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  1. #16
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
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    Chicago suburbs
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    X3 on couldn't read the article because of it being blocked by a registration ad.

    Gosh, I've been buying baby carrots since forever...but never actually took notice if they were "baby carrots" or "baby CUT carrots". Now I certainly will.
    2012 Seven Axiom SL - Specialized Ruby SL 155

  2. #17
    Join Date
    Apr 2011
    Location
    perpetual traveler
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    1,267
    <sigh>

    I suggest taking everything Mercola says with a grain of salt. One might at least read the wiki about him as a first step: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Mercola

    (BTW this publication discusses the extent chlorine products can be used in organic food production: http://www.ams.usda.gov/AMSv1.0/getf...TELPRDC5090760)

    Nevertheless, I can't stand those dry old tasteless so called baby "cut" carrots.
    Last edited by goldfinch; 05-29-2011 at 05:47 PM.

  3. #18
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    West MI
    Posts
    4,259
    Quote Originally Posted by goldfinch View Post
    <sigh>

    I suggest taking everything Mercola says with a grain of salt.
    A BIG grain of salt...like a saltlick.
    Kirsten
    run/bike log
    zoomylicious


    '11 Cannondale SuperSix 4 Rival
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    '14 Seven Mudhoney S Ti/disc/Di2

  4. #19
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    1,249
    Quote Originally Posted by tangentgirl View Post
    There are baby carrots and there are baby cut carrots. The first are just that, carrots that are picked before they grow up.

    The second are carrots that would have been tossed out because don't pass muster for shelves.

    The first group is really sweet and good. I'm not sure if there is a way to tell the difference on the packaging, but you can look at the actual carrots and see the little top and root. Yum yum yum.
    You know I've always wondered whether baby carrots are actually sweet because all the varieties of carrots put maximum sweetness at a certain "maturity". I will have to do some investigating-- got 4 varieties of carrots growing in my school garden and I'll be pulling them at baby stage for pickling at the posh restaurant they're being sold to. I'll be curious to find out!
    Help me reach my $8,000 goal for the American Lung Association! Riding Seattle to D.C. for clean air! http://larissaridesforcleanair.org
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  5. #20
    Join Date
    Jan 2002
    Location
    On my bike
    Posts
    2,505
    Quote Originally Posted by zoom-zoom View Post
    a big grain of salt...like a saltlick.
    finally!!!
    To train a dog, you must be more interesting than dirt.

    Trek Project One
    Trek FX 7.4 Hybrid

  6. #21
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Posts
    2,841
    This is what the article says:
    The small cocktail or “baby” carrots you buy are made using the larger crooked or deformed carrots which are put through a machine which cuts and shapes them into cocktail carrots. You might have known that already. But what you might not know is that once the carrots are cut and shaped into cocktail carrots, they are dipped in a solution of water and chlorine in order to preserve them.

    When a baby carrot turns white (“white blushing”), this causes the bags of carrots to be pulled from the shelf and thrown away. To prevent this consumer waste, the carrots are dipped in chlorine to prevent the white blushing from happening.

    Chlorine is a very well-known carcinogen. Organic growers instead use a citrus based, nontoxic solution called Citrox.


    We have chlorine in our drinking water & our pool water. I'm not sure I'd go as far to say that "chlorine" qualifies as toxins. And personally, I get irritated when my baby carrots go bad before I manage to eat them all (I get the big bag at costco.) I also rinse them before eating them, which should wash off any chlorine they were dipped in. And I eat 30 times more carrots than I would if I didn't get baby carrots when I do buy baby carrots. That's probably more like 100 times more, 'cause I take a bag of baby carrots with me when I go kayaking, camping, and I stick 'em in my salads... I am lazy enough that I know I will not sit and peel a ton of carrots to take a bag of them with me when I go kayaking. I will just take something else instead.
    Last edited by Cataboo; 06-02-2011 at 08:12 AM.

  7. #22
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Hillsboro, OR
    Posts
    5,023
    Oak - I only buy organic potatoes when I plan to eat the skin (white potatoes) or I eat them from our own garden.

    Personally, I'm not worried about chlorine on baby carrots. Chlorine evaporates. Drinking water with chlorine in it will be MUCH more potent than the tiny trace amounts (if any) left after bathing a root veggy. It's not like carrots are absorbent!

    Plus, those baby carrots have made all those other ugly, deformed carrots that used to get thrown away into a consumable product. I wouldn't dismiss them so readily.

    Though, I will say that they have zero flavor compared to carrots out of your own backyard. Tomatoes and carrots - two types of produce that taste COMPLETELY different when home grown. I got spoiled and now I hate the store bought varieties!
    My new non-farm blog: Finding Freedom

 

 

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