remember picking green beans on Granny’s farm and feeling confident in their homegrown goodness? Well, the nutritional value of fruits and vegetables has dropped in the past 50 years, according to analyses from the US, the UK, and Canada, too.

In 2002 Canadian media examined tables listing food nutrient values going back to 1951 and compared them to values reported for produce in Canadian supermarkets in 1999. Of the 25 popular fruit and vegetable varieties tested, including potatoes, tomatoes, bananas, and apples, most showed a loss in nutrients, some significantly. Potatoes had lost all their vitamin A as well as 57 percent of their vitamin C and iron, while broccoli’s calcium and iron had fallen 63 and 34 percent, respectively.

Some researchers argue this nutritional slump is caused by the current agricultural trend of growing large-yielding crops fast, which doesn’t give plants enough time to synthesize or obtain maximum nutrients from the soil. Another factor is the tendency for produce to be picked too soon and shipped before it reaches full ripening.

Is Organic More Nutritious?

So what about organic food? Is it more nutritious? Charles Benbrook, chief scientist at the Organic Center and a former executive director of the Board on Agriculture of the US National Academy of Sciences, states: “All our data shows that whenever there’s been a valid comparison between conventional and organic, organic is virtually never lower [nutritionally] than conventional, and in a significant number of cases, it’s higher.”

The Phytochemical Rainbow

Vitamins and minerals aside, “there are other beneficial compounds in fruits and vegetables,” points out Dr. Hoon Tan, a medicinal chemist. He’s talking about phytochemicals–all those colourful reasons we’re encouraged to eat a rainbow of veggies.

These antioxidants prevent cell damage and help ward off aging and degenerative diseases, including the two biggies, heart disease and cancer. Interestingly, Dr. Tan and his colleagues are finding more of them in organic produce.

“They’re part of a plant’s defence mechanism against disease and pathogens,” he explains by phone, “so if crops are sprayed by agrochemicals, they have no need to create compounds that defend them. For example, in organic versus nonorganic artichokes, the level of [a phytochemical called] Q40 could vary up to 40 times.”

Society’s craving for sweetness has also hindered antidisease-crusading antioxidants, which, according to Dr. Tan, often lie in sharp flavours. “In the past 50 years, botanists have bred out bitterness in plants but they’ve removed a lot of beneficial compounds.” The English laboratory where he works will soon be comparing new and old varieties of wild strawberries and apples to determine better their phytochemical differences.

Would our ancestors be shocked by our current food supply? Probably. As for the effects modern processing has on our food, that’s a whole other column.

Vancouver writer Michelle Hancock wishes for a green thumb so she can grow more heritage, organic colourful stuff. She can be reached through editorial@alive.com.

Source: alive #288, October 2006

Back to top

See Related Content
Take the Guessing out of Organic
So you've made the decision to buy organic. Now, how do you find it? Here are some basic guidelines on what to look for and some suggestions for reducing your exposure to toxic chemicals when organic food is not readily available. If you buy organic from a store, a label offers important guarantees.
Detoxing Your Outer Body
Going organic is a sure way of decreasing your consumption of pesticide.
Make Apples Your Super Snack
It doesn't much matter, from a nutritional point of view, which kind of apple you eat. All apples are beneficial to health. But sadly, we currently consume only 20 pounds of fresh apples a year--less than an apple a week.
A Pioneer Apple Farmer
The severe Ontario winters in the mid-1930s killed our family orchard, so for years I went to school with no apples. What a hardship! Even at a young age, I knew that apples were very important to our family's survival..
The Potato-Major Polluter or Eco-Spud?
Canada's favorite vegetable--the potato--can be an environmental hazard. But it needn't be s.
Nutritious Organics No Surprise
It's common sense that organic foods are more nutritious than conventionally farmed produce, but now there's science to back that claim. Dr Virginia Worthington at Baltimore's Johns Hopkins University reviewed 41 studies comparing 35 vitamin and mineral levels of organic and conventional produce.
Certified Organic: A Sustainable Initiative
The media recently jumped on the report that the federal government spent $914,000 to establish an organic research and education centre at Nova Scotia Agricultural College last July.
The Truth About Coffee
Growing wild in Ethiopia, carried along ancient trade routes to Yemen and through Venice to Europe, coffee finally arrived on our shores in the 1700s.
Reading Labels
Quality is never more important than when it comes to baby food. Ideally, we would prepare all of baby's meals from scratch with organic ingredients. When schedules get too crowded, however, we are grateful for the wide selection of puréed baby food available on store shelves.
Cut to the Mustard
Picture a solitary burger patty (veggie or otherwise) sitting naked on a bun. Somehow, it doesn't seem complete. Where's the pizzazz? Where's the zip? Condiments add excitement to many of our favourite foods.
Where You Bin?
To many health- and eco-conscious consumers, organic foods and bulk bins seem made for each other. Shopping in bulk gives us the option of buying two kilos of rice flour or 10 grams of dried organic blueberries without excessive packaging.
Certified Delicious
Pasta is comfort food, generally high in carbohydrates that stimulate production of serotonin - our brain's feel-good neurotransmitter.
On Board for Organics
Organic foods are the fastest-growing segment of the Canadian agricultural sector. In each of the past 10 years, sales have increased 20 percent in Canada, and worldwide annual sales of organic products are now estimated at $20 billion..
Slip Into Something More Organic
Many of us have made the shift towards an ecologically aware lifestyle. Perhaps you have chosen to eat organic foods, to buy more locally made products, or to switch to public transport.
You've Heard It Through the Grapevine
After hundreds of studies, what do we really know about wine's health benefits? You've read the data, but how much of it is true? Over 100 scientific reports since 1991 provide strong evidence that wine consumption prevents heart disease.
Good News for Carnivores
It's pretty hard not to notice the growing number of organic products available to today's consumer. At one time the exclusive preserve of health food stores and farmer's markets, organic produce and, more recently, meat products are now taking up substantial shelf space in your local supermarket.
Organics: Hype or Hope?
Do you buy organic products because you don't want pesticides in your food? In a world where persistent toxic chemicals pollute the oceans and DDT has been found in Antarctic snow, perhaps you've wondered if it's possible to buy anything that's truly pesticide free.
Chef Marcus Von Albrecht
Wolfing down ready-made salads from the corner store or speed-spooning a bowl of barley soup might get nutrients into the body, but food is more than fuel. Slowing things down and viewing the kitchen as a sanctuary can put a whole new spin on not only our cooking, but also our health.
Organic: For Better or Worse?
There was a time when buying organic food was something of an ordeal except in summer and fall, when one could always find a farmer's market and stock up on fresh fruits and veggies.
Ch-Ch-Changes
New regulations and a new national label for Canadian organic products will give consumers the assurance that the food they are buying meets the minimum national organic standard of Canada. The new regulations have been drafted in a way that allows their scope to be expanded in the future. This includes livestock feed and aquaculture but does not include pet food, landscape certification, fibre products, and cosmetics.
Organic Wheat You Can Eat
The export demand for high quality organic wheat for flour is a huge opportunity for Canadian wheat growers, but they're not taking advantage of i.
US Organic Rules Lacking
Ten years in the making, the new US National Organic Standards released in December aren't pleasing everyone. The new standards will ensure the label "made with organic ingredients" means at least 70 per cent organic. But they also allow food additives in both these and 100 per cent certified organic products..
Let's Go Bananas!
Organic bananas are now being sold by Dole, the world's largest producer of fresh fruits and vegetables. On Feb. 1, 2001, the company announced its decision to use banana peels to slide into the $6 billion organic products industry.
A Better Bouquet of Blooming Organics
Good for you. You've decided to eat organic foods, as locally grown as possible. You have started your own organic backyard or balcony garden. You only drive your car when biking, walking, busing, or carpooling is impossible. You support environmental organizations and vote for the most environmentally dedicated political leaders.
The Omnivore's Dilemma
The length of Michael Pollan's latest book makes it daunting to begin. But don't let the number of pages fool you: this is an exceptionally engaging book for anyone who is the least bit interested in food, and as such, makes for rapid reading.
Future Famine?
Seeing the abundance on display in our supermarkets-pyramids of multicoloured fruit piled skyward, bright green and yellow veggies crowding large bins, shelves brimming with canned goods-it's tough to contemplate the prospect of global famine.
Canada's Organic Capital
It's early afternoon and I'm squinting down at carefully cultivated earth, trying to decipher which ones are weeds and which ones are fledgling beet leaves. The mid-June sun promises a hot summer and a sunburn if I'm not careful.
Organic Bounty
How can organic agriculture help feed the world's growing population? This highly debated question was discussed by 350 participants from 80 countries at a United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) conference in Rome in May 2007.
Alternative Nobel Prize Awarded to the Schmeisers
The Schmeisers have given the world a wake-up call about the dangers to farmers and biodiversity.
A Greener Shade of Coffee
Much of today’s coffee is produced using unsustainable social and environmental methods, from felling huge swaths of rainforest to meagrely compensating farmers who grow the beloved brew.
Pesticides and ADHD
We’ve all been warned about the potential dangers of pesticides, and we’ve heard the recommendations to choose organic whenever possible. But some may be dissuaded by the price difference.

Back to top