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Monday, November 20, 2017

WASHING APPLES

from Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Pesticides can help increase the quality of the apples we see in stores and even though it is standard for the food industry to wash apples before sending to market, some of the protective residue may remain. A report in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry suggests an easy and effective way to wash pesticide residue from apples. Researchers washed apples with three different liquids. The one that was most effective was a one percent baking soda solution in water. After about fifteen minutes, that solution removed ninety-six percent of one type of pesticide and eighty percent of another. Washing with plain tap water or a bleach solution—the industry standard—were reported to be far less effective.

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