Anonymous wrote:I don't wash raspberries but I wash all other berries.
why not?Anonymous wrote:Used to be A. Now I don't eat them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A. Of course. They are so dirty and may also have pesticides.
You arenβt really washing the pesticides off. Debis yea, which is why I do it.
Anonymous wrote:Do you wash your berries before you eat them?
A. Yes, I take the berries out of the container and rinse them under running water before transferring to a new container
B. Yes, in fact I wash berries in some kind of food-safe cleaning solution before eating (please share your cleaning formula)
C. No, I eat berries straight out of the container because I have a superior immune system
D. It depends, I wash some berries and others I don't (please specify which ones and why)
I do A. But, eating berries right out of the container seems quite popular (on social media, watching coworkers eat lunches, my fellow travelers on airplanes, etc). Maybe I'm missing something--does the water even do anything?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I rinse them if I am serving a whole bunch. I always rinse strawberries if I can, because often they are gritty. But if the kids or I grab a strawberry without rinsing, it's fine. I rinse for cleanliness only. If there is some dirt and it doesn't bother whoever is eating it, it's all good.
Why are you eating berries in winter, is the bigger question!
Because we live in a wealthy first world country and have access to this kind of healthy produce year round.
Yeah, but does it taste good? And if so where are you buying it? All the strawberries and raspberries I can find in winter either taste lousy or go bad within 2 days. Or both.
Anonymous wrote:A or C - probably 60/40 split
I am sure they have already been through some kind of rinse before being packaged.