The general consensus is that when you pay a 50% markup for a tomato from the organic aisle or a carton or milk displaying the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) organic certification logo, you are buying healthier food. You assume it is healthier for you, since the food should be grown without the interference of man-made chemicals, but also healthier for the animals and the environment.
Take Stonyfield Farm—a far cry from mass-producers such as General Mills or Kellogg, who have entered the organic market—as one case study of how a company may be compelled to compromise its practices as the organic food market expands. Back in 1983, Samuel Kaymen founded Stonyfield Farm merely to feed his six children and to promote environmental responsibility. Today, the company’s main hub is an industrial plant in New Hampshire, where it handles milk shipped in from other farms and, perhaps soon, milk powder from New Zealand. Continue reading the article here
http://blogs.currentprotocols.com/?p=706
See how the organic industry has changed during 1995 to 2007
http://www.certifiedorganic.bc.ca/rcbtoa/services/corporate-ownersh...
For those who don't remember, the USDA took over the regulation of the organic industry in the early 1990s (at the complete dismay to the organic community) and turned it into, in my humble opinion, a mockery. Just another thing we must push to regain. Oh, and it keeps getting worse.
In the late 1990s I did a little experiment because I sensed something wasn't quite right when my organic certified produce appeared different. And, rather suddenly... when organic markets began popping up all over the place and even regular stores began carrying organics - my little warning flags went straight up because you don't have to be a rocket scientist to figure out that thousands of people did NOT just go out and decide to have organic farms.
Prior to then, it was extremely challenging to find enough organic produce to replace regular produce in ones home. I know, I did it for 30 years and would even drive an hour each way to a store that was truly organic, Walnut Acres. Does anyone remember Walnut Acres? They are not what they used to be, in the mid 1990s AOL, I believe it was, bought them out and shut down their farm and their labor intensive kitchen where women would sit and literally hand peel every tomato, potato, carrot, an hand chop the beans that went into the Walnut Acres canned food - which was very good. Yup, the new buyers shut down the entire farm and store. What a shame. The store carried produce only from certified organic farms - such certificate back then was extremely hard to obtain because the standards and regulations were impossible to obtain unless you were the most devoted of the devoted. Even weeds had to be pulled by hand. Hence few farmers wanted to be bothered, making organics hard to come by.
So my informal experiment was...
At a Whole Foods market I bought one bunch of regular broccoli and one bunch of organic broccoli. I brought them home, smelled them - they both smelled the same, they both looked the same, they both had the same water content (organic produce 'should' have a lower water content because it is typically under a bit more stress and the variety of seed is different).
I then cut a piece off of each bunch and in separate pots cooked (steamed) each for the same length of time using the same temp.
After being cooked I examined them, they both looked exactly the same, they smelled exactly the same, AND they both tasted exactly the same.
I then left the remainder of both heads (uncooked) in the fridge to see how they rotted. Organic produce 'should' pretty much dry out and become rubbery. Whereas regular produce will become moldy, slimy and stink like something just died.
At two weeks later, I examined both heads of broccoli and, you guessed it, both had rotted the EXACT same way! You can imagine the choice words I had about this.
This got me a bit peeved. I had been buying real organic produce for 30 years and with my background in plants, well... let's just say I'm not stupid and I knew then that the USDA taking over the organic regulations completely ruined a perfectly fine industry and it keeps getting worse by the month!
What do "you" think? Do you care about this issue? Does it matter to you if your family has chemical-free food to eat or not?