“The findings underscore the need for interventions at national, state, and community levels, across multiple settings,” the CDC says in the news report. “A diet high in fruits and vegetables can reduce the risk for many leading causes of death.”
Organic: What’s The Cost of Health?
Eating more fruits and veggies is crucial to a healthier body – but there’s more to it than just picking up a bag of apples at your local store. For example, according to the Food and Drug Administration, more pesticides (36, to be exact) are found on apples than on any other fruit or vegetable. In one test, as many as seven chemicals were detected on a single apple. Organic produce truly is the healthier option.
Yes, going organic tends to be more expensive, but think of it this way: Either you can invest in more organic produce, or you can deal with the lofty medical costs of certain diseases and conditions, namely cancer, that many popular produce chemicals have been proven to contribute to?
Ideally, yes, it’d be great if 100% of the food you ate was organic. But since that’s just not an option for many people, we’ve listed below the top fruits and vegetables with the dirtiest reputations, as well as steps to take to better protect yourself against regular produce, if going organic just isn’t an option at all:
Cantaloupe
Cantaloupes often contain five of the longest-lasting chemicals, one of which is dieldrin, an exceedingly toxic and carcinogenic insecticide. Though it was banned in 1974, residues still persist in soils and are taken up through the cantaloupe’s roots and absorbed into the edible portion.
If you can’t go organic: Thoroughly wash the outside of the melon, since a knife can drag exterior residues through the flesh as you slice it.
Cucumbers
In a survey of 42 common vegetables, cucumbers were ranked second in cancer risk and 12th in “most contaminated food” by the Environmental Working Group, a respected public-interest group.
If you can’t go organic: Peel the cucumbers, since the waxes used to make the skin shiny also tend to hold chemicals.
Grapes
Because grapes ripen quickly, tend to mold, and attract insects, growers hit them with multiple applications of various chemicals. The worst kind are…
… Chilean grapes, which are treated with as many as 17 of them. (Ninety percent of the grapes eaten in the United States from January to April are Chilean.)
If you can’t go organic: Search out grapes grown domestically; they are treated with fewer chemicals.
Green Beans
The Environmental Protection Agency has more than 60 pesticides registered for use on green beans.
If you can’t go organic: Choose fresh beans over canned or frozen. Wash them well.
Spinach
In a certain cartoon, spinach makes muscles. In real life, the chemicals used to treat it may cause cancer or interfere with hormone production.
If you can’t go organic: Vigilantly wash each leaf separately under running water.
Strawberries
Strawberries are one of the most contaminated of all produce items in the United States.
If you can’t go organic: Choose local berries over long-distance ones (which generally involve more spraying). The package should say where they’re from, or the supermarket’s produce manager should know.
Winter Squash
Like cantaloupes and cucumbers, winter squash has a propensity to absorb dieldrin from the soil into its edible parts.
If you can’t go organic: Buy squash grown in Mexico – the soil there is largely uncontaminated by dieldrin.
…and we didn’t forget! Remember what we said about apples containing more pesticides than just about any other produce? Well, if you can’t buy organic apples, peel the ones you have. Also, look for apples from New Zealand, which are treated with half as many pesticides as those grown in the U.S.