Anonymous wrote:My issue with Nature's promise is this... for years i ate their "natural" chicken because it had no antibiotics, no this and no that, but especially cus it was fed a vegetarian diet. well...so why did they come out with a line of organic chicken??? i assume now, it was because the feed they were giving the natural chicken contained GMO...and now the organic line doesn't. i don't know but i am all the way pissed off that this is the case. For 10 years i though i was doing good to my body just to realize i was probably eating GMO all the while. #sad
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So if I choose organic simply for the health reasons (i.e. I don't want pesticides or growth hormones in my milk) and the other issues (small family farms, etc.) aren't my priority (got nothing against those issues, LOL, just not my priority), is Horizon fine? Now I'm getting worried!
Yes, good grief. I buy Horizon and Nature's Promise milk depending upon which is cheaper that week and am satisfied with both. If you can afford to buy locally raised, free range, 100% organic everything, great - but most of us cannot. Removing pesticides and hormones from your family's food and buying things that meet USDA organic standards is still a major improvement over traditional factory farmed meat and dairy. Stop worrying about what the "organic police" militants here have to say and do the best you can.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am in correspondence with Nature's Promise because I noticed they put corn meal in "organic" products which do not normally contain corn meal, like whole grain bread and buttermilk pancake mix. I wanted to know if the corn was non-GMO. Their consumer affairs rep wrote to say that "we cannot guarantee that the crops we purchase have not come in contact with shared farm harvesting equipment, on farm and off farm transportation vehicles, grain elevators and storage silos." In other words, you might just find some pesticides in their products from GMOs even though they are billing everything "organic." I asked if their chickens (from which they make organic chicken broth) are fed GMO corn, waiting reply
I do not believe any mass-produced product sold at Giant with the label "organic" is truly organic. It's very difficult to grow completely organic food, even in your own back yard. Even if you use no pesticides, previous owners of your house may have used DDT, and it's still there, a half-century later. Pesticides from your neighbor's lawn-care company can be blown over into your yard, contaminating your "organic" garden.
It's best to know the company, know the farmer, do as much research as you can, and then wash everything before cooking, and hope you have a healthy immune system. Processed food is processed food, whether it's called "organic" or "natural" or whatever. It ain't healthy.
Well, I assume you don't live here in DC, because that is just impossible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So if I choose organic simply for the health reasons (i.e. I don't want pesticides or growth hormones in my milk) and the other issues (small family farms, etc.) aren't my priority (got nothing against those issues, LOL, just not my priority), is Horizon fine? Now I'm getting worried!
Yes, good grief. I buy Horizon and Nature's Promise milk depending upon which is cheaper that week and am satisfied with both. If you can afford to buy locally raised, free range, 100% organic everything, great - but most of us cannot. Removing pesticides and hormones from your family's food and buying things that meet USDA organic standards is still a major improvement over traditional factory farmed meat and dairy. Stop worrying about what the "organic police" militants here have to say and do the best you can.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am in correspondence with Nature's Promise because I noticed they put corn meal in "organic" products which do not normally contain corn meal, like whole grain bread and buttermilk pancake mix. I wanted to know if the corn was non-GMO. Their consumer affairs rep wrote to say that "we cannot guarantee that the crops we purchase have not come in contact with shared farm harvesting equipment, on farm and off farm transportation vehicles, grain elevators and storage silos." In other words, you might just find some pesticides in their products from GMOs even though they are billing everything "organic." I asked if their chickens (from which they make organic chicken broth) are fed GMO corn, waiting reply
I do not believe any mass-produced product sold at Giant with the label "organic" is truly organic. It's very difficult to grow completely organic food, even in your own back yard. Even if you use no pesticides, previous owners of your house may have used DDT, and it's still there, a half-century later. Pesticides from your neighbor's lawn-care company can be blown over into your yard, contaminating your "organic" garden.
It's best to know the company, know the farmer, do as much research as you can, and then wash everything before cooking, and hope you have a healthy immune system. Processed food is processed food, whether it's called "organic" or "natural" or whatever. It ain't healthy.