Alt text
  • buy organic food with no preservatives
  • look ingredients
  • salt (inorganic preservative)

Image of a cat looking down at the camera.


    •  Laticauda   ( @Laticauda@lemmy.ca ) 
      link
      fedilink
      17
      edit-2
      10 months ago

      It’s a heavily abused and arbitrary marketing term that doesn’t actually indicate anything about what the food is made of or how it’s made or grown. It also doesn’t indicate anything about how healthy the food is or how good it tastes. At most it’s slightly better for the environment in some areas with some brands when used properly, but even then regulations are too lax and inconsistent worldwide for it to be a trustworthy label.

      • Organic foods can and usually do have pesticides, and those pesticides are just as harmful to you as the artificial ones. For instance, Rotenone was an organic pesticide used for decades that is strongly linked to parkinsons and has since been banned in North America.

        • Also quantity, most “organic” pesticides are significantly less effective and so it requires more applications of more product in order to get the same effect. Eating “organic” likely exposed you to more pesticides than the alternative.

    • Depends on where you live. As far as I know the term is not well protected in many countries, so it means next to nothing there.

      However, I live in the EU / Germany, where we have several organic farming standards that are all fairly strict. Generally, organic actually means organically produced food here, grown without artificial pesticides, chemical fertilizers, and so on.