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M & O Consumer
Action Kit








Introduction




What is genetic engineering?






Why Care?






In the Kitchen






In the Supermarket






Mothers' Milk List






On the Farm






Government




Sample Letters to US Government




Companies--Look Who Is Listening!




10 Largest Companies





Food, Farms, and Genetic Engineering

In the Kitchen

How to Plan and Prepare Healthier Meals for Your Family and the Environment

When planning meals, right now, you really can't avoid genetically engineered (GE) foods altogether. They're just too pervasive and unlabeled. But there are eight simple steps you can take to reduce your family's exposure with Mothers & Others' New Green Diet. Rich in seasonal and locally produced whole grains, fruits and vegetables, and low in animal and processed foods, this diet will help you minimize the amount of genetically engineered foods that you buy and eat, limit your intake of food additives and pesticide residues, and allow you to support farming practices that reduce the use of synthetic chemicals that harm wildlife and the environment.

8 Simple Steps to The New Green Diet
How to Shop for the Earth, Cook for Your Health, and Bring Pleasure Back to Your Kitchen(reprinted from The Green Guide #77, March 2000)

The following guidelines can help you make healthier, greener food choices.

  • 1. Eat a variety of foods.
    Eating a wide variety of foods is the best way to meet all your nutritional requirements, but the proliferating "variety" in supermarkets does not reflect biological diversity. Three species--rice, corn and wheat--supply nearly 60% of the calories and protein people derive from plants. And of 200 crops eaten by humans, only 30 account for 90% of the world's calorie intake.

  • 2. Buy locally produced food.
    The average mouthful of food travels 1,400 miles from the farm to our plates. Food available from local farms is fresher and closer to ripeness, while using less energy for transport. Buying local products also supports regional farmers and preserves farmland. Local food is less likely to have been treated with post-harvest pesticides. If you get your fruits and vegetables at a farmers' market or from a Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) farm, you can ask the farmer whether the food has been genetically engineered or treated with pesticides.

  • 3. Buy produce in season.
    Out-of-season produce is costly because transport uses so much energy. It's also more likely to have been imported, often from a country with less stringent pesticide regulations than the U.S. Instead, in winter, prepare seasonal crops like potatoes, onions, sweet potatoes, beets, and parsnips. Put away or freeze spring and summer produce, such as berries or snap peas, from local producers. All these foods retain their nutritional content in storage; using them cuts energy costs.

  • 4. Buy organically produced food.
    Organic certification guarantees that the product has been grown, handled and processed without synthetic pesticides, hormones, antibiotics, artificial ingredients, preservatives or irradiation. Foods that are labeled "100% certified organic" cannot contain genetically engineered ingredients. Organic certification also means the farmer is promoting biological diversity by rotating crops, conserving and renewing the soil, and protecting water sources.

  • 5. Eat fresh, whole foods with adequate starch and fiber.
    Whole foods--fruits, vegetables, grains, legumes (beans), nuts and seeds--are the healthiest we can eat. The National Cancer Institute recommends we each "strive for five" servings of fresh fruits and vegetables a day to protect against cancer, heart disease and common digestive ailments. Also most fresh produce, legumes and whole grains, with the exception of corn and soy, are still genetically natural.

  • 6. Eat fewer and smaller portions of animal products.
    Meat and dairy products are major sources of fat in the U.S. diet, and contribute to higher risk of heart disease, cancer and diabetes. Animal products, including farmed fish, may contain hormones, antibiotics and organochlorine chemicals, such as dioxin, DDT and other pesticides, which concentrate in animal fat. Fish caught in contaminated waters may contain high levels of PCBs or mercury. Cattle, chickens, pigs and sheep consume more than 70% of the grains produced in the U.S. So it's likely that the meat, eggs and dairy products you buy were raised on bioengineered feed--primarily soy, corn, or cottonseed meal. Modern meat production also consumes water, energy and land. Animal waste produces air and water pollution. And red meat production creates about 3.5 times more greenhouse gases than that of grains.
    When you do buy meat, poultry or diary, choose organic, which means it has been raised on organic feed.

  • 7. Choose minimally processed and packaged foods. A typical highly processed "food product" may contain little natural food and be high in fat, salt or sugar. It's likely to contain genetically engineered soy- and corn-based additives, such as corn syrup and soy lecithin, which are present in 60% of all processed foods.

  • 8. Prepare your own meals at home. Cooking from scratch can involve a little more labor and a little more time, but you can be sure you'll save money and resources, because you're not paying someone else to prepare, package, transport and advertise your meals. Home cooking is healthier and more nutritious because you start with fresh ingredients. And it can be its own reward, providing a truly creative outlet and rejuvenating the family meal.

    * Parts of these Eight Steps are adapted from Joan Dye Gussow, professor emeritus of nutrition and education, Columbia University Teachers College, and Katherine L. Clancy, director of the Wallace Center for Agriculture & Environmental Policy, "Dietary Guidelines for Sustainability," Journal of Nutrition Education,Vol.18, No.1,1986.

BABY FOOD

Formula
All infant formulas currently on the market, whether made of soy or cows' milk, may contain genetically engineered ingredients. The only non-GE alternative to infant formula is breastfeeding, which is recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics for the first year of life. (Soy milk is not a nutritionally adequate substitute for infant formula.)

Solid Foods
In August 1999, Gerber pledged to use only non-genetically engineered ingredients in its line of baby foods. Other baby foods and cereals may contain GE corn or soy additives. Rather than rely on commercial baby foods, you can put your baby on Mothers & Others' New Green Diet as you introduce solid foods. Steam and puree fruits and vegetables, or set aside for baby a pureed portion of your own cooked food before adding seasonings. Make ahead and freeze in ice cube trays for convenience on busy days.

KIDS

As prime consumers of heavily processed and aggressively advertised junk food, children are in the front line for eating genetically engineered ingredients. All commercial sodas and candies are likely to contain genetically engineered ingredients (usually corn syrup and/or lecithin). Parents should have at the ready organic, natural and GE-free snack alternatives, such as fresh fruits and vegetables, dried fruits, raisins, whole grain breads, homemade cookies and rBGH-free or organic cheeses, yogurt and ice cream.

COOKING SUBSTITUTES

Many commonly used ingredients have much healthier and minimally processed alternatives. A few are listed below:

GE Ingredient Non-GE Substitues
corn syrup Sucanat (TM) (made from organic cane juice), brown rice syrup, molasses, honey
corn starch flour, arrowroot powder
canola, corn, cottonseed, sunflower oil and "vegetable" oils olive, safflower, nut oils

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