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Informative Articles

Benefits of Food Safety Management System ISO 22000 to the Industry
What is ISO 22000? ISO is a network of the national standards institutes of 156 countries, on the basis of one member per country, with a Central Secretariat in Geneva, Switzerland, that coordinates the system. ISO is a non-governmental...

Fast Food Fixes - Repairing Food Disasters
With all of the hustle and bustle of the season, the chaos of our schedules sometimes spills over into the rest of our lives. Anyone who has ever been distracted in the kitchen knows that almost anything can happen and often with disastrous...

Food for thought. The Call or Nor To Call Waltz
When something in your relationship is repetitive and your reaction to that repetition has not served to change it, then you need to change your reaction. It doesn't take a psychic to see; if it hasn't worked in the past, it certainly won't work...

Scaring Kids Away From Fast Food
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What Type Of Food Should You Really Feed Your Cat?
What should you feed your cat to make sure he or she will have the necessary nutrition? What is the ideal mix of food to help your cat live to the limit of it's life span? Tp answer these questions, one should look at the diet of a feline in...

 
Organic Food: Truth or Fallacy?


Every food scare - about chemicals, additives, and genetically modified
ingredients and mad cow disease, is followed by a rise in organic food
sales.

In most supermarkets we are able to find organic food; fresh produce,
milk, eggs, cereal, frozen food, and even junk food. I prefer organic
food, assuming it to be safer, more nutritious.

But, notice that the label on Organic Cow has changed - now it is
"ultrapasterized," - this ensures that the milk will stay fresh,
allowing it to be shipped all over the country.

An organic TV dinner in the frozen foods section
advertises its chicken to be raised without chemicals
and allowed "to roam freely in an outdoor yard", the rice and vegetables
grown without synthetic chemicals. The list of ingredients is extensive;
natural chicken flavor, high-oleic safflower oil, guar and xanthan gum,
soy lecithin, carrageenan and natural grill flavor - and with the
assurance that most of these additives are organic, and no doubt are.

The organic food industry has become a $7.7 billion business, the fastest
growing category in the supermarket, and has attracted the attention of
agribusiness corporation, which the organic food movement always
presented as an alternative. The biggest organic farms are owned and
operated by conventional mega-farms.

Agribusiness has sought to re-define the romantic word
'organic' to make it as broad as possible; to make it easier for the big
companies to get into the organic food business by allowing food additives,
ascorbic acid to xanthan gum, and synthetic chemicals to be used in
'organic' food; a cow to feed on pasture; a factory farm to be labeled
organic. These modifications will take effect next year.

The real farm food grown on the real family farm is not always the same food
contained in our frozen TV dinners. Now that agribusiness owns the organic
food companies, is 'organic' on the road to becoming meaningless? The whole
meaning of 'organic' is changing.

The word 'organic' doesn't make any health claims. It is not a health,
nutrition, or food-safety claim. It is a production standard - and we make
our own health claims to this word. We bring our own personal beliefs to
the word 'organic'. The truly organic small family-farmer is going to have
to replace the word 'organic'.

"I don't care if the Wheaties are organic---I wouldn't use them for compost.
Processed organic food is as bad as any other processed food." says Eliot
Coleman, a Maine farmer and writer whose organic techniques have influence
two generations of farmers.

Is "industrial organic" a contradiction in terms?

Resource: L.A.Times, May 13, 2001
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/05/13/magazine/13ORGANIC.html?pagewanted=1

By Margot B/Writer, Editor, & Web Site Developer, June 8 2001
http://www.writers.OrgHQ.com
http://home.talkcity.com/LibertySt/mbumpus
mailto:margotb@wonderport.com



About the Author
Margot B is a published writer of a book and 100's of articles, specializing in health and environment.
mailto:margotb@wonderport.com
Web sites:
http://www.writers.orghq.com
http://margotsnews.dot.nu

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