Chattanooga Times Free Press

Introducin­g Arctic Goldens

It’s genetic engineerin­g, not magic, that keeps these apple slices from turning brown

- BY ROBERT RODRIGUEZ THE FRESNO BEE

Apple slices that don’t brown may seem like some sort of magic trick. But it’s not sleight of hand; it’s science.

After years of research and testing, a British Columbia company is introducin­g the first geneticall­y engineered apple whose flesh does not brown.

Known as the Arctic Golden, this Golden Delicious apple was rolled out last month to about 400 stores in the Midwest. Future plans call for wider distributi­on and other apple varieties.

Sold sliced in a 10-ounce bag, the apple is the brainchild of the Okanagan Specialty Fruits company.

The company has geneticall­y tinkered with the Arctic Golden’s genes to prevent it from producing the enzymes that cause browning. Cut the Arctic Golden apple, and it doesn’t brown at all. The company got federal

approval for the Golden Delicious apple and a Granny Smith apple in 2015. It got the green light on Fuji apples in 2016.

Although consumers have been split on so-called “frankenfoo­d,” the company says its GMO apples are designed to boost apple consumptio­n, reduce food waste and provide consumers with sliced apples made without preservati­ves, Neal

Carter, president of the fruit company, told www. Inhabitat.com.

“There are certainly people against what we do,” Carter said. “But there are less people against it than two years ago or five years ago. Once people experience the apple, generally they say, ‘Hey this is just an apple.’ “

Will consumers put aside their fears of GMO food? That remains to be seen. Although most of our food, about 75 percent, already contains some type of GMO ingredient, the federal government in 2016 created regulation­s requiring GMO food labeling.

Several years earlier, California tried and failed to pass a GMO labeling bill. Had it passed, California would have been the first state in the nation with such a regulation.

For its part, the Okanagan Specialty Fruits company said it understand­s the concerns over GMOs, but its apples have gone through extensive testing in the United States and Canada.

“Through this rigorous review process, nearly 15 years of studies have been completed and data analyzed to demonstrat­e that Arctic apples are just as safe for humans and the environmen­t as other apples,” the company states on its website, www.arcticappl­es.com

The Arctic Golden package will also have a short version of the variety’s developmen­t and offer a SmartLabel quick-response code and a toll-free phone number where consumers can learn more how the apple was produced, according to an article in the Packer, a produce trade publicatio­n.

 ?? OKANAGAN SPECIALTY FRUITS ?? Arctic Golden Delicious apples are being sold in the Midwest. The apple has been geneticall­y engineered to prevent browning.
OKANAGAN SPECIALTY FRUITS Arctic Golden Delicious apples are being sold in the Midwest. The apple has been geneticall­y engineered to prevent browning.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States