The next thing to consider is plant variety. This one blew me away when Tina from Crows Pass Farm came to Michelle's Place and explained it using strawberries. Who hasn't ooooh'd and aaaaahhh'd over a ginormous strawberry? Well, I won't be doing that anymore after learning from a real farmer. The plants that produce fewer, smaller, brightly colored fruits and veggies have higher nutritional value (and they taste WAY better!). Period. End of Story.
Now for storage...this is complex because storage not only has a huge impact on nutritional value but there are many different types of storage to consider (dried, stored, frozen, canned). If you want the highest nutritional value possible, go for local-grown fresh fruits and vegetables. Once the food is picked, the nutritional values start declining rapidly so eat and pick is best.
There is a lot of debate centered around raw food vs. cooked food. The link provided has good information about this topic.
The way you choose to cook your food will also play a big part in how your food retains its nutritional value. Lightly cooking your organic fruits and vegetables can not only retain but increase antioxidant and nutritional values.
I did not make all of this up...my source is healthy-food-site.com
Bon appetit!
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