Category: Conscious Consumerism: Shopping & Reviews

  • Wal-Mart’s Ready to Tell You What’s “Great For You”

    Wal-Mart’s Ready to Tell You What’s “Great For You”

    great for you icon

    To eat is a necessity, but to eat intelligently is an art.
    – La Rochefoucauld

    This week Wal-Mart unveiled its packaging featuring the “Great for You” symbol on their house labels, reserved for those foods that meet certain criteria:

    Single ingredient foods:

    • fruits or veg: fresh, frozen, canned, dried, 100% juice
    • 100% whole grain
    • unflavored low or no-fat milk & yogurt
    • lean protein (eggs, seafood, meat or poultry)
    • fats or oils, nuts or seeds whose calories that come from saturated fats total less than 15%

    Foods that contain a single ingredient food AND meet certain standards for:

    • fat content (no labeled trans, saturated fat account for less than 10% of calories, total fats account for less than 35% of calories)
    • sodium content  (380mg or less in single food item, less than 600mg for mixed dishes)
    • added sugars (no more than 25% of total calories).

    In a press release, First Lady Michelle Obama is quoted as saying that “the healthy seal will be another tool for parents to identify the best products for their kids. Giving parents the information they need to make healthy choices is a key piece of solving childhood obesity.”

    Only, this isn’t all the information parents need. My own opinion is that kids need the natural fats found in milk and dairy and nuts and seeds more than they need the processing and substitutes. I think canned foods should be avoided due to the BPA that can be found in the can’s linings. I think what a cow eats and how it was treated factors in as much as how high fat content of its milk or beef is— and that most of us could stand to eat less meat, period. I think sodium content naturally becomes much less of a concern when people concentrate more on eating food that remembers where it came from.

    And preservatives, chemicals, food colorings and other additives? Aren’t even being entered into the equation.

    Look, I have no problem with this:

     

    walmart great for you label

     

    Apples ARE great for you! I think everybody already knows that, though. Wouldn’t that money be better spent elsewhere?

    I do sort of have a problem with this:

     

    walmart great for you label

     

    I’m sorry. Fruit cocktail is not as great for you as apples. That’s that and that there’s what it is.

     

    There’s no sense of degree.

    Fruit cocktail tends to have added sugars, preservatives, plus there’s that whole BPA in can linings issue. Quite simply it is not as “great for you” as apples— but both options carry the same label that’s supposed to set parental minds at ease about identifying the best foods for their kids.

    This reminds me of a recent shopping trip when Jeff stood in the organic aisle and remarked that he felt like he was allowed to buy anything he wanted from there. No, you can’t. Organic cookies are still cookies, and if you eat enough of them you’ll rot your teeth and get fat. Fruit cocktail may contain fruit, but it also contains sugar, and if you eat enough of it you’ll rot your teeth and get fat.

     

    There’s no sense of whole-diet.

    Yes, apples are good for you. But tons of apples are not nearly as good for you as apples incorporated into a well-rounded diet along with bananas, kale, blueberries, avocados, carrots and cabbage. There is a spectrum of nutrients that we need to derive from our whole diet— some of which we absorb better with fats, which are being given the cold shoulder in this scenario too.

    A person could easily only eat foods with the proper label and still have wholly incomplete nutrition. It’s all about balance and variety.

     

    There’s no sense of personal responsibility.

    Basically, I think this labeling system just makes it easier for people to make lazy choices. Rather than take control of our own heath, and responsibility for our own choices, it’s become as easy as “look for the funny little man.”

    When we grab things off the shelf based on whether it carries the “great for you” label, we deny our children education. They don’t see us flipping that package over to check for additives, or vitamin content, or to compare one brand’s sugar level with another. We’re not discussing whether the full-fat of one yogurt makes it a better or worse choice than a low-fat option with more sugar.

    We’re just automating our food choices further, putting our faith into the machine, and it’s that sort of mindless eating that contributes to the obesity problem to begin with.

    What happens when your kid goes to college and shops somewhere other than Wal-Mart? Will he be equipped to make the right choices then, or have we just delayed the problem?

     

    The problem isn’t Wal-Mart.

    My intention here is not really to knock Wal-Mart for not doing enough. They are doing something, and that does matter. They are attempting to make it easier and cheaper for people to get healthier foods and I do respect that (my issues with Wal-Mart having more to do with my disdain of big-box America in general).

     

    Sometimes there are no shortcuts.

    Slapping an easy button on something is not the same as educating the public about healthy choices and a well-rounded diet. It’s a form of enabling. Enabling people to make lazy choices and somehow feel good about it.

    I just want people to wake up and stop expecting everyone to make everything easy for them. Some things in life require education. They require you to care. They require discipline. Properly attending to your children’s health is one of them, and one of the biggest ways to care for your child’s health (and your own) is to monitor the food that enters your house.

    Care enough to learn. Learn enough to make a difference.

     

    What Wal-Mart could do better

    Superstores have buying power. I’d love to see big box stores throw their support behind local and organic— it’s those large orders and promises for the future that drive prices down. I’d like to see them refuse to buy BPA-laden products. And I’d like to see actual weekly meal ideas, that make for a comprehensively healthy diet over the course of 7 days, broken down into shopping lists. Maximize the nutritional buying power of food stamps. Offer cooking demonstrations. And maybe people could get an additional discount or bonus food when they purchase a set meal plan. Because if I’ve learned nothing else from the internet, it’s that people put a bargain above almost all else.

    The company has given more than $13 million in grants to organizations for nutrition education— worthy organizations like Share Our Strength, the National 4-H Council and Action for Healthy Kids. They estimate these grants will impact more than 300,000 people this year.

    I have no idea how many people shop at Wal-Mart and how much they spend, but I’m thinking that bringing those education efforts in-store would reach a heck of a lot more than 300,000 people a year.

    Stop telling people what’s Great For Them. Show them how to figure out what’s great for their health.

     

    What do you think?
    How do we get people to start reading labels—
    and interpreting them to make good choices?

     

     

  • What’s Essential? Nordic Naturals Wants to Know

    What’s Essential? Nordic Naturals Wants to Know

    healing powers of nature

    On ne voit bien qu’avec le cœur. L’essentiel est invisible pour les yeux.
    One sees clearly only with the heart. What is essential is invisible to the eye.

    -Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, The Little Prince

     

    What is essential to your life?

    Beyond the obvious: food, shelter, air to breathe. Companionship. What could you not go without?

    For me, it is the quiet moments with my kids, especially out in nature and in our home. Places that nourish and join our spirits beyond our blood ties.

    These are the times that they will carry within them forever. They will remember the silly, loud, boisterous times too, to be sure. But when one day I am gone, it will be the times that they are quiet and the voices inside them are still, that they will feel how I am forever a part of them.

    I know this because I experience it. I sit in an open field or an empty room and I remember what it felt like to have my father sitting next to me, reading or just being, silent but there. Comforting.

    In a rushing, busy, saturated world, I think silence is the most essential gift we can give to our children. Not all the time. Treasured sometimes.

    I treasure the time we spend sitting at the creek or lying down in the yard or lolling about on a Sunday afternoon, doing absolutely nothing.

     

    lying around

     

    I treasure the moments I spend standing at their doors, after pulling their blankets up to keep them warm, one last time before I go to bed.

     

    sleeping soundly

     

    I treasure the fact that they leave silly pictures of themselves on my phone, knowing full well I’m going to post them on the internet.

     

    brothers being silly

     

    I treasure and document these moments, knowing they are fleeting. They grow up faster every day.

    These are the times that my heart shouts out, you are mine. You are wonderful. You are beautiful. You are safe. You are loved.

    I say it silently, into the stillness, and yet I know they hear me.

    That which is essential is invisible to the eye.

    That which is said silently is heard by the heart.

     

    clever homemade valentine

     

    This post was inspired by my entry into the Nordic Naturals® What’s Essential™ Contest (as always, brevity is not my strong point).

    Let Nordic Naturals® know what’s essential to you in 200 words or less: One Grand Prize Winner will receive a trip for two to Santa Cruz CA, including airfare, car rental, hotel, spending money, Nordic Naturals award winning omegas and more. Six Second Prize winners will receive a Canon® Vixia HF M400 camcorder and a one-year supply of Nordic Naturals award winning omegas. Twelve Third Prize winners will receive a one-year supply of Nordic Naturals award winning omegas.*

    To enter, submit your What’s Essential story and accompanying image on Facebook or on whatsessential.com. Good luck!

     

  • Mr. Chewy Pet Food Delivery: Review and #Giveaway

    Mr. Chewy Pet Food Delivery: Review and #Giveaway

    beagle begging for treat

    If you think dogs can’t count,
    try putting three dog biscuits in your pocket
    and then giving Fido only two of them.

    -Phil Pastoret, ‘Our Boarding House’

    So, we’re trying to help our overweight dog drop five pounds by watching the amounts of food he gets, and also the quality. I’ve been on the prowl for protein-rich, filler-light food for not-so-active adult dogs, AND I needed to find a puppy chow that was large breed specific (a thing I hadn’t realized existed until the vet asked if that was what Karma was eating, whoops). Luckily, sometimes the Universe (and MrChewy.com) conspire to help a blogger out.

    What’s Mr. Chewy? One-stop shopping for hassle-free delivery of  pet products: food, treats, litter and competitive pricing on Frontline flea and tick meds (having just been through six months of stubborn flea issues, I’m currently resigned to these as a necessary evil, sorry).

    Given the chance to see what Mr. Chewy had to offer, I opted for The Honest Kitchen VERVE Dog Beef and Organic Grains Diet for Jimmy and Avoderm Natural Large Breed Puppy Chicken Meal & Brown Rice Formula for Karma. If you’re in the market for dog food, seriously, click these links and check out the ingredient lists. They are impressive.

    natural dog foods

    The Avoderm is a standard-looking puppy kibble, but once I started adding it to her normal puppy chow (slowly, so as not to upset her stomach) Karma would refuse to eat the chow until I added that bit of Avoderm. I’m thinking that’s puppy speak for “where the heck is my avocado superfood deliciousness?” With an ingredient list that’s full of food names I recognize, plus avocado for healthy skin & fur, I feel pretty good about feeding this to her. Avoderm comes in wet and dry food, for cats and dogs.

    dehydrated dog foodThe Honest Kitchen VERVE is pretty cool. It’s a 4-lb box of dehydrated raw dog food made with human-grade beef, vegetables, fruits and organic grains which makes 16lbs of dog food. You scoop out however much food you need and add an equivalent amount of hot water, wait a few minutes and voila! Healthy dinner for Jimmy without taking up a huge amount of space in the pantry. VERVE is specifically for senior dogs with (ahem) moderate to low activity levels; there are also formulas for sensitive stomachs, grain-free, gluten-free and cats.

    I also couldn’t help but order them some treats. I know, overindulgent mommy. This is why he’s pleasantly plump.

    dogswell-newmans own dog treats

    Here I went with Newmans Own Organics Turkey and Sweet Potato Medium Size Heart Shaped Treat Dog Treats (say that 3x fast) and Dogswell Happy Hips Duck Breast Dog Treats (straight up dried meat, looks like jerky).

    I love Newmans Own because their products are certified organic, and contain zero antibiotics, hormones, chemical ingredients or artificial preservatives, colors, or additives. PLUS, they donate their profits to charity (in the case of pet foods, those monies go to pet-related charities). Dogswell is one of the few brands of treats that Jimmy will eat, period, but he will totally break free of his usual stern demeanor to dance the meringue for these. No hormones, antibiotics, fillers or byproducts.

    *totally gratuitous video of Jimmy doing tricks for Dogswell*

     

    Mr. Chewy has a very impressive (70+ brands) selection of high-quality pet foods, treats, and cat litters— including way more organic, vegan and gluten-free options than any brick-and-mortar pet store or grocery I’ve ever been in. Options like:

    • Blue Buffalo (natural, no by-products or artificial preservatives)
    • Orijen (grain-free, limited carbs, more fresh meat than any other brand of dry food)
    • Taste of the Wild (grain-free, real roasted meats, fruits & veggies for antioxidants)
    • Royal Canin Veterinary Diet (specifically formulated for health conditions)
    • ZiwiPeak (equivalent to a raw diet)

    Yeah. They don’t carry that at SuperFresh. In the week since I ordered, they’ve added a bunch more (I opted in for the email updates and have been notified of brands I might be interested in).

    mr chewyLove the navigation choices on this site; I was able to break down by breed (cat vs dog), then age, then specialty (in this case, I wanted natural or organic + weight loss). Mr. Chewy offers an automatic subscription service that can be canceled at any time, and you save 15% off your order right now when you select that service. Shipping is free when you spend $49 or more– a significant perk when we’re talking heavy bags of food or litter.

    I placed my order very very late on a Thursday night  and it arrived on Saturday afternoon, which was awesomesauce. I do think it shipped from close by, though, so your results may vary.

    AND, they have a kickass referral program. If someone orders using your referral code, they get 10% off their order AND $10 gets donated to a no-kill rescue or shelter. (My referral code is ROBI7330 if you decide to order. I don’t make anything off of it, just the animals benefit.)

    GIVEAWAY!

    saint bernard puppyI’ve got $25 to give one pet-loving SGOH reader to spend at MrChewy.com!  You don’t HAVE to spend it on organic products, but if you do and let me know how you like it, I will give you virtual chest bumps and high fives. Just leave me a comment letting me know what breed you’d love as your next pet (don’t front, we all windowshop for new pets! I want an Irish Wolfhound). For a bonus entry, tweet this post and leave me another comment letting me know you did 🙂 I’ll randomly select a winner on February 12th, 2012.

     
    This review was made possible by Mom Spark Media. Thoughts are my own. All prizing for MSM giveaways is handled by a third party unless otherwise noted. For this reason prize fulfillment can take up to 90 days after the winners information is received.