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Why American & European Fruits And Vegetables Have No Flavor

November 13, 2012 by admin in NetNews with 12 Comments

GMOs aren’t the only nasty thing from Agribusiness. Breeding for mass production instead of taste and nutrition has cost us. Little produce in supermarkets has flavor worth the trouble of eating, & the lack of nutrition is destroying health.

Farmers Market Tomatoes, by Isa Sorensen

Farmers Market Tomatoes, by Isa Sorensen (Mapless In Seattle)

by Ravi Mantha

The first time I went to a grocery store after moving to the US, I literally jumped in joy at the opulence of it all. It was 1989, and the Berlin wall was six months away from being toppled. Having grown up in socialist India, I had never before seen anything like this amazing symbol of American consumerism known as, SAFEWAY!

I danced and danced down the wide aisles of the huge grocery store, and rode the supermarket trolley like it was a mini-scooter, admiring the extraordinary variety of every category of, er, stuff.  Eighteen types of toothpaste, twenty yogurts, an entire aisle dedicated to varieties of soda pop, wow!

The fruits and vegetables were perfectly waxed and huge compared to the little discolored runts found in India. I marveled as my host-mother Marlene selected these enormous, beautiful tomatoes and white onions and a head of lettuce that was bigger than my own head.

We went back home, and I helped her make this wonderful looking salad, and we sat down to eat.

I bit into a slice of tomato, ready for the burst of fresh flavor to attack my tongue.

And … nothing!

I blinked.  I ate another slice.  Same result.

The lettuce leaf was also just a watery bite of nothing.  Deflated, I followed my host mother’s suggestion and loaded up my salad with some sugary honey mustard dressing.

Now, my dear American consumer friends, I have a question.  How is it that the wealthiest nation on the planet produces the worst tasting vegetables and fruits?

The main reason is actually a scientific one.

It turns out that fruits and vegetables that ripen more consistently are also flavorless.  In the wild, tomatoes ripen inconsistently.  There is an evolution/natural selection pressure that favors this because inconsistent ripening allows the tomatoes a greater chance to be eaten by birds and animals, thereby allowing for those seeds to spread and germinate.

However, there is a genetic mutation that allows uniform ripening that affects a percentage of tomatoes, and this genetic change also happens to make the tomatoes less nutritious and flavorful.

The full explanation on this mutation is found in Scientists Find Gene Behind Ripe, Tasteless Tomatoes..

Now think about this.  There are two broad categories of tomatoes.

Type 1 is full of nutrition and flavor, but this type ripens inconsistently, and comes in all kinds of colour shades, shapes and textures.

Type 2 looks perfectly shaped, is in a uniform color, shows perfect behavior and ripens uniformly, but it also happens to have no flavor and little nutrition.

If you were a big US grocery chain, even a purportedly organic one, which type of tomato would you stock?

If you guessed Type 2, you would be right, and you would also solve the mystery of why not only American tomatoes, but the vast majority of fruits and vegetables in the USA have no flavor and are less nutritious compared to fruits and vegetables found in, say, a much-poorer country like India.

It is also true that most American consumers have never really tasted decent fruits and vegetables and they don’t know the difference.  This largely explains why when Americans go abroad, to Italy or Japan or India, and taste real vegetables for the first time, it is a major eye-opener!

 Implications for Health

What happens when we eat these tasteless vegetables?  Actually, the reality is that even flavorless vegetables and fruits are quite nutritious and good for you; if this were not the case, no grocery store would stock or sell them.

The problem is more indirect.  When healthy food is tasteless, our taste buds will simply guide us towards junk food like chips, sugary drinks, and saturated fats, so instead of a tasteless salad, we end up preferring to eat burgers and fries.

The golden rule of public health is that we have to make healthy food taste good.  Think how wonderful a Mediterranean diet tastes like!  This diet is difficult to follow in the US because the same vegetables that are so yummy in Greece taste like nothing in the US.  There is a mountain of difference between freshly-grated parmesan cheese, and the pre-packaged mass-market crappy shite that passes for parmesan in grocery stores.

The Solution

In many parts of the United States, CSA (community supported agriculture) farms are available that provide fresh fruits and vegetables that are not industrially produced.  Just type CSA and your home town/county into an internet search engine, and you will see them.  For a few hundred dollars, you too can enjoy the freshest fruits and veggies throughout the growing season, and your kids can go and pick fresh veggies in most of these farms too, which is a great day out for the whole family!

The fact is that in the US, middle class people spend a very small amount of their income on food.  Spend a bit more, and you can have an amazing quality of life in the food you eat.  Your body is a temple; it deserves the most flavorful and nutritious food you can comfortably afford.

Ravi Mantha’s graciously gave permission to publish his piece, originally titled Mystery Solved: Why Fruits And Vegetables In America Have No Flavour.

 

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  • http://www.facebook.com/attila.biro.1804 Attila Biro

    I live in Hungary. We can buy tasty vegetables on the market, but the multinational food stores are usually selling the unedible crap the article has described. The most problematic ones are tomatos. Even on the markets, when you are not aware, you can buy tomatos of Spanish origin, which are tasteless. I first thought, this is because they pick them green, and ripen them later artificially with acetylene, ethylene, CO2 or whatever. But later, when I travelled to Spain, I experienced, that their tomato is the same tasteless shit you can buy anywhere in multinational stores, so I dumped the tomatos I bought in Barcelona, and I learned the lesson. In a way this thing has to do , with EU laws, which only allows beautyful – but tastless – vegetables to be sold in normal trade.

  • stock

    and our unellected primemsinter the amercian agent manmohna singh the sikh traitor is pimping for wall mart and tesco to coem to india to spread those tastewless gmo tomatoes. that manmohan singh msut be captured and tried for treachery agassint india and then killed.

  • http://www.facebook.com/timsrim Tim Gee

    This is typical with the modern world, image over substance.

  • http://www.facebook.com/carolyn.norman.984 Carolyn Norman

    I find that roma tomatoes for some reason, always taste good and fresh!

    • / Heidi Stevenson

      I agree that roma tomatoes from supermarkets taste better than most others they sell – but only in that comparison. Next to an organic tomato taken from a local garden, there’s no comparison!

      • http://www.facebook.com/carolyn.norman.984 Carolyn Norman

        I totally agree with you….

  • http://www.facebook.com/mary.murrow.9 Mary Murrow

    I live in Austria and most of the tomatoes we get here are also from Spain or Italy. The only ones that seem to have any flavour are some types of very small, oval tomatoes from Italy. You can also get locally grown tomatoes, but almost all tomatoes here have a horrible taste on the skin of them, which is very difficult to wash off. The taste is something like that of a dirty dishcloth (not that I would normally chew on such a thing!) Sometimes I have to resort to blanching and peeling the tomatoes to get rid of this revolting taste – I assume it must be from pesticides, though it even occurs in organic tomatoes… I suppose most people will think that I am overly fussy, but I have yet to come across a tomato here that has the deliciously intensive, fresh, fruity but slightly tart flavour of the tomatoes we used to get in my village in New Zealand, grown in her own garden by the lady down the road…

    • / Heidi Stevenson

      Austria is, unfortunately, in the same region as the Czech Republic, which is the location of the worst acid rain in the world. Acid rain destroys soil, so that could be part of the problem. Soil conditioning the remove the acidity caused (indirectly) by acid rain may be a solution to the problem with tomatoes in your area.

      In the end, it’s the soil that determines the quality of our food. If it’s ruined, then we cannot produce good quality food.

  • FoxValleySpirit

    When we had garden space, my husband used to grow heritage tomatoes that were absolutely delicious. I wish we had garden space now but we had to move into town and our current landlord will not allow gardening(!). I am old enough to remember when “delicious” apples actually WERE delicious and not the styrofoam taste/texture that they have now. But we as consumers kind of did it to ourselves–we pick the roundest, reddest, prettiest, not the tastiest. If we got rid of the Monsantos of the world and went back to organic, as-nature-made fruits and vegetables, how much better off we would be!

  • DamienSan

    Sorry to disappoint but, as a french that is currently living in NC I can tell you that Europe is NOT as bad as US. I found good vegetables in Italy, good in Sweden, good in Denmark but NONE in NC.

    And I tried everything here: CSA, organic, cheap, the most expensive. Not a single place to find a vegetables or fruits with taste. That means, even without money problem, I can’t find anything with taste.

    In France, only super market stuff doesn’t taste good and it’s not even true for high end supermarket (overpriced), but in the US even CSA stuff have not taste (and are overpriced too)…

    This is just depressing. But please just don’t include Europe with American, it’s not at all as bad as here.

    • / Heidi Stevenson

      As a person in Europe who has also lived in the US, I think that the problem is becoming universal. Agribusiness and its supermarkets are taking over everywhere – and though France is not in as bad a state as the US, it most certainly is changing. Tragically so.

      • DamienSan

        As long as Monsanto is away from europe, there is hope …

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