We deliver organic fruit, organic vegetables and organic meat including chicken, lamb, beef and pork - including our fantastic sausages to Yorkshire and the North East.
We operate a box scheme or a choice box giving you ease of ordering with a regular delivery or the flexibility to choose what you want.
There is enough evidence now that the level of good things is high in organics. Early results from the biggest study into organic food has found that it is more nutritious than ordinary produce and may help to lengthen people's lives.
The evidence from the £12m four-year project will end years of debate and is likely to overturn government advice that eating organic food is no more than a lifestyle choice. The study found that organic fruit and vegetables contained as much as 40% more antioxidants, which scientists believe can cut the risk of cancer and heart disease, Britain’s biggest killers. They also had higher levels of beneficial minerals such as iron and zinc.
Professor Carlo Leifert, the co-ordinator of the European Union-funded project, said the differences were so marked that organic produce would help to increase the nutrient intake of people not eating the recommended five portions a day of fruit and vegetables. “If you have just 20% more antioxidants and you can’t get your kids to do five a day, then you might just be okay with four a day,” he said.
This weekend the Food Standards Agency confirmed that it was reviewing the evidence before deciding whether to change its advice. Ministers and the agency have said there are no significant differences between organic and ordinary produce.
Patrick Holden, director of the Soil Association, said the research could help to contribute to a “seismic” change in the food industry: “If you know there are significant nutritional differences in these foods, any sensible citizen would conclude it must have health implications.”
Sunday Times (p1, 11) ‘It’s official: organic is better’, ‘Eat your words, all who scoff at organic food’
There were also reports in The Guardian (p5), Daily Telegraph (p8), The Independent (p14) and the Daily Express. Emma Hockridge, Soil Association campaigner, was interviewed about this report on BBC News 24.
Soil Association comment:
The Soil Association will be issuing a background press briefing today. Richard Young, Soil Association's policy adviser, commented on the research findings: "This research confirms the wisdom and foresight of Lady Eve Balfour and other founders of the Soil Association who ran the Haughley Experiment from 1939 to 1969* in order to compare, among other things, the nutrition quality of food grown organically and non-organically."
*The Haughley Experiment was started in 1939 and continued until 1969. The Soil Association became responsible for both its direction and financing in 1947.