The Expanding Organic Grocery Scene
Real Food: The Expanding Organic Grocery Scene
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Earl Richardson
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By Mother Earth News Editors
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It's a great time to be an organic food shopper, whether
you're new to organics or a veteran devotee. Since 2002,
when the U.S. Department of Agriculture regulations for
organic foods, which set production and handling standards
that all food labeled "organic" must meet, went into
effect, the organic food business has been booming. Growing
concerns about toxic pesticides, inhumane treatment of
livestock animals, E. coli outbreaks and mad cow disease
continue to fuel the growth, as does people's desire to
support a more eco-friendly food chain. (Next issue, we'll
bring you an article about yet another reason to buy
organic—the declining vitamin and mineral content of
conventional produce.)
More and more supermarkets are expanding their organic
sections and moving those products to more prominent store
positions. (For organic brands to look for, see list, Page
77.) Local food co-ops are featuring a wider range of
products than ever before, and they are buying from local
producers whenever they can. There are even growing chains
of natural foods supermarkets: Whole Foods has 146 stores
in 27 states and Canada, and Wild Oats has 101 locations in
25 states and Canada.
Food industry giants, including Mars and General Mills,
have purchased smaller organic companies and introduced
their organic brands to many mainstream shoppers, while
additional small producers in this country, and many
others, are starting new organic companies, often dedicated
to artisan-style, high-quality organic production on a
modest scale. In either case, everybody wins—more
wholesome, flavorful organic products are being produced
and sold, more land is being farmed sustainably and more
livestock animals are being raised humanely.
Many of these new, premium organic products offer
extraordinary tastes. A few months ago at MOTHER EARTH
NEWS, we tasted several kinds of organic soybeans and
discovered how much better black soybeans taste than the
more-common yellow types. And our favorite cookie now is
the Newman's Own Organics Fig Newman.
Some items are more expensive than standard fair, but you
get what you pay for, right? Foods bringing that rare,
homegrown flavor back into our favorite recipes are worth a
premium price whether they're available in our
supermarkets, online or at a local farm. Some of these
products come from just down the road and others come from
half-a-world away. Although we normally encourage you to
buy as locally as you can, we've found that some of the
topnotch imports remind us of how good our U.S. food can,
and should, be.
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