GoFuckYourself.com - Adult Webmaster Forum

GoFuckYourself.com - Adult Webmaster Forum (https://gfy.com/index.php)
-   Fucking Around & Business Discussion (https://gfy.com/forumdisplay.php?f=26)
-   -   Do you eat "Organic" foods ? (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=899911)

Juicy D. Links 04-15-2009 10:56 AM

Do you eat "Organic" foods ?
 
I like my cows to be organic :1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh


http://www.livealife.co.uk/images/organic_cow.jpg

Blazed 04-15-2009 11:03 AM

Yes its more expensive so it must be better.

Yen_HerbalRevenue 04-15-2009 11:04 AM

Fresh and easy just opened around here not to long ago and I tried shopping there. It was nice and had some cool stuff but everything expires in 1 or 2 days, as it should but can anyone really go to the store everyday to make dinner?

munki 04-15-2009 11:06 AM

We've got a Trader Joe's around the corner, most of our meals nowadays have gone organic...

Furious_Female 04-15-2009 11:10 AM

Yes. We spend around $300-500 a week on groceries mainly because most are organic, free range, etc. I <3 Whole Foods and Trader Joe's but we live about 65 miles from the closest one but we still go when we can.

Blazed 04-15-2009 11:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Yen_HerbalRevenue (Post 15747262)
Fresh and easy just opened around here not to long ago and I tried shopping there. It was nice and had some cool stuff but everything expires in 1 or 2 days, as it should but can anyone really go to the store everyday to make dinner?

Are fresh and easy popular in America? Its owned by Tesco's (the UK equivalent of Walmart) and is their attempt to make some ground in the states.

What food expires in 1 or 2 days, i guess you are talking vegetables? I dont think there is nutritionally any difference between fresh veg and frozen veg.

Si 04-15-2009 11:14 AM

only eat organic seo i'm afraid.

I put it in my soup instead of crutons :thumbsup

Si 04-15-2009 11:15 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Blazed (Post 15747306)
Are fresh and easy popular in America? Its owned by Tesco's (the UK equivalent of Walmart) and is their attempt to make some ground in the states.

What food expires in 1 or 2 days, i guess you are talking vegetables? I dont think there is nutritionally any difference between fresh veg and frozen veg.

No the UK equivalent of Walmart is actually ASDA. (same company)

But yeah it is owned by Tesco :thumbsup

Evil Chris 04-15-2009 11:17 AM

Didn't everything used to be "organic"?

Blazed 04-15-2009 11:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mobilefun1987 (Post 15747343)
No the UK equivalent of Walmart is actually ASDA. (same company)

But yeah it is owned by Tesco :thumbsup

Not really Asda is tiny compared to Tesco's. Walmart bought Asda but Tesco's is more comparable to Walmart since they both dominate the countries they are based in.

Furious_Male 04-15-2009 11:49 AM

The only organic food I go out of my way to get is organic peanut butter. That stuff is the best.

Yen_HerbalRevenue 04-15-2009 12:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Blazed (Post 15747306)
Are fresh and easy popular in America? Its owned by Tesco's (the UK equivalent of Walmart) and is their attempt to make some ground in the states.

What food expires in 1 or 2 days, i guess you are talking vegetables? I dont think there is nutritionally any difference between fresh veg and frozen veg.

Yeah they are coming up all over the place here... People are really getting into the trend.

fresh Veggies yeah expired quickly, but salad dressing, bread, and other stuff you get at the market is good for weeks at least... Not at fresh and easy.

Yen_HerbalRevenue 04-15-2009 12:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Furious_Male (Post 15747558)
The only organic food I go out of my way to get is organic peanut butter. That stuff is the best.

I love peanut butter at the Vons around here you can make your own peanut butter. It is pretty cool. I like to make mine with Honey roasted nuts!

Deesnuts 04-15-2009 12:05 PM

ill eat it all!!

Furious_Male 04-15-2009 01:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Yen_HerbalRevenue (Post 15747625)
I love peanut butter at the Vons around here you can make your own peanut butter. It is pretty cool. I like to make mine with Honey roasted nuts!

That sounds real good. I will have to look around and see if I can find places around here that allow me to do that.

Stephen 04-15-2009 01:03 PM

yeah, and I especially like organic milk (2%) cuz the cows weren't doped with steroids, etc

Yen_HerbalRevenue 04-15-2009 01:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Furious_Male (Post 15747929)
That sounds real good. I will have to look around and see if I can find places around here that allow me to do that.

I would send you some but it's organic and prob wouldn't make it to NY without going bad:(

$5 submissions 04-15-2009 01:10 PM

I try organic eggs, milk, and fruits/veggies when I can.

The upside: less hormones, pesticide residues, and other stuff that cause cancer/problems down the road.

The downside: availability, higher price

CurrentlySober 04-15-2009 01:11 PM

Hell Yeah!

Anthing thats organic (ie GROWN IN POO) just HAS to be the best :)

d-null 04-15-2009 01:36 PM

of course, it's crazy not to nowadays

with the genetically modified growing concepts that the huge multinational companies have going where they spray the plants to shed them of all their foliage while they are still standing to make it faster and more profitable to harvest and all the other shady stuff that is going on I avoid non-organic as much as possible

Elli 04-15-2009 01:37 PM

I don't put much stock in the "organic" label, but I do buy antibiotic and hormone-free beef and chicken, free range eggs, organic milk, and local veggies as much as possible. We're very lucky that there are plenty of options very close by. And the farms 10 minutes away sell fresh free range eggs for $3.50 a dozen, whereas the "free range" eggs at the store cost $6!

2012 04-15-2009 01:40 PM

no but I take organic shits

halfpint 04-15-2009 01:41 PM

No becuase they grow that organic crap in human shit

Elli 04-15-2009 01:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by halfpint (Post 15748113)
No becuase they grow that organic crap in human shit

That is the weirdest objection I've heard yet. What do you think fertilizer has been made out of for centuries, if not shit?

And who is using human shit as fertilizer?

gmr324 04-15-2009 01:57 PM

Is the organic food industry regulated or can anyone
just slap that label on their package? I guess the best
option which we do is to just purchase as much as
possible from local farms you can talk to

halfpint 04-15-2009 02:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Elli (Post 15748164)
That is the weirdest objection I've heard yet. What do you think fertilizer has been made out of for centuries, if not shit?

And who is using human shit as fertilizer?

http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/03/07/7533


There was a program on TV a couple of years ago about an organic farmer that was using human shit

Intrinsic 04-15-2009 02:19 PM

too expensive but healthier, yes..

halfpint 04-15-2009 02:20 PM

http://www.iwmi.cgiar.org/news_room/...f_3948865..pdf

Elli 04-15-2009 02:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by halfpint (Post 15748274)
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/03/07/7533


There was a program on TV a couple of years ago about an organic farmer that was using human shit

There's no record that those were organic farms only, and that was an EPA project to clean up waterways. Nothing to do with organic methods.

Scary shit:
"A top state official alerted the Food and Drug Administration, but Boyce said no one ever told him to stop selling his milk or mentioned a possible threat to public health.

"We were a little startled," Boyce recalled. "They concluded that our permit was good, and we could continue to sell milk. So we did.""

beerptrol 04-15-2009 03:13 PM

They say to much red meat is bad for you so organic or not you're still damned lol Organic or not,they still grill the same.

Furious_Female 04-15-2009 03:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Evil Chris (Post 15747354)
Didn't everything used to be "organic"?

Yes, now they charge extra for it :1orglaugh

d-null 04-15-2009 03:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Evil Chris (Post 15747354)
Didn't everything used to be "organic"?

yeah, maybe over 100 years ago, now in this era we are seeing high cancer rates

kowalsky 04-15-2009 04:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Juicy D. Links (Post 15747222)
I like my cows to be organic :1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh


http://www.livealife.co.uk/images/organic_cow.jpg


I am with you! :thumbsup


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...nean_asado.jpg

cherrylula 04-15-2009 04:12 PM

as much as possible...

After Shock Media 04-15-2009 04:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gmr324 (Post 15748206)
Is the organic food industry regulated or can anyone
just slap that label on their package? I guess the best
option which we do is to just purchase as much as
possible from local farms you can talk to

Yes it is regulated but unfortunately many consumers are uneducated as to what requirements go with what term, and there are lots of terms. Gets confusing as some terms are regulated, while other terms are not. This goes beyond organic, etc. applies to all sorts of labels in general (diet, light, organic, free, reduced, so forth).

It boils down to 4 categories - 100% organic, organic, made from organic ingredients, and contains less than 70% organic ingredients.

100% is obvious for most part.
Organic must contain 95% organic ingredients, with 5% consisting of only approved products that are unavailable in organic form.
Made with organic ingredients - contain at least 70% organic ingredients and they can list 3 of them on the label - though they cannot display the USDA organic seal on the package.
Less than 70& - can not use the term organic anywhere on the main display panel, but they can list the specific components in the ingredients section of the information panel.

Fun to think that's just for the organic issue, toss in free range or many others and all sorts of new rules again for a new term.

Mr Pheer 04-15-2009 04:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Yen_HerbalRevenue (Post 15747262)
Fresh and easy just opened around here not to long ago and I tried shopping there. It was nice and had some cool stuff but everything expires in 1 or 2 days, as it should but can anyone really go to the store everyday to make dinner?

I like the selection at Fresh & Easy but I dont shop there because its all self-checkout.

I dont work in a grocery store, someone else can ring the shit up. I've pretty much quit going to Lowe's for the same reason.

After Shock Media 04-15-2009 05:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mr Pheer (Post 15748907)
I dont work in a grocery store, someone else can ring the shit up. I've pretty much quit going to Lowe's for the same reason.

Really?
I love stores that have self checkout. I prefer when they have both the most. I will always hit the self checkout at home depot, Shopko, etc. It seems to go faster.

Juicy D. Links 04-16-2009 02:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by kowalsky (Post 15748777)

tubesteak????????????????????

Octopus 04-16-2009 03:16 AM

No, never.

sexandcash 04-16-2009 03:25 AM

I'm not going to waste my money on Organic after I heard my hs biology teacher tell us that Organic fields/orchards receive the pesticide runoff from the regular fields located right next to the Organic ones. What's the point then?

If I see something I like at Trader Joes that just so happens to be organic, ok great. But I won't buy something because it's organic. If I go to farmers market and like the look of the organic strawberries better than the normal ones, I'll take them. I won't buy something just because it's organic though.

Screw that.


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 03:01 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
©2000-, AI Media Network Inc123