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Does Organic mean non-GMO?

Question:  Does organic mean GMO free?

organic vs. con

I did not make this info graphic

I’ve been re-evaluating my food choices over the last year for these reasons:

  1. I wanted to lose 70 lbs.  I still want to lose weight but it is coming off more slowly the closer to 50 I get!  I’ve had some success but not nearly as much as I would like.  I met with several nutritionist who had different views with one common theme–I needed a cleaner diet.  
  2. I’ve had a food aversion to eating meat.  This isn’t a new phenomenon for me–with each pregnancy I opted not to eat meat with a bone, read meat, cured meat, or meat in any type of sauce.  These aversions were very surprising because I love meat–I love preparing meat–or at least I did.  So when this new food aversion began about a year ago–I laughed it off and thought I was going through a phase–NOT.
  3. Self love and honoring myself was not something that I really ever did–but now I’m learning that I am not my past or my future–I am now, and what I eat in this moment matters.
  4. Each morning I wake up and look at my kids.  I am reminded that I need to be responsible for what they eat and help them make good choices–I need to model those choices.
  5. My daughter decided that she did not want to eat dead animals.  “I do not want to harm any living thing.” So I honor that.  But it really challenged how I looked at food.
  6. I joined a CSA, planted my own garden and found a chicken farmer who loves his hens!
  7. Let’s be honest–I’m going through my second puberty and I’m just questioning everything that everyone has ever told me.  I want to make my own choices about what is safe and good for me.

But I wondered . . . does organic mean GMO-free?  I wrote here about GMO’s and how they may not be a healthy food choice but I’ll like to offer this video trailer as well–can’t wait for the movie.

Answer:  The easiest way is to avoid GMOs is to buy organic produce, avoid processed foods, avoid foods and ingredients on the Non-GMO Project’s high-risk list and look for products with the Non-GMO Product seal.

This article states:  It’s hard enough to find time to grocery shop and put food on the table, let alone become an expert in the details of food labels. 

I can totally do that!

What I have discovered is a series of loopholes in the wording.  I’ll be writing about that soon–but this is more great information on “organic” and “gmo”.

History of GMO standards in U.S. organic agriculture

  • In 1997, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) released its draft National Organic Program rule. At this time, they proposed that organic allow the use of GMOs. This proposal was unacceptable to consumers, manufacturers, retailers, farmers, and basically anyone who had anything to do with organic.
  • The organic community united to “Save our Organic Standards” and deluged the USDA with comments. After receiving more than 275,000 comments from the public opposing the use of GMOs in organic, the final USDA organic rule, which went into effect in October 2002, prohibited the use of GMOs in the production and handling of organic products.
  • The final rule outlines that an organic operation has to document that it has not used GMOs and takes reasonable steps to avoid contact with GMOs. Whether a product is labeled “100% organic,” “certified organic” (with an allowance of 5% non-organic ingredients) or “made with organic” (a minimum of 70% organic ingredients), none of the ingredients are permitted to use genetic engineering.That means in a “made with organic” cereal containing 70 percent organic ingredients, the remaining 30 percent non-organic ingredients cannot be produced from genetic engineering. Providers of non-organic ingredients being used in organic products, must also be able to provide proof that their ingredients are non-GMO.
  • An organic certifier may require testing when there is reason to believe that an organic product has come in contact with GMOs.

Be Blessed as you make mindful choices for your mind, body and spirit.

I link my blog to other amazing bloggers–check them out!

What is a GMO?

The Joyful Mom blog is taking a decidedly different turn.

I love food!

Not just eating food but growing it, picking it (out of my own garden and u-pick fields), the history of food “The Golden Bough” was my first book that made me think about food!  That book has lead me to read more over the years.  Frances Moore Lappe’s book Diet for a Small Planet (20th Anniversary Edition) was a book I read but had a hard time making my own–I wanted to follow her ideas and make them my own–but it wasn’t my time.  Then along came Hope’s Edge: The Next Diet for a Small Planet and with that book I finally got it!  I understood the issues with food but I didn’t have a plan to implement it–I had 4 very young kids and was overwhelmed.  I kept wanting to care and make a difference but it wasn’t “my own” yet.  Finally last summer it hit me as listened to Michael Pollan’s “The Ominvores Dilemma” on 13 CD’s and then read the The Omnivore’s Dilemma: The Secrets Behind What You Eat, Young Readers Edition!  (My son also read the kid version and he now makes very different food choices vs before reading the book.)

So now here I am–a Mom of 4 energetic, hungry kids, cooking breakfast, lunch, dinner for 6 and wanting to make a difference in feeding my family.  I want to eat real food–not food created in a lab.  I want to eat food from seeds that have learned to grow in the wind . . . not plants that are dumped with chemicals to make them grow taller, faster and bigger–with less nutritional value.

Here I am–a Mom researching, blogging, reading and cooking.  I’m sharing it all with you.

The first question I had was:  What is a GMO?

Not only was is a GMO–but why do I care?  Will it hurt me?  Make my kids grow super tall or have them develop before their bodies would be ready? (This article is amazing with a little bit of the history!)

I went online and found THE NON GMO PROJECT, a awesome website that explains not only what GMO’s are but also gives a list of what foods are non-gmo.  They also have an app!  I love my apps!  I have used the app quite a bit–my phone in one hand and looking through the pantry with the other.

I sort of like Jillian Michael’s–I’m sure now that she has kids she has cleaned up her language a bit–but a few foul words have never stopped me from listening to what she has to say about food!  Her no-nonsense approach to “not eating poison” has really made me stop and listen/read.  In this short article she gives some great information about the food choices we make.

Stay tuned for more articles like this

AND

some great recipes using non-GMO foods!

Be Blessed.

I’m linking up with these wonderful blogs!