Why Are Fruits and Veggies Less Nutritious Today?
August 22, 2011 by admin
Filed under News Stories
August 22nd, 2011
EverydayHealth.com
By: Lindsey Marcellin
When it comes to getting enough nutrients in your diet, one bit of information is pretty clear-cut: Everybody should be eating an abundance of different fruits and vegetables every day. Yet according to research, fruits and vegetables are less nutritious than they used to be say 50 years ago. The reason?
A number of studies have explored the phenomenon of declining nutrients in fruits and vegetables, but the one that garnered the most media attention was led by Donald R. Davis, PhD, at the University of Texas in Austin, and was published in HortScience. Among Davis’s findings, one of the most consistent was that a higher yield of crops — in other words, more crops grown in a given space — almost always resulted in lower nutrient levels in the fruits and vegetables. What’s more, the median mineral declines among a variety of fruits and vegetables could be fairly significant, ranging from 5 to 40 percent, with similar declines in vitamins and protein levels.
Higher yield is one reason behind the decline, but several nutrition experts say it’s not the only one. “The soil itself has been over-harvested, meaning that over years of use and turnover of soil, it becomes depleted in nutrition,” says Michael Wald, MD, an integrated medicine specialist in Mount Kisco, N.Y. “All crops growing upon depleted soil must therefore be depleted in nutritional content.”
Cherie Calbom, MS, a clinical nutritionist and author of The Juice Lady’s Living Foods Revolution, sees it as a bigger problem that extends to many aspects of modern farming. “Our poor farming practices are leading to sick plants, depleted soil, and a need to use higher and higher doses of pesticides and herbicides to ward off what healthy plants would naturally ward off,” she says. “We are heading toward a dust bowl in many parts of the country if nothing changes.”
Despite these concerns, Janet Brill, PhD, RD, a nutritionist and author of Cholesterol Down, it’s still critically important to eat lots and lots of fruits and vegetables, and these developments shouldn’t discourage you from doing just that. “People should be concerned about one area of fruits and vegetables and one area only: to eat lots more of them each day, cooked and raw,” she says. “After we have solved that problem [of consumption], then we can move on to any nutrition concerns about growing them.”
5 Ways to Get the Most Out of Your Fruits and Veggies
There are still many steps you can take to ensure a healthy nutrient punch every time you include fruits and vegetables in your diet.
Go with locally grown. The key to getting more nutrients is eating food that spends less time traveling from the field to your table. The way to accomplish that goal is with locally grown produce, either from your own garden or from a local farmer’s market. “Buy fresh, whole, and locally grown seasonal produce,” Brill suggests. “Try to purchase produce with the least amount of time from farm to table, as vitamins and minerals are lost over time as well as with cooking and handling.”
Choose frozen. Your natural instinct when eating produce is to think that fresh is always better than frozen. But Brill says that this isn’t necessarily the case. “Sometimes the veggies frozen right after harvest have retained more nutrients than those ‘fresh’ veggies that have taken forever to get to your plate,” she explains.
Don’t judge a book by its cover. Big, shiny fruits and vegetables sure look good and grab your attention in the supermarket, but just because they’re beautiful doesn’t mean they’re better for you. For example, organic apples may be smaller and not quite as pretty, but their pesticide levels are likely to be lower.
Keep them rough. When it comes time to prepare those fruits and vegetables for eating, bigger, rougher pieces of produce may have the nutritional edge over finely chopped and sliced options. “Keep chopping to a minimum,” Brill advises. “The greater the exposure of the fruit or vegetable to air, the greater the loss of nutrients.”
Minimize cooking time. Though there are some exceptions (the lycopene in tomatoes, for example), the less most fruits and vegetables are cooked, the more nutrients they retain. So eat your fruits and vegetables raw whenever possible. When you do cook them, keep the cooking time to a minimum and avoid too much contact with water. “Cooking methods that are quick, with a minimum amount of liquid, will help to preserve nutrients,” Brill says. “Steaming, blanching, and stir-frying are all great ways to cook vegetables quickly and retain valuable nutrients. Keep veggies crisp — never overcook or boil in water until soggy.”
It may take a bit more effort to find fruits and vegetables as nutrient-rich as they were 50 years ago, but with more local farm stands cropping up, seasonal choices are getting easier to find and are certainly more delicious.








Hi there Kevin, I have been listening to your Natural Cures audio files online and amazed at the information. I started eating organic foods this week, and can’t believe how good this stuff tastes…it really is quite a difference, and I’m eating my salads, even if I’m not 100% on everything else….I’m making changes and really glad I’ve joined GIN and I’ve been really working on my health. Next I’m getting my water changed, for both drinking and showering….I phoned ewater and will be getting both units. Thanks
Duane Lehr
Why does a peach taste like a real, juicy delicious peach in Europe, and even an organic one here in Canada tastes like cardboard ? Maybe it was the particular one I had. This article was useful, thank you. Loved the show today (again). So glad you’re no longer Darth Vader. : )
Thanks Kevin for all those great advices on food and natural cures.
By the way, about preserving one’s Natural Hair Color:
I was told in 1985 that one particular food can keep your hair color and give color back to your hair. I used it since then from once to 3 or more times a week, and it works wonderfully: still no white hair at all at 53, whereas all my cousins are white and my brothers 2 and 5 years younger are salt and pepper… just amazing.
I was told that it can give back your natural color even to hair already white, and in the Summer 1993, as I was growing some white hair near the base of my ears for a while, while shaving one morning, I figured this was because I had not taken this food for several months then. You know, you may forget about it sometimes. So, I made the Decision to use it now on for good, as I had already done since 1985, and those white hairs after they fell, were replaced by colored hair (well, I did not check the exact place where that hair was, but the white did not grow back in that area!…) So I sometimes forget about it still for a few weeks or months, and those whity reminders put me back on this delicious food, and then they vanish.
So, it does work! Isn’t nature fabulous?
I think I should consider a good marketing approach for sharing this information, may be… You are very inspiring about this. May be if you have any idea about this, would you let me know? I believe that it is beneficial for the morale of people and for keeping feeling good every morning in front of the mirror to be able to keep one’s natural hair color throughout the years, looking at your hair as it was over 30 years back, instead of pretending by hiding the white hairs even naturally.
Now, why should people pay for this information, many might say? Well, what is free has no value in people’s mind. What you pay for has value and you use it. This is exactly what GIN is about, and this is a great way to make people change drastically and I thank you Kevin for all this. Guess what I talked all the time since 1985 to every people about this food and what it does. Even today people ask me, oh is it this food, I go: yes, but guess what: they are still not using it… So what good is the free sharing of information?
This is how I discovered marketing and I love it: people hate being sold, but they love buying… so, I know what I’ll do, I’ll counsel with some GIN members about it and I’ll find someone who has done similar things in the past and has been where I’m right now…
Million thanks for all. All the best,
Bruno
Not only we, but our soil is also deficient in nutrients.
I so appreciate all the information that things in the world are not always as they seem. Who would have thought that choosing “healthy” options at the supermarket doesn’t really give you the nutrition that you need?
Can’t we water the crops with mineral supplements, or water from oceans or lakes to boost the mineral content in the soil?
Wow thats amazing! Go organic!