Keeping the Sweet Corn Sweet

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Who loves sweet corn as much as we do?

Bugs!

Just about everyone knows the frustration of driving to the grocery store or your local market, locating the bins of freshly-picked sweet corn, and shucking a few husks to check for quality. Then you see it, usually near the top of the cob: A tiny worm, munching on the kernels of sweet corn that you had hoped to eat for dinner.

It’s enough to make you lose your appetite.

Thankfully, this annoyance soon may become a thing of the pastas long as we don’t let the enemies of agricultural technology have their way with our food.

For years, farmers like me have raised genetically modified corn. Ntau tshaj 90 percent of all the corn grown in the United States is a GM product, much of it now bred to enjoy a natural resistance to pests and weeds. We depend on it to produce the food we eat every day.

The market for sweet corn, the kind of corn that we buy at grocery stores and eat at homenot the corn that feeds animals, makes sugar, or blends into biofuelsis a small sliver of the corn market. Although biotech sweet corn became widely available a number of years ago, only now has it started to gain momentum as a popular consumer item.

One early result was improved taste. When the husks come off corn, the sugar in the kernels starts to break downso shucked corn should be eaten as soon as possible, to keep its flavor. If we can keep the husks on longer, we’ll savor our corn even more.

Tshaj 20 xyoo dhau los, when I began growing “sweet” corn, retail customers were looking for good flavor and the corn tasted good. “Sweet” is a matter of perspective however. It was not long until I was introduced to sugar enhanced corn. The sugar content in the sweet corn went from 8 percent to 17 percent and the corn tasted ‘better’. Hnub no, super sweet corn, nrog 30 percent sugar content, wows customers everywhere. These genetic enhancements defined the “sweet” in sweet corn and for close to 20 xyoo, this is what moms have been preparing for the dinner table.

Other benefits of GM sweet corn aren’t as obvious. One of the chief advantages of biotech crops today is that they allow farmers like me to use fewer chemicals to control insects, pests and weeds. This is a benefit that consumers will experience firsthand, even if they don’t quite realize it right away. Initially, they may not even notice the complete absence of worms from corn. Over time, it may dawn on them that they haven’t spotted any of these nasty critters in a long while. We may even reach a point where consumers don’t feel a need to shuck their corn before buying it, because they’ll come to expect full and healthy kernels on the inside. Talk about a win-win.

And there is more. Farmers burn less fuel because we have to run fewer tractors through our fields. Hauv lwm lo lus, biotechnology allows us to conserve gasa savings we can pass on to consumersand also reduces our carbon footprint. So GM corn is also a more sustainable food source that will help us minimize the impact of farming on the environment. Everybody should hail this advance in agricultural technology.

As with any innovative ‘solution’, there are often detractors. They may be driven by fear of the unknown or in support of a personal ideology. In a war of popular perceptions, confusion can carry the day, allowing fear, ignorance and outspoken activists to distort the truth and run roughshod over the interests of consumers. In this case, people like you and me who want to eat and serve affordable, tasty, nutritious corn to our family and friends.

Forty-plus years in retailing fresh produce has taught me that great taste, good quality and reliable supply will win over even the most ardent of naysayers, one ear at a time.

John Rigolizzo, Jr. yog ib tug thib tsib tiam neeg ua teb, raising zaub tshiab thiab teb pob kws rau hauv yav qab teb New Jersey. The family farm produces for retail and wholesale markets. John is a volunteer board member of Truth About Trade & technology (www.truthabouttrrade.org)

 

 

John Rigolizzo, Jr.
WRITTEN BY

John Rigolizzo, Jr.

John Rigolizzo, Jr. yog ib tug thib tsib tiam neeg ua teb, yav tas los raising 1,400 acres ntawm cov zaub tshiab thiab cov pob kws teb nyob rau yav qab teb New Jersey. Tsev neeg ua liaj ua teb tam sim no nce 70 acres ntawm teb pob kws thiab John qhia cov neeg ua liaj ua teb hauv zos txog kev loj hlob thiab kev lag luam muag zaub. John ua haujlwm pab dawb ua ib tug tswvcuab rau lub Ntiaj Teb Farmer Network thiab tau muab kev coj noj coj ua rau Pawg Saib Xyuas Kev Tiv Thaiv Farmland, Lub Koom Haum Saib Xyuas Zaub Mov ntawm New Jersey thiab New Jersey Tomato Council. Raws li ib tug qub New Jersey ua liaj ua teb Bureau Thawj Tswj Hwm, nws tus paj laum thiab ntev-lub sij hawm them nyiaj yug ntawm free trade tau kev txhawb los ntawm nws kev koom tes nyob rau hauv 11 thoob ntiaj teb pauv missions thiab kev koom tes nyob rau hauv World Trade Organization cov rooj sib tham nyob rau hauv Seattle thiab Geneva.

Sau ntawv cia Ncua