The Province

Love those skins: Why are you still peeling vegetables?

- BECKY KRYSTAL

There are certain vegetables we have a reflexive instinct to peel: carrots, parsnips, potatoes, beets.

Anything that grows in the ground, really. Especially when there’s visible dirt on the vegetables when you buy them.

But is peeling those veggies necessary? No. Is peeling them good for you and the planet? Not really.

I’ve pretty much stopped peeling root vegetables. I never understood the urge to peel cucumbers, either. Cucumbers can be a kind of watery food, and the skin adds some needed flavour, in my book.

Potatoes, I’m still coming around to, I’ll admit. My favourite types to eat with the peel are Yukon Gold and red potatoes. Those labelled as “new” are good bets, too, because they’re young with thin skins.

So here are the reasons we should stop wasting our time peeling:

■ It’s extra work. Do you like doing more than you have to in the kitchen? I don’t.

■ A good wash is plenty sufficient to clean produce. Run your produce under cold running water while gently scrubbing it. This is enough to remove dirt and bacteria, and drying the produce with a clean paper towel or cloth will help, too.

For firm items such as carrots, turnips, parsnips or beets, feel free to use a brush and scrub to your heart’s content.

Peeling also doesn’t guarantee that you will eliminate pesticides, which can penetrate produce from the outside or find their way inside through the water supply.

If you’re concerned about exposure to pesticides, you can certainly choose to buy organic produce, but even that needs to be washed and can still harbour natural pesticides or other types of pesticides that have drifted from convention­al produce grown nearby. At least one cleaning method seems to hold promise in breaking down pesticides: a soak in a water bath with baking soda.

■ Peeling contribute­s to food waste. We’ve all heard the scary numbers about how much of our food ends up in landfills. Chucking vegetable peels in the trash only makes it worse.

■ You lose part of what’s good about fresh produce. Adults should consume 25 to 30 grams of dietary fibre daily, but we typically only eat half that much. Fruits and vegetables are high in fibre, which helps you feel fuller and aids in digestion. There’s a lot of fibre in the exteriors of vegetables, so when you peel them away, you lose that benefit. Vitamins, minerals and antioxidan­ts can also reside in or just below the skin.

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