Organic Within Reach

Save time and money by making your favorites with organic ingredients

At a certain point in the late middle of my life I made the unexpected but happy discovery that the answer to several of the questions that most occupied me was one and the same.

Cook.

– Michael Pollan, “Cooked,” 2013

There are lots of reasons to buy organic foods: Studies show they’re better for our health and the planet.

Still, organic food can give you sticker shock. In 2015, Consumer Reports found that prices for organic items range dramatically depending on where you shop, but are higher on average than those for conventional versions.1

But with a little planning, cooking organic food can save money and time, help you eat better, cut down on waste and help protect the environment.

It’s getting easier all the time to buy organic. Walmart, Costco2 and Kroger3 are selling organic products,4 and more Americans are buying them.5

EWG researchers were inspired by celebrity chef Jamie Oliver's demonstration and challenge: “Would you like to be quicker and cheaper than a takeaway?” So we crunched the numbers, chopped the onions and waited in lines. We found that – with help from our own online tools – many typical households could afford to eat organic food regularly for about a third of what the average American spends eating out.

“Many typical American households could afford to eat organic food regularly for about a third of what the average American spends eating out.”

The key is planning your meals and cooking at home. It saves money, cuts down on waste, helps protect the environment and is just as fast – if not faster – than eating out. Bonus: Home-cooked meals tend to be healthier than take out.

What does organic mean?

A third party must certify food labeled organic to ensure that it meets criteria set by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. These standards work to protect natural resources, preserve agricultural biodiversity, and support animal health and welfare.

Why organic is better for people and the planet

Organic produce packs more disease-preventing antioxidants and carries far less pesticide residue than conventional produce, which is grown with massive applications of pesticides and other chemicals. Organic farming methods protect water, soil, bees and other helpful insects, as well as the health of farmers, farmworkers and neighbors.

Organic meat and dairy products, especially from pasture-raised animals, have a healthier balance of fats than conventionally raised animals. Animals that aren’t given unnecessary antibiotics tend to have fewer bacteria that can cause untreatable infections.

To learn more click here

Making organic food easier to find

In 2014 organic food accounted for almost 5 percent of total food sales – the most ever.6 And it's easy to find: The same year the U.S. had 19,474 organic operations certified by the USDA, which was more than twice the number in 2002.7

Organic is no longer the exclusive province of upscale stores such as Whole Foods. Walmart, Costco and Kroger have added organic sections, bringing the food within reach for millions of shoppers throughout the U.S. In 2015 Costco was projected to sell $4 billion in organic food – double its organic sales three years earlier – and about 10 percent more than Whole Foods.8

EWG Food Scores

When you think about healthy food, you have to think beyond the Nutrition Facts panel.

A 2016 survey of 5,000 American consumers conducted by the Grocery Manufacturers Association, Food Marketing Institute and Deloitte found that half of all shoppers value health and wellness, safety, social impact, experience and transparency more in their purchasing decisions than the traditional factors of taste, price and convenience.9 And the Organic Trade Association concluded in their 2015 survey “the face of organic-buying families now mirrors the demographics of the U.S. population in terms of ethnic background.”10

But can people really afford to eat organic on a typical budget?

The average American household income is about $58,000 a year.11 The two to three members of these households spend $2,787 a year – nearly half their combined food budgets – eating out.12,13,14

Americans eat out a lot. The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that people reported eating out four times a week on average15 – twice in a fast food restaurant and twice in a casual restaurant.16 The National Restaurant Association estimates that adults eat out 5.8 times a week.17

“Americans eat out a lot … four times a week on average.”

Fast food costs three times what it costs to cook

EWG found that the average cost of eating out is three times the cost of cooking, no matter how you eat.

According to EWG’s calculations based on Department of Labor data,18 in 2014 typical American households spent an average of $1.80 per person per mealA for food eaten at home. In contrast, those same households ate out for an average of $5.36 per person per meal.B,C

EWG staff members visited stores and restaurants in April of 2017 and compared the costs of organic ingredients and popular restaurant meals. EWG obtained organic food prices from a Kroger supermarket in Ventura, Calif. (for details see EWG’s Shopping Lists). For items Kroger didn’t carry, we used prices at the nearby Whole Foods’ Oxnard, Calif. store.

EWG found that many American households could afford to eat organic regularly if they chose to cook more. Cooking, even with all-organic ingredients, is about a third of the cost of eating out.

Three organic meals cooked from scratch totaled $11.90, averaging $3.97, while the equivalent non-organic restaurant meals (an Egg McMuffin from McDonald’s, the Baja Ensalada from Baja Fresh, and the Cedar Salmon from Applebee’s) totaled $29.81, averaging $9.94 per person per meal. That’s two and a half times the cost of cooking fresh, organic versions of these meals at home. 

“EWG found that many American households could afford to eat organic regularly … Cooking, even with all-organic ingredients, is about a third of the cost of eating out.”

Fast food isn’t that fast

What about the all-important resource: time? Most people say they don’t cook at home because they don’t have time.19,20,21 The food industry promotes the myth that cooking takes too much time and skill.22 There’s no denying that cooking takes time, but how much?

EWG discovered that eating out takes just as much time, and sometimes more, than cooking at home.

“Eating out takes just as much time, and sometimes more, than cooking at home.

For starters, driving or walking to a restaurant takes a few minutes, maybe longer.

An online survey of 800 Americans found that people were willing to travel 17 minutes to eat at a restaurant or café.23 Scientists at RAND, a nonprofit public policy research organization, monitored GPS data from 241 adults in five cities and found that their subjects traveled an average of 2.4 miles (about four minutesD) from home to eat at a fast food place and 3.3 miles (about six minutesE) to eat at a sit-down restaurant. Some people traveled nearly 20 miles for a meal.24

When you add up the time it takes to drive, order, and wait for your meal to be ready, getting food at a fast food place will take you 14 minutes.F At a casual restaurant, during peak dinner hours, the time to drive, wait to be seated, and served rises to 44 minutes.G If there is no wait to be seated, getting food at a casual restaurant can drop to 21 minutes, but depending on the conditions, it can take even longer for your food to be served.25 And this does not include the time it takes to eat, pay or drive on to your next destination.

 

“When you add up the time it takes to drive, order and wait for your meal to be ready, getting food at a fast food place will take you 14 minutes. At a casual restaurant, during peak dinner hours…that rises to 44 minutes… but depending on the conditions, it can take even longer for your food to be served.

EWG’s experience: Eating out versus eating in

Averages are well and good, but EWG staff wanted the raw numbers. So we conducted an experiment you can replicate.
 
We selected popular chain restaurants from the fast food, fast casual and casual chain restaurant categories, and chose an entrée to both order out and cook at home for breakfast, lunch and dinner (an Egg McMuffin from McDonald’s, the Baja Ensalada from Baja Fresh, and the Cedar Salmon dish from Applebee’s) to compare both the time and cost of each.H

For breakfast, an EWG staffer cooked up an organic egg breakfast sandwich in four minutes flat. We knew that was right on target when we came across a video from McDonald’s showing that making an Egg McMuffin at home took four minutes). The drive to McDonald’s took nine minutes and the service time was four minutes.I
 
For lunch, an EWG staff member prepared a salad topped with chicken in 10 minutes. Driving to the nearest Baja Fresh for a similar meal took eight minutes, plus eight minutes to be served.
 
For dinner, an EWG staff member cooked salmon, asparagus and potatoes in 19 minutes. In comparison, dinner at Applebee’s took 44 minutes in all: a 14-minute drive in rush-hour traffic, followed by 30 minutes waiting for the salmon to arrive.

Generally, we found that over the course of a day, it took 42 minutes to eat out and 33 minutes to eat in.

Chart 1 below shows that when EWG added in additional time considerations like the average time driving,J paying,K meal planning,L grocery shoppingM and cleaning up,N cooking at home still takes seven minutes less than eating out.26

It’s easy to see how Americans spend an average of 41 minutes eating fast food and 71 minutes eating at sit-down restaurants, according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Time Use Study.27

In fact, Americans clock somewhere between 86O and 101P hours a year to “get food” instead of “cooking food.”

When you know that well-planned cooking, such as making soup, can produce several days of meals, it’s clear that eating out does not save time. 

As you get better at cooking and develop a repertoire of go-to recipes and timesaving tricks, your time spent cooking will decrease, and you’ll save even more time by cooking at home.

A breakfast cooked from scratch can be on the table in less than 15 minutes, beating out a fast food run. You can make a breakfast egg sandwich in four minutes. There’s an oat solution to fit everyone’s morning, from overnight rolled oats, to old-fashioned oats, to one-minute oats, to even notoriously slow steel-cut oats.

Lunch and dinner may take a little longer, but as Chef Jamie Oliver demonstrates, with a plan and the right skills, you can cook a fantastic meal in five minutes or less.

Obviously, cooking at home could stretch out for hours if you let it, but with a few go-to meals and 10 minutes of planning time a week, you can easily beat both the time and financial costs of eating out.

Obviously, cooking at home could stretch out for hours if you let it, but with a few go-to meals and 10 minutes of planning time a week, you can easily beat both the time and financial cost of eating out.”

Eating out contributes to obesity

The eating-out habit appears to be partly responsible for the American obesity epidemic.28 In 1965 Americans consumed less than 10 percent of their daily calories outside the home.29 By 2008, that figured had tripled.30 Over that same time period, childhood obesity trends have more than tripled. In national survey data from the years 1963 to 1965, just under 5 percent of teenagers were classified as obese. By the years 2007 and 2008, the most recent period for which data are available, nearly 20 percent of teenagers were obese.31

Research by USDA scientists, based on national survey data on more than 9,000 adults, found that people who eat out frequently are more likely to be overweight or obese than people who have most of their meals at home.32,33,34,35 That’s no surprise. Ample evidence shows that take-out and eat-out foods are usually high in empty calories and low in nutrients.36,37,38,39,40 On the other hand, when people make their meals at home41,42,43 and eat together,44 they tend to eat more healthful fruits, vegetables and whole grains.

The magic of meal planning

Americans spend about $11 per person per week on food that goes straight into the trash – perfectly good food is often wasted due to poor planning or misunderstanding of product dates.45

If you spent 10 minutes a week planning, you could save more than $2,000 year, according to research by the National Resources Defense Council.46 Find out exactly how much you could save at savethefood.com.

“By committing to planning your meals and cooking at home with organic ingredients, you can save time, money, eat better, cut down on waste and help protect the environment.”

Here are some meal-planning tips from EWG:

1) Make time

You’re going to need at least 10 minutes a week to plan meals – maybe more at first. Lock that time into your schedule. (If you include children to teach them this time- and money-saving life skill, you’ll probably need more than 10 minutes.) 

2) Set up a meal planner

Download EWG’s Good Food on a Tight Budget Meal Planner. Or make your own – it can double as a kid’s art project.

3) Take inventory

What do you already have? (This is a great place to include kids. Put them in charge of inventory. Let them make sure you have carrots, onions and other staples.)

4) Get creative

Some online recipe sites let you search by what you have on hand: Check out Epicurious, Gojee, Yummly and Pinterest to get started. (For kids, use recipe resources such as ChopChop, a family-cooking magazine. Empower kids by letting them circle recipes in the magazine – their curiosity may encourage them to try new things!)

5) Use leftovers night and always have a back-up plan!

A good meal plan uses one or two new recipes, two or three standbys, one leftover night and one back-up plan for hectic days. Have some go-to quick and easy plans for the nights when everybody is tired. Seasoned meal planners can figure out which leftovers work as lunch the next day or can be frozen for a future back-up meal.

6) Convert your meal plan to a shopping list

EWG’s Good Food on a Tight Budget Shopping List is a good place to start. You can find apps such as BigOven, FitMenCook, Paprika, Food on the Table, Plan to Eat, Menu Planner and others if you like to manage things electronically.

7) Stick to the list

One of the most exciting things about meal planning is saving money and food. Challenge yourself and calculate how much you save. Then tweet at us about it using the hashtag #OrganicWithinReach.

Remember, fruits and vegetables should make up about 40 percent of a healthy budget (or about $11 of every $25 you can spend on food).

8) A little prep goes a long way

Set aside some time to prep your produce for the week, either all at once or in smaller chunks. Doing some of the washing and chopping ahead of time makes a from-scratch meal come together faster.

9) Cooking time is fun time

Those who enjoy cooking have better diets,47 so focus on fun! Put on your favorite radio station, podcast or audiobook. Cook with someone else and use it as a way to share your day. With kids, cooking is less about getting something done than spending quality time together and making the kitchen a special, comfortable and fun place to be. Keep little hands busy with tasks such as washing lettuce, shelling pistachios or peeling garlic (crush it with the side of a knife first to loosen the skin and let them take off the peel with their fingers). Think of it as an art project that you get to eat at the end! Tweet at us with your family’s fun kitchen ideas using the hashtag #OrganicWithinReach.

10) Bonus: Super-planners

Seasoned meal planners know all about the magic of slow and pressure cookers. They also savor the peace of mind that comes with having a meal tucked in the freezer for a busy day.

Start small – you’ll get there. And think of all the time and money you’ll have saved! You can also get started with a meal planning service like Weelicious Menus.

EWG’s Shopping Lists and Recipes


BREAKFAST

Organic Egg Breakfast Sandwich for One

in the style of McDonald’s Egg McMuffin

EWG cook time: 4 minutes

Ingredients

1 organic English muffin

1 organic egg

1 slice organic cheese

1 slice organic Black Forest Ham

½ tsp organic olive oil

1 tbsp filtered tap water

Directions:

1) Toast English muffin in a toaster.

2) Coat iron skillet lightly with about ½ teaspoon of olive oil.

3) Heat skillet over moderate flame. When pan is hot, crack egg lightly into frying pan and cook until bottom of egg begins to look cloudy (about 30 seconds).

4) Grab a cover for the skillet and put it near the stovetop. Then add a splash of water (about 1 tablespoon) to pan and cover immediately.

5) Cook egg through (about 1½ minutes).

6) Meanwhile, remove English muffin from toaster and place on plate.

7) Place one slice of American cheese on one half of the English muffin to lightly melt cheese.

8) Remove one slice of ham from package.

9) Once egg is cooked through, remove from skillet and place on top of the cheese slice to keep melting the cheese.

10) Add ham to skillet and warm (about 15 seconds on each side).

11) Remove ham from skillet and place on top of the egg. Top with the other half of the English muffin. Enjoy in moderation!


LUNCH

Organic Fiesta Salad with Chicken for One

in the style of Baja Fresh’s Baja Ensalada

EWG cook time: 10 minutes

Ingredients

4 leaves organic romaine lettuce

1 organic tomato

1 tbsp crumbled or shredded organic cheese

1 tbsp chopped organic red onion

3 stems of organic cilantro

¼ organic lemon

½ organic corn tortilla

1 organic chicken breast (use thigh meat for more flavor and lower cost)

1 ½ tbsp organic olive oil

1 ½ tbsp organic balsamic vinegar

Directions:

1) In a bowl or large mason jar, mix 1 tablespoon of olive oil, 1 tablespoon of balsamic vinegar, salt and pepper and your choice of spices to make a marinade (3/4 teaspoons each of chili powder, paprika, garlic and a little honey is a nice mix).

2) Using a chef’s knife and a cutting board designated for raw meats, slice chicken into equal sized strips. New in the kitchen? Jamie Oliver’s Knife Skills will teach you how to cut almost anything with just three basic knife techniques.

3) Add chicken to bowl of marinade and mix (or shake in closed mason jar) and set aside. Got more time? Marinate in refrigerator for an hour or longer.

4) Thoroughly wash your hands.

5) Wash 4 large leaves of lettuce, one tomato and 3 cilantro stems. Shake off the vegetables and set on towel to dry.

6) On a different cutting board designated for raw vegetables, chop one small corn tortilla and set aside. Cut the lemon in quarters and set aside. Slice the red onion into eighths and chop one section, then cross-chop the onion together with the cilantro and add this mix to a separate small bowl for the pico de gallo.

7) Chop lettuce and add to a salad bowl. Dice tomatoes and add one third of them to the salad bowl and the remaining tomatoes to the bowl for pico de gallo.

9) Heat an iron skillet to high.

10) Squeeze the juice of half a lemon into the pico de gallo and season to taste with salt and pepper.

12) Add 1 tablespoon of olive oil to the hot skillet and turn the heat down to medium.

13) Add sliced corn tortilla to iron skillet and cook, stirring occasionally for 1 minute. Using a spatula or tongs, place tortilla strips from pan directly into the salad bowl.

14) Add marinated chicken to iron skillet and spread out the slices so they have room to cook.

15) Thoroughly wash your hands again.

16) Sear chicken over moderate heat for 1 minute without stirring. Then flip the chicken and cook until it is no longer pink (another 2 to 3 minutes). Turn off heat.

17) Using a spatula or tongs, top the salad with your cooked chicken and pico de gallo.

18) Drizzle salad with olive oil and balsamic vinegar, and toss. Season to taste with salt and pepper or leftover cilantro. Sprinkle with cheese. Enjoy!

Have 20 minutes and want to impress? Watch the Trust Me for Tender Chicken method from The Kitchn.


DINNER

Wild-caught Salmon with Red Potatoes and Seasonal Organic Veggies for One

in the style of Applebee’s Savory Cedar Salmon

EWG cook time: 19 minutes

Ingredients

1 wild-caught salmon fillet (34 ounces)

1 small organic red potato

3 organic asparagus spears (asparagus is on the Clean FifteenTM list of produce with the least pesticide residue)

½ small organic zucchini

¼ organic lemon

1 tbsp organic olive oil

1 clove of organic garlic

Directions:

If you’re new to pan-frying salmon, a read through the Perfect Salmon Tips and the Bad Salmon Playbook will be well worth your time.

1) Wash potato, asparagus and zucchini. Let asparagus and zucchini dry on a towel.

2) Quarter potato and place in a small sauce pan with enough water to cover the potatoes (about 1 cup). Cover and heat to a boil, then turn down to medium heat with the cover partially open.

3) Heat an iron skillet to high.

4) Add 1 tablespoon of olive oil to the hot skillet.

5) Season skinless side of fillet with a pinch of salt. Add room temperature salmon fillet with the skin side touching the skillet. Reduce the heat to medium-low immediately.

6) If the edges of the salmon begin to lift up, press gently on the fillet to ensure even cooking.

7) While the salmon cooks, slice lemon in quarters and set aside. Peel garlic and slice thinly. Slice zucchini in half lengthwise and then chop into half circles.

8) Add asparagus spears and zucchini to steam tray above the potatoes and cover.

9) Cook the salmon until the skin looks crisp and the flesh changes color to light pink 2/3 of the way up the fish—about 4 ½ to 5 minutes (slightly more or less depending on fillet thickness). Then flip the salmon by gently inserting spatula between the salmon skin and the skillet. If it doesn't release easily, let it cook longer. It will lift easily with a spatula when it’s ready.

10) Cook the salmon on the second side for about a minute, just to sear the top. Add sliced garlic to the side of the pan and saute.

11) Using a spatula, remove salmon and garlic from pan onto serving plate and set aside to rest salmon with the skin facing up.

12) Using a slotted spoon, remove zucchini from steam tray and add to skillet. Sear zucchini for one minute without stirring.

13) Using the potholder, remove zucchini from the pan and place alongside salmon on the plate.

14) Remove asparagus from steam tray and place alongside salmon and zucchini on the plate.

15) Turn off potatoes, and using a slotted spoon, remove from the boiling water and place directly onto hot skillet.

16) Add more olive oil if necessary and sear potatoes for one minute, not stirring.

17) Remove potatoes from pan using a spatula and place on plate. Turn off heat.

18) Season with salt, pepper and lemon juice as desired. Enjoy!

Calculation Notes

[A] EWG calculation from U.S. Department of Labor, Consumer Expenditure Survey, 2014, for household of 2.5 people spending $3,971 a year for 17 meals a week at home. $3,971 divided by 52 weeks a year, divided by 2.5 people, divided by 17 meals a week equals $1.80 per person per meal.

[B] EWG calculation from U.S. Department of Labor, Consumer Expenditure Survey, 2014, for household of 2.5 people spending $2,787 a year for four meals a week away from home. $2,787 divided by 52 weeks a year, divided by 2.5 people, divided by four meals a week equals $5.36 per person per meal.

[C] The NPD Group, a market research firm, (http://npd.com/wps/portal/npd/us/news/press-releases/fast-casual-is-only-restaurant-segment-to-see-traffic-growth-in-2013-reports-npd) reported similar costs—a typical bill at fast food places such as McDonald’s, KFC and Burger King averaged $5.30 in 2013. But bills at casual chain restaurants such as Applebee’s and TGI Friday’s can climb even higher, averaging $13.66.

[D] Travel time of four minutes calculated assuming an average city street driving speed of 35 miles an hour (2.4 miles divided by 35 miles per hour and converted to minutes by multiplying by 60).

[E] Travel time of six minutes calculated assuming an average city street driving speed of 35 miles an hour (3.3 miles divided by 35 miles per hour and converted to minutes by multiplying by 60).

[F] According to http://qsrmagazine.com/reports/drive-thru-performance-study-2014: research by the fast food industry news organization, QSR Magazine, in its 2014 Drive-Thru Performance Study, there is an average waiting time of 6 minutes in the queue to order at a drive-through, and a three and a half minute wait time from placing an order to being served at a drive-through. Including the 4-minute drive to a fast food place, picking up fast food requires 14 minutes in total.

[G] A (http://fastcasual.com/press-releases/lrs-releases-study-results-on-average-restaurant-wait-times) survey conducted by the restaurant pager supplier, Long Range Systems, LLC, found that the average wait time to be seated at a restaurant at during peak hours was 23 minutes. The time from placing an order to being served averages 15 minutes for dinner, according to a survey commissioned by researchers at Texas Tech University. Including the average 6-minute drive to a sit down restaurant, going out for dinner requires 44 minutes in all.

[H] The time you need to cook a meal decreases as your skill level increases. An EWG staff member with no experience with the recipes we chose cooked all the meals, ensuring the cooking times would be realistic for beginning cooks.

[I] We selected meal times (breakfast 8:09 a.m., lunch 12:43 p.m., and dinner 6:22 p.m.) based on averages (http://ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25088521) reported by adult Americans to the National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys, 2007-2010, conducted by the CDC.

[J] The average drive to grocery stores is 1.9 miles, according to GPS monitoring (https://www.cdc.gov/pcd/issues/2015/15_0065.htm) data of 241 adults in five U.S. cities collected by scientists at RAND. Round-trip travel time of 6.5 minutes calculated assuming an average city street driving speed of 35 miles per hour (1.9 miles divided by 35 miles per hour multiplied by 60 and multiplied by two for the round trip).

[K] The average company service time quality standard for return of payment is three minutes, according to a (http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/hospitalityreview/vol24/iss1/5) survey of eight chain restaurants commissioned by two researchers at Texas Tech University and collected through an anonymous shopper program.

[L] Assuming meal planning takes 10 minutes a week, the average time spent meal planning each day is 1.4 minutes, (10 minutes divided by 7 days).

[M] The Economic Research Service (http://www.ers.usda.gov/publications/pub-details/?pubid=44609") calculated the average time spent grocery shopping time to be 44.3 minutes [Table 6], according to data collected by the U.S. Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics for the 2006-2008 American Time Use Survey. Assuming a shopper obtains a week’s worth of groceries in one trip, the time spent a day is 6.3 minutes (44.3 minutes divided by seven days).

[N] The average time spent for those who both cook and clean up is 61.5 minutes a day, according to (http://www.ers.usda.gov/publications/pub-details/?pubid=44609) calculations by the Economic Research Service [Table 7] using data collected by the U.S. Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics for the 2006-2008 American Time Use Survey.

[O] The Economic Research Service (https://www.ers.usda.gov/publications/pub-details/?pubid=45302) calculated [Figure 1] that Americans average 14.1 minutes a day “eating and drinking out” using data collected by the American Time Use Survey. 14.1 minutes a day multiplied by 365 days is 5,147 minutes, or 86 hours.

[P] EWG calculates that if Americans eat out at a fast food restaurant twice a week, 14 minutes each time, and twice at a casual dining restaurant, for 44 minutes each time, that adds up to 116 minutes a week. 116 minutes a week multiplied by 52 weeks a year is 6,032 minutes, or 101 hours.

References

[1] Tod Marks, The Cost of Organic Food. Consumer Reports, 2015. Available at consumerreports.org/cro/news/2015/03/cost-of-organic-food/index.htm

[2] Ángel Gonzáles, Largest Organic Grocer Now Costco, Analysts Say. The Seattle Times, 2015. Available at www.seattletimes.com/business/retail/costco-becomes-largest-organic-grocer-analysts-say/

[3] Beth Kowitt, Is the Largest Natural-Foods Brand Even Sold at Whole Foods? Fortune, 2015. Available at fortune.com/2015/10/28/kroger-natural-organic-food/

[4] Elizabeth Crawford, Who Buys Organic and Where They Buy it is Evolving. Food Navigator, 2015. Available at foodnavigator-usa.com/Markets/Who-buys-organic-and-where-is-evolving

[5] Organic Trade Association, Organic Looks Like America, Shows New Survey. 2015. Available at ota.com/news/press-releases/17972

[6] Organic Trade Association, U.S. Consumers Across The Country Devour Record Amount of Organic in 2014. 2015. Available at ota.com/news/press-releases/18061

[7] U.S. Department of Agriculture, USDA Certified Organic Operations Domestic: 2002-2014. 2015. Available at flickr.com/photos/usdagov/17156783001/

[8]  Hayley Fitzpatrick, Costco Could Beat Whole Foods as the Nation’s Top Seller of Organic Food. Business Insider, 2015. Available at businessinsider.com/costco-becomes-top-seller-of-organic-food-2015-6

[9] Deloitte, Capitalizing on the Shifting Consumer Food Value Equation. Available at gmaonline.org/file-manager/FMI_GMA_Report_rev_008.pdf#sthash.EmnFgZaj.dpuf

[10] Organic Trade Association, 2015.

[11] U.S. Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics, Table 1400, Size of Consumer Unit: Annual Expenditure Means, Shares, Standard Errors, and Coefficients of Variation, Consumer Expenditure Survey. 2014. Available at www.bls.gov/cex/2014/combined/cusize.pdf

[12] M.A. Beydoun et al., Reduced Away-From-Home Food Expenditure and Better Nutrition Knowledge and Belief Can Improve Quality Of Dietary Intake Among U.S. Adults. Public Health Nutrition, 2008, 12(3):369-381.

[13] L.P. Smith et al., Trends in U.S. Home Food Preparation and Consumption: Analysis of National Nutrition Surveys and Time Use Studies from 1965-1966 to 2007-2008. Nutrition Journal, 2013, 12:45.

[14] U.S. Department of Agriculture Economic Research Service, Trends in U.S. Food Expenditure, 1953-2013. 2016. Available at ers.usda.gov/data-products/food-expenditures/interactive-chart-food-expenditures.aspx

[15] A.K. Kant et al., Away From Home Meals: Associations with Biomarkers of Chronic Disease and Dietary Intake in American Adults, NHANES 2005-2010. International Journal of Obesity, 2015, 39(5):820-827.

[16] Ibid.

[17] National Restaurant Association, Industry Forecast Predicts Trends in Healthier Options and “Greener” Restaurants in 2009. 2008. Available at www.restaurant.org/Pressroom/Press-Releases/Industry-Forecast-Predicts-Trends-in-Healthier-Opt

[18] U.S. Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2014.

[19] L.P. Smith et al., 2013.

[20] C.A. Monteiro et al., Increasing Consumption of Ultra-Processed Foods and Likely Impact on Human Health: Evidence from Brazil. Public Health Nutrition, 2011, 14(1):5-13.

[21] K.S. Hamrick and A.M. Okrent, The Role of Time in Fast-Food Purchasing Behavior in the United States. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Economic Research Service, 2014, ERR-178:1-24. Available at ers.usda.gov/publications/err-economic-research-report/err178

[22] A. Lichtenstein and D. Ludwig, Bring Back Home Economics Education. Journal of American Medical Association, 2010, 303(18):1857-1858.

[23] Ross Marchant, Consumers Will Travel 17 Minutes to Reach a Local Business. Bright Local, 2014. Available at brightlocal.com/2014/05/01/local-business-travel-times/

[24] J.L. Liu et al., Beyond Neighborhood Food Environments: Distance Traveled to Food Establishments in 5 U.S. Cities, 2009–2011. Preventing Chronic Disease, 2015, 12(E126):1-9.

[25] ER Tobin and LM Huffman, “Examining the Impact of Service Times on Overall Guest Satisfaction Perception in the Casual Dining Environment,” Hospitality Review 24, no. 1 (2006): 42-48. Available at digitalcommons.fiu.edu/hospitalityreview/vol24/iss1/5

[26] K.S. Hamrick et al., How Much Time Do Americans Spend on Food? U.S. Department of Agriculture, Economic Research Service, 2011, EIB-86:1-58. Available at www.ers.usda.gov/publications/pub-details/?pubid=44609

[27] K.S. Hamrick and A.M. Okrent, 2014.

[28] L. Mancino et al. Food Away from Home and Childhood Obesity. Current Obesity Reports, 2014, 3(4):459-469. Available at ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26626922

[29] L.P. Smith et al., Trends in U.S. Home Food Preparation and Consumption: Analysis of National Nutrition Surveys and Time Use Studies from 1965-1966 to 2007-2008. Nutrition Journal, 2013, 12(45):1-10. Available at ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3639863/pdf/1475-2891-12-45.pdf

[30] Ibid.

[31] C. Ogden and M. Carroll, Prevalence of Obesity among Children and Adolescents: United States, Trends 1963–1965 through 2007–2008. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Health E-Stat, 2010, 1-5. Available at cdc.gov/nchs/data/hestat/obesity_child_07_08/obesity_child_07_08.pdf

[32] S.A. Bowman and B.T. Vinyard, Fast Food Consumption of U.S. Adults: Impact on Energy and Nutrient Intakes and Overweight Status. Journal of the American College of Nutrition, 2004, 23(2):163-168.

[33] K.J. Duffey et al., Regular Consumption from Fast Food Establishments Relative to Other Restaurants is Differentially Associated with Metabolic Outcomes in Young Adults. Journal of Nutrition, 2009, 139(11):2113-2118. Available at ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2762152/pdf/nut1392113.pdf

[34] N. Larson et al., Young Adults and Eating Away from Home: Associations with Dietary Intake Patterns and Weight Status Differ by Choice of Restaurant. Journal of American Dietetic Association, 2011, 111(11):1696-1703. Available at ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3230226/pdf/nihms331671.pdf

[35] A.K. Kant et al., 2015.

[36] S. Paeratakul et al., Fast-Food Consumption Among U.S. Adults and Children: Dietary and Nutrient Intake Profile, Journal of the American Dietetic Association, 2003, 103(10):1332-1338. Available at ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14520253

[37] S.A. Bowman and B.T. Vinyard, 2004.

[38] R. Rosenheck, Fast Food Consumption and Increased Caloric Intake: A Systematic Review of a Trajectory Towards Weight Gain and Obesity Risk. Obesity Reviews, 2008, 9(6):535-547. Available at ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18346099

[39] M.A. Beydoun et al., 2008.

[40] B.-H. Lin and J. Guthrie, Nutritional Quality of Food Prepared at Home and Away from Home, 1977-2008. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Economic Research Service, 2012, EIB-105:1-24. Available at ers.usda.gov/publications/eib-economic-information-bulletin/eib105.aspx

[41] N.I. Larson et al., Food Preparation by Young Adults is Associated with Better Diet Quality. Journal of the American Dietetic Association, 2006, 106(12):2001-2007. Available at ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17126631

[42] L.P. Smith et al., 2013.

[43] J.A. Wolfson and S.N. Bleich, Is Cooking at Home Associated with Better Diet Quality or Weight-Loss Intention? Public Health Nutrition 18, no. 8 (2015):1397-1406. Available at ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25399031

[44] D. Neumark-Sztainer et al., Family Meal Patterns: Associations with Sociodemographic Characteristics and Improved Dietary Intake Among Adolescents. Journal of the American Dietetic Association, 2003, 103(3):317-322. Available at ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12616252

[45] D. Gunders, Wasted: How America is Losing Up to 40 percent of its Food from Farm to Form to Landfill. Natural Resources Defense Council, NRDC Issue Paper, 2012, 1-26. Available at nrdc.org/food/files/wasted-food-IP.pdf

[46] Ibid.

[47] D. Crawford et al., Which Food-Related Behaviours Are Associated with Healthier Intakes of Fruits and Vegetables Among Women? Public Health Nutrition, 2007, 10(3):256-265.

What does organic mean?

A third party must certify food labeled organic to ensure that it meets the stringent criteria set by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. These rules work to protect natural resources, preserve agricultural biodiversity, reduce the use of synthetic pesticides, and support animal health and welfare.1 If the product does not carry the USDA organic seal, it is not organic.

Organic foods cannot be irradiated; genetically modified; or grown with synthetic pesticides or fertilizers, chemical additives or sewage sludge. Organic livestock and poultry cannot be treated with hormones and antibiotics. (Sick animals must be treated but their meat cannot be sold as organic.) Livestock and poultry must be fed only certified organic feed, with no genetically modified corn or soy, and no animal byproducts. Poultry must have access to the outdoors. Cows, sheep and goats must have access to pasture.2

Why organic is better for people and the planet

Fewer pesticide residues

Lab tests conducted in 2013 by the U.S. Department of Agriculture identified 165 different pesticides on samples of common conventional fruit and vegetables – even after washing and, in some cases, peeling.3

Synthetic pesticides, used on conventional but not organic produce, have been detected in measurable levels in people who eat conventional produce. Researchers at Harvard and the University of California, Berkeley, reported that when children switched from a diet of conventional food to organic food, pesticide levels in their bodies dropped significantly.4,5,6 Researchers have found that American children with higher concentrations of synthetic pesticides were more likely to be diagnosed with ADHD,7,8,9 and that pregnant women with higher readings of these chemicals had shorter pregnancies and smaller babies.10

Farmworkers are at special risk. Between 1997 and 2000, pesticides poisoned an average of 475 California farmworkers a year.11 Agricultural chemical companies have developed pesticides that are supposedly less toxic to farmworkers, but some of these same chemicals are likely contributing to the collapse of bee colonies.12

Unlike technologies to stave off insects and weeds approved for organic agriculture, many synthetic pesticides used on conventional produce have been banned or otherwise phased out over the years due to potential human health and environmental risks.

EWG helps people find the conventionally grown fruits and vegetables that test low for pesticide residues, as well as the fruits and vegetables that test high and should be bought organic when possible. Learn more by reading EWG’s Shopper’s Guide to Pesticides in ProduceTM.

Avoid Monsanto’s Roundup and GMOs

Many scientists are convinced that the pesticides used in the cultivation of GMO corn and soybeans are dangerous to humans.

Farmers spread 95,000 tons a year of glyphosate on an estimated 154 million acres of corn and soybeans genetically engineered to withstand this potent weed killer.13,14 A Monsanto chemist invented glyphosate; the company markets it under the brand name Roundup.

In December 2015, the World Health Organization classified glyphosate as “probably carcinogenic to humans.”15

In 2014, Dow AgroSciences introduced a new weed-killer called Enlist Duo,16 which aims to kill so-called superweeds that have evolved to survive glyphosate alone. Dow’s product contains both glyphosate and an older chemical called 2,4-D. Last June, the World Health Organization called 2,4-D a “possible” human carcinogen.17 The Environmental Protection Agency approved Enlist Duo in 2014 and then sought to revoke that approval late in 2015 amid concerns about the potential synergy of the two main chemicals, which could make it more toxic.18

Young children are especially vulnerable to pesticides. In 2014, EWG determined that 487 elementary schools across the U.S. are within 200 feet of a corn or soybean field where glyphosate and other toxic pesticides are regularly sprayed.19

Learn more by reading EWG’s Shopper’s Guide to Avoiding GMOs and Elementary Students at Increased Pesticide Risk.

Reduce your exposure to so-called ‘superbugs’

Bacteria and viruses20 have evolved to survive pharmaceutical drug treatments developed to cure common infections. These so-called superbugs have developed in part because conventional growers routinely feed antibiotics to healthy animals to keep them from getting sick in crowded, unsanitary conditions.21 In contrast, organic livestock producers rely on preventative care, good sanitation and stress reduction – not antibiotics – to keep animals healthy. Consequently, Stanford scientists concluded in a review paper that the bacteria on organic meats aren’t as likely to have developed antibiotic resistance.22 Learn more by reading EWG’s Tips to Avoiding Superbugs in Meat.

More disease-fighting antioxidants

A 2014 study by scientists at Newcastle University and Washington State University suggested that eating a single serving of organic produce could provide as many cancer-fighting antioxidants as two conventional servings of the same foods.23

Healthier balance of fats

A 2011 EWG report highlighted studies that found organic, pasture-raised animals have a healthier balance of fats.24 In 2016, Scientists at Newcastle University confirmed this finding again after conducting a meta-analysis on 67 published studies.25 Learn more by reading EWG’s Meat Eater’s Guide.

Fewer environmental impacts

Organic production methods reduce fertilizer and pesticide runoff, and build healthy, productive, water-conserving soil by using compost, cover crops and rotating the fields on which livestock graze.26,27 Organic agriculture allows pollinators to thrive and helps farms adapt to changing conditions.28 And since organic agriculture doesn't use synthetic fertilizers or pesticides, it’s more energy-efficient and can reduce greenhouse gas emissions.29,30 Raising animals in pasture reduces erosion and water pollution, stores more carbon in soil, and preserves wildlife habitat and biodiversity.31,32,33

References

[1] U.S. Department of Agriculture, USDA Organic. Available at usda.gov/wps/portal/usda/usdahome?contentidonly=true&contentid=organic-agriculture.html

[2] Ibid.

[3] U.S. Department of Agriculture, Pesticide Data Program. Available at www.ams.usda.gov/datasets/pdp

[4] C. Lu et al., Organic Diets Significantly Lower Children's Dietary Exposure to Organophosphorous Pesticides. Environmental Health Perspectives, 2006, 114(2):260-263.

[5] C. Lu et al., Dietary Intake and its Contribution to Longitudinal Organophosphorous Pesticide Exposure in Urban/Suburban Children. Environmental Health Perspectives, 2008, 116(4):537-542.

[6] A. Bradman et al., Effect of Organic Diet Intervention on Pesticide Exposures in Young Children Living in Low-Income Urban and Agricultural Communities. Environmental Health Perspectives, 2015, 123(10):1086-1093.

[7] M.F. Bouchard et al., Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder and Urinary Metabolites of Organophosphate Pesticides. Pediatrics, 2010, 125(6):e1270-1277.

[8] M. Wagner-Schuman et al., Association of Pyrethroid Pesticide Exposure with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder in a Nationally Representative Sample of U.S. Children. Environmental Health, 2015, 14(44):1-9. Available at ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4458051/

[9] J.R. Richardson et al., Developmental Pesticide Exposure Reproduces Features of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology Journal, 2015, 29(5):1960-1972.

[10] S.A. Rauch et al., Associations of Prenatal Exposure to Organophosphate Pesticide Metabolites with Gestational Age and Birth Weight. Environmental Health Perspectives, 2012, 120(7):1055-1060.

[11] Margaret Reeves et al., Fields of Poison 2002. Californians for Pesticide Reform. Available at beyondpesticides.org/assets/media/documents/organicfood/health/documents/FieldofPoisons2002.pdf

[12] European Food Safety Authority, ERSA Identifies Risks to Bees from Neonicotinoids. 2013. Available at efsa.europa.eu/en/press/news/130116

[13] U.S. Department of Agriculture, Acreage. 2013. Available at usda.mannlib.cornell.edu/usda/nass/Acre/2010s/2013/Acre-06-28-2013.pdf

[14] G.M. Dill et al., Glyphosate-Resistant Crops: Adoption, Use and Future Considerations. Pest Management Science, 2008, 64(4):326-331. Available at enveurope.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s12302-016-0070-0

[15] World Health Organization International Agency for Research on Cancer, IARC Monographs Volume 112: Evaluation of Five Organophosphate Insecticides and Herbicides. 2015. Available at www.iarc.fr/en/media-centre/iarcnews/pdf/MonographVolume112.pdf

[16] Dow AgroSciences, Dow AgroSciences Announces Launch of Enlist DuoTM Herbicide in the U.S. Available at newsroom.dowagro.com/press-release/dow-agrosciences-announces-launch-enlist-duo-herbicide-us

[17] World Health Organization International Agency for Research on Cancer, IARC Monographs Evaluate DDT, Lindane, and 2,4-D. 2015. Available at www.iarc.fr/en/media-centre/pr/2015/pdfs/pr236_E.pdf

[18] Andrew Pollack, E.P.A. Revokes Approval of New Dow Herbicide for G.M.O. Crops. The New York Times, 2015. Available at www.nytimes.com/2015/11/26/business/epa-revokes-approval-of-new-dow-herbicide.html

[19] Mary Ellen Kustin and Soren Rundquist, Elementary School Students at Increased Pesticide Risk. Environmental Working Group, 2014. Available at ewg.org/agmag/2014/08/elementary-school-students-increased-pesticide-risk

[20] Alan Sipress, Bird Flu Drug Rendered Useless: Chinese Chickens Given Medication Made for Humans. Washington Post, 2005. Available at washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/17/AR2005061701214.html

[21] World Health Organization, The Evolving Threat of Antimicrobial Resistance: Options for Action. 2012. Available at http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/10665/44812/1/9789241503181_eng.pdf

[22] C. Smith-Spangler et al., Are Organic Foods Safer or Healthier than Conventional Alternatives?: A Systematic Review. Annals of Internal Medicine, 2012, 157(5):348-366.

[23] M. Barański et al., Higher Antioxidant and Lower Cadmium Concentrations and Lower Incidence of Pesticide Residues in Organically Grown Crops: A Systematic Literature Review and Meta-Analyses. British Journal of Nutrition, 2014, 112(5):794-811.

[24] S.K. Duckett et al., Effects of Winter Stocker Growth Rate and Finishing System on: III. Tissue Proximate, Fatty Acid, Vitamin and Cholesterol Content. Journal of Animal Science, 2009, 87(9):2961-2970.

[25] D. Średnicka-Tober et al., Composition differences between organic and conventional meat: a systematic literature review and meta-analysis. British Journal of Nutrition, 2016: 115(6):994-1011. Available at https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4838835/

[26] N. El-Hage Scialabba, Organic Agriculture’s Contribution to Sustainability. Crop Management, 2013:1-3. Available at fao.org/docrep/018/aq537e/aq537e.pdf

[27] J.P. Reganold and J.M. Wachter, Organic Agriculture in the Twenty-First Century. Nature Plants, 2016, 2(15221). Available at nature.com/articles/nplants2015221

[28] Ibid.

[29] Ibid.

[30] Organic Farming Research Foundation, Organic Farming for Health and Prosperity. 2012. Available at ofrf.org/sites/ofrf.org/files/docs/pdf/HP-report-web.pdf

[31] D.E. Johnson et al., Methane, Nitrous Oxide and Carbon Dioxide Emissions from Ruminant Livestock Production Systems. In Eds. J. Takahashi and B.A. Young, Greenhouse Gases and Animal Agriculture. Elsevier, 2002.

[32] Food and Agriculture Organization, The State of Food and Agriculture 2009: Livestock in the Balance. 2009. Available at fao.org/docrep/012/i0680e/i0680e00.htm

[33] N. Pelletier et al., Comparative Life Cycle Environmental Impacts of Three Beef Production Strategies in the Upper Midwestern United States in Agricultural Systems. Agricultural Systems, 2010, 103:380-389. Available at www.leopold.iastate.edu/files/pubs-and-papers/2010-04-comparative-life-cycle-environmental-impacts-three-beef-production-strategies-upper-midwestern-unite.pdf

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