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    Why Does Organic Taste so Good?

    by Toni Salter
    Organic-Food-Just-Tastes-Better

    For a variety of reasons, people are cooking meals at home more often and there are now television networks devoted entirely to cooking shows.

    Celebrity chefs are turning out wonderful meals in 30 minutes, while basic home cooks are serving up 3 course gastronomic delights under the sometimes grueling and stressful conditions of TV challenges.

    While we at home may follow every step and the dishes may look great, oftentimes the challenges are won or lost on the taste test.

    Our dish may look the same, however when it comes to taste, what makes one dish better than the other? It is true that individual taste is subjective and much of the population has diluted their palette with too much fat and sugar to really appreciate subtleties.

    There is one thing that most chefs agree on, that they overwhelmingly prefer organic produce to that which is conventionally grown. Chefs prefer organically grown ingredients, not so much for environmental or moral reasons, for these professionals, it is all about taste.

    Organic food simply tastes better, or so the reasoning goes. Is there any logic to this? Is there an underlying reason why this might be the case… or perhaps just a ploy to get us to pay more for their designer dishes?

    Scientific research has actually weighed in and suggests a reason for the difference in taste.

    The UK Soil Association review (2001) found that on average, conventionally grown produce tends to contain more water than organic produce, which contains more dry matter (20 percent more) for a given weight.

    This extra water, in effect, dilutes the conventional produce and perhaps explains the more "intense" flavor in its organic counterparts. The review showed that the higher water content of conventional produce also tends to dilute the nutrient content. So, organic produce is not only tastier but also a lot more nutrient dense.

    Another factor contributing to the flavor of organic produce is the vine ripening. Organic produce is allowed to ripen fully before harvesting, developing all the natural sugars.

    Unlike conventionally grown produce, organic produce is not harvested green and kept in refrigerated storage until such time that demand dictates their arrival by artificial ripening processes.

    The best produce of all, it could be argued, is organic homegrown produce. Produce sold at the market is grown for its ability to withstand being transported, sometimes many hundreds or thousands of miles.

    As a result, both organic and conventional varieties can often be chosen based on qualities other than taste.

    A home grown variety, rich in flavor and developing into a very soft fruit at maturity can be far superior than the limited choices offered at any store.

    We may not all be master chefs, but most of us know a great tasting home grown tomato when we bite into one.

    If you are still in doubt about the superior taste of organic produce… watch Hammy the hamster's taste test video. Here is an unlikely taste tester without any celebrity chef bias.

    Toni Salter, 'The Veggie Lady', is a registered horticulturist living in ­­­­­­­­­­­Sydney, Australia. Follow Toni on Twitter and 'Like' her on Facebook.

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    63 comments

    • BetsyB  •  Deerfield, Illinois  •  3 months ago
      I don't know where the author got his information. But most commerically grown organic tomoatos are picked green, like their conventional counterparts. If you want fresh tasting produce, purchase your produce from a farmer's market. Organic or conventional, it will be fresher, taste better, and you will be supporting small farms.
      • Miba 3 months ago
        Cause of course everyone has the money to support their own family AND someone else's family. 1.50 for a head of lettuce at wal-mart or 3.00 for a head of lettuce at the farmers market.... hell my kids don't need to eat anything but lettuce for dinner tonight so let's buy the more expensive one so my neighbors kids can eat good.
      • AW 3 months ago
        Every time you buy something, even at Walmart, you are supporting someone else's family. You can buy at Walmart and support Sam Walton's family, or you can buy at the farmers' market and support the farmer's family.
      • DoneWithStupidity 3 months ago
        It still amazes me how many people in this world have Miba's mentality. Someone who won't think twice about spending $3.99 on a bag of chips that if you actually looked at how much you are paying per ounce would astound you. That's ok... but spending more on giving your kids better food and supporting your community isn't??? Someone has their priorities way out of whack.
    • Pachacutec  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  3 months ago
      If the organic veggies/fruit are locally grown, many times they taste better. However, I think that's due more to the fact that, as it IS local, it's fresher. As a rule, the stuff I buy in the chain organic stores is definitely NOT tastier than the "processed" produce.
      • Ray 3 months ago
        Certainly if produce is grown closer to a person's home, it's going to taste better. It will usually have been picked ripe, not green. It won't have been put in storage for weeks or even months. That orange color on oranges at the supermarket? It's usually a dye that is sprayed on per an article I read years ago. I try to always buy organic. Organic vegetables and fruits do taste better.
    • K  •  3 months ago
      I can bet a majority of the posters here have never grown a single vegetable at home. Give it a try people. It won't kill you and it isn't hard.
      • NightShade 3 months ago
        Depends on the vegetable, but yeah, you're mostly right. We used to try growing normal-sized pumpkins when I was a kid for the seeds and to make pie. Those were the most pathetic things I've ever seen. About the size of those mini-pumpkins and usually half the plants wouldn't even fruit!
      • Barb 3 months ago
        My parents grew veggies at one point and then stopped because as Mom said they could get just as good at the fruit stands for less.
      • K 3 months ago
        @Nightshade Yeah, those picture-perfect orange pumpkins are hard to grow. Our family switched to the green/yellow marbled variety and those were wonderful. Taste the same too!

        @Barb I agree. Buying from fruit stands is a perfectly good way to support local growers. Makes a great Saturday morning outing, too.
    • ChevyGal  •  Westmont, Illinois  •  3 months ago
      As I cleaned organic veggies last night, I realized that the taste of organic in the middle of winter wasn't any different than non-organic in the middle of winter. All taste a bit flat.
      • DoneWithStupidity 3 months ago
        You have to buy what is in season. That also has a lot to do with it.
    • John Kimble  •  New York, New York  •  3 months ago
      They did a bit like this on Penn and Teller's Bullchit when they got random people to taste organic vs. inorganic food. Most people preferred the inorganic kinds...
      • A Yahoo! User 3 months ago
        Much of taste preference depends on what we ate growing up and what we are used to. For instance, some people prefer the taste of canned green beans over fresh or frozen. So if we are used to eating bland inorganic food, then we tend to prefer the taste of bland organic food.
    • 78Westy  •  Brush Prairie, Washington  •  3 months ago
      The answer is simple if your gulible enough to buy it then your gulible enough to believe when people tell you it tastes better or has less chemicals on it!
    • wildman  •  3 months ago
      Someone has been smoking rope and needs to sober up and sniff what they are shoveling.
    • Barb  •  3 months ago
      Just because it is "organic" doesn't automatically mean it tastes better. I have given up buying "organicly grown" apples because the ones I have bought were tastless when compared to the same Fuji apples I bought that weren't "organic".
    • David D.  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  3 months ago
      without reading the article, i would say because of lack of pesticides.
    • Toni  •  Kansas City, Missouri  •  3 months ago
      uh because there's no pesticides in them
    • Mia  •  3 months ago
      It really does taste better. Wish I could afford to buy it more.
    • Attila  •  3 months ago
      Organic food is just wonderful when prepared in an Orgasmatron.
    • Attila  •  3 months ago
      Everything tastes better with salmonella!
    • omerlm  •  3 months ago
      I buy almost exclusively organic produce, and the majority of it I don't notice much of a taste difference. However, there are some that I do, because it's conventional counterpart is typically laden with many sprays, and the lack thereof makes it taste better, like actual fruit, or whatever it is. :)
    • rats  •  Kennewick, Washington  •  3 months ago
      Celebrity chefs are turning out wonderful meals in 30 minutes. Ah, come on! With a cast of hundreds and a mighty big budget! Oh, yes and someone to clean up the mess. Shish!
    • rats  •  Kennewick, Washington  •  3 months ago
      Most of that good taste comes from growing to full maturity before being picked. Growing hybrids for a longer shelf-life has also destroyed flavor. Can't beat homegrown, organic or non-organic.
    • Trippy  •  3 months ago
      The key is buying organic, local and in season! That is when the food tastes the best. An organic apple that is out of season isn't going to taste very good because it has degraded faster than those that are non-organic and sprayed with more chemicals than your toilet bowl cleaner. I have taught my kids to only eat fresh in season. There are also many good frozen organic products that allow you to extend the season - no the frozen blueberry isn't the same as the fresh one but it is much healthier for you than the non-organic one you buy in December that may as well be a bowl full of pesticides shipped from god knows where . . .
    • Retirement-bound  •  3 months ago
      Simply put, organic food tastes better because chemicals like flavor enhancers and preservatives taste like crap.
    • rockerchck  •  Norfolk, Nebraska  •  3 months ago
      Absolute fantasy. Another dope who's bought into the biggest scam ever foisted on the American consumer--the organic food industry.

      The FACT is that most organic produce is grown on very large farms and isn't "vine-ripened", either.

      Yes, if you buy local produce that is vine-ripened it will taste better whether they grew it by putting a bag of commercial fertilizer on it or dusting it for some bug--or not.

      If you live in Minnesota, however, the organic produce at the grocery store didn't come from some backyard farmer's garden that morning. It was trucked in from California or Mexico that same way that the non-organic produce was.

      Whether it is "organic" or not makes ZERO difference.

      Whether it is locall grown, regardless of being organic makes the difference. It's just that locally grown isn't always possible in every location all year around.
    • E  •  3 months ago
      "Unlike conventionally grown produce, organic produce is not harvested green and kept in refrigerated storage until such time that demand dictates their arrival by artificial ripening processes."

      This may be generally true, given that organic produce is often produced by smaller farmers and not shipped as far, but it should be noted that this has NOTHING to do with organic production itself. Organic produce can be harvested green and is kept in refrigerated storage in some cases. The organic label offers NO assurance of "better taste" nor "safer production" nor "locally grown". And large factory-type "organic" farms are becoming more and more common.

      This is article is an organic food propaganda piece.

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