Five Easy Ways to Reduce Your Family’s Pesticide Consumption

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By MoniqueAttinger

If you have been eating a typical North American diet and depend on certain convenience or packaged foods, you are eating pesticide residue.

But what's the alternative? After all, organic produce is very expensive and family budgets can only stretch so far.

Here’s the good news: small changes in your weekly grocery purchases can add up to a significant reduction in your family’s consumption of harmful chemicals. And it's easy.

Your first resource in helping to get pesticides out of your food is the 2009 Environmental Working Group’s (EWG’s) list of the worst conventionally grown food items. EWG provides some straightforward advice on foods to avoid – as well as foods that are relatively safe even when not organic. It’s called the Shoppers Guide to Pesticides and it's small enough that you can take with you to the supermarket to help you in your produce selection.

The Shoppers Guide to Pesticides forms the basis for five easy tips that will help you and your family eat better without turning your life upside-down or breaking the bank:

1. Buy the EWG’s “Dirty Dozen” only if you can get organic.

The worst produce items to buy conventionally grown are:

  1. peaches
  2. apples
  3. bell peppers
  4. celery
  5. nectarines
  6. strawberries
  7. cherries
  8. kale
  9. lettuce
  10. imported grapes
  11. carrots
  12. pears

Of all the common produce independently tested by EWG, these were the worst - even after washing and peeling the produce! If you completely replace these items with their organic counterparts, you will substantially reduce your family’s pesticide intake.

2. Can’t afford organic? Replace the “Dirty Dozen” with low pesticide alternatives instead.

Not every budget can afford the cost of replacing 12 staple foods with their organic version. However, another way to reduce your chemical consumption is to pick and choose what you replace.

For instance, replace a staple fruit like apples with organic; organic apples tend to be less expensive than other organic fruit. Then, to provide your family with some variety, try a substitution. For instance, substitute conventionally grown watermelon for your regular strawberry purchase. Your family still gets a sweet fruit, but one that exposes them to much less chemicals.

3. Love salads? Buy organic lettuce and bell peppers.

Unfortunately, the traditional salad vegetables are all on the list of biggest pesticide offenders, including lettuce, bell peppers, celery and carrots. Rather than buy all of these items in organic, focus on one or two favorites – like organic lettuce and organic bell peppers – and substitute carrots with tomatoes, and celery with avocado. Avocado provides a great source of healthy fats, which are essential for a child’s brain development. Tomatoes get you a number of bioflavonoids on your plate.

Is organic lettuce getting too expensive? Try a raw cabbage salad. Using cabbage in place of lettuce will also get you a reduction in toxins.

4. Are you buying juice boxes for lunches? Switch from apple to pure orange juice.

Many parents depend on apple juice as a staple in their children’s meals and snacks away from home. However, apples are one of the Dirty Dozen. Washing and peeling do not remove pesticide residue. As a result, you can expect that any apple juice made from conventionally grown apples will also contain higher pesticide residues.

A simple switch to orange juice will reduce the amount of pesticides going into growing bodies, with a healthy dose of vitamin C included.

5. Love kale but can’t find it in organic? Try a related vegetable.

Many times we’d like to eat something – but can’t find it in the organic section. Organic foods tend to be much more seasonal than other produce. As a result, many of our favorite leafy veggies will be conspicuously absent during fall and winter months. If you are dying for kale, try another healthy green veggie from the cabbage family - broccoli. Broccoli is much cheaper and significantly less pesticide is used on it in the growing process.

Comments

SpotCoolStuff.com profile image

SpotCoolStuff.com 3 years ago

Good, informative, hub! You said washing doesn't remove the pesticides. But, does it help? Are there certain ways of washing that help more than others?

MoniqueAttinger profile image

MoniqueAttinger Hub Author 3 years ago

It really depends on when the pesticides are applied in the growing process and how frequently. Some plants are sprayed multiple times before fruits or veggies are harvested! The problem is that most pesticides and chemicals have the capability of penetrating the skin of the produce. Washing may remove any pesticides that are remaining on the surface - but it won't get what has gone into the item.

That's why I used the information from the Environmental Working Group as the basis for my five tips. The fruits and veggies that were tested were all washed and prepared as a "regular" person would do it.

Unfortunately, that still leaves such family staples as apples in the Dirty Dozen. That's why switching to orange juice works to reduce the pesticides you take in; oranges are grown with much less pesticide than apples and the tough outer rind is excluded from the juice - which means pesticide in the rind is not in your juice box.

Joe Hutchins 2 years ago

It seems that apples are bad for pesticides, but apple juice not as much

here is one source:

http://www.eartheasy.com/eat_pesticides_produce.ht

look under "tips"

MoniqueAttinger profile image

MoniqueAttinger Hub Author 2 years ago

An interesting tip - I wonder where they get their data from. I would find myself much more comfortable with a juice that is made from a fruit that has lower pesticide residues in the first place.

Tess Rousseau 2 years ago

I just copied the EWG's Dirty Dozen list which I will carry in my purse, so that when I go shopping it'll be easy to check what I should buy in the organic section only. Thanks for the great information.

KS20647 profile image

KS20647 2 years ago

I Like the hub I myself if it doesn't come from the land I do not eat it. I wash what I buy in the stores and I rarely buy things there I go to a produce stand or a farm. I was raised on one. My family has a long life span and we raise our own food and the reason being is the pesticides, we try to get as little as we can but it is so hard to do that now.

Thanks for the Hub

RichardCMckeown profile image

RichardCMckeown 8 months ago

Very useful hub. Never thought of having pesticide consumption. Great to know about this information,Monique. Keep writing.:)

MoniqueAttinger profile image

MoniqueAttinger Hub Author 7 months ago

Thanks for dropping by, Richard! ;-)

aman 7 months ago

hi monique. thanks for info.i want to know that if i wash an apple with baking soda solution ,will it reduce pesticide residue

MoniqueAttinger profile image

MoniqueAttinger Hub Author 7 months ago

Aman - it's possible that this will help to remove some (since it helps to make the water more effective), but I haven't seen any research that shows how much percentage, etc.

Here's a link that also talks about this topic:

http://www.naturalnews.com/028277_pesticides_fresh

Debbie 6 months ago

I heard that by soaking some vegetables (broccoli & cauliflower) in cold salt water for about 1/2 hour this should help to remove dirt and pesticides. Does this make sense to you?

MoniqueAttinger profile image

MoniqueAttinger Hub Author 6 months ago

Sorry it's taken awhile to get back to you about your comment on soaking veggies... Any kind of soaking will help to remove some pesticides just by virtue of diluting them. However, I think the recommendation is to use a small amount of safe soap if you want to get as much pesticides as possible off your produce.

Ly Le 2 months ago

What is safe soap?

MoniqueAttinger profile image

MoniqueAttinger Hub Author 2 months ago

You want a soap that doesn't have a lot of additives / chemical fragrances, and that biodegrades quickly. You can actually buy "produce wash", that is designed specifically for that purpose, but it tends to be expensive, and so I don't bother with that! Further, getting pesticides off food will only remove the small amount which is on the outside - any which has been "soaked up" by the plant is in the food and can't be washed off. So, washing is only a small help: the main use of washing is to remove harmful bacteria.

When I buy any soap for the purposes of washing produce, I usually check the health food store or "natural" foods section and then purchase soap there which is free of any kind of scent - that's what I use for cleaning produce.

When it comes to getting rid of bacteria though, I recently came across an straight-forward way to do that - and is easy and inexpensive. Here's the link: http://projectjennifer.com/2011/04/the-best-way-to

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