![]() |
![]() |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Food, Farms, and Genetic Engineering
In the Kitchen How to Plan and Prepare Healthier Meals for Your Family and the EnvironmentWhen 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.
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)
|
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 |
Copyright 2000. Mothers & Others for a Livable Planet. ALL RIGHTS
RESERVED.
To request permission to reprint, contact greenguide@mothers.org
New York Office:
Mothers & Others
40 West 20th Street
New York NY, 10011-4211