The organic debate is one of those topics that can make any parent feel guilty. You want to give your kids the best, but organic everything would double our grocery bill. So I did what any overthinking Brooklyn mom would do — I researched it deeply and came up with a system.

The Short Answer

Organic is worth it for some things, but not everything. The key is knowing where pesticide residue is highest and making strategic choices.

Where I Buy Organic (The “Dirty Dozen”)

Every year, the Environmental Working Group publishes a list of produce with the most pesticide residue. For these, I always buy organic:

Strawberries — consistently the most contaminated

Spinach

Apples

Grapes

Peaches

Celery

The rest of the dirty dozen too, when budget allows.

Where I Skip Organic (The “Clean Fifteen”)

These have the lowest pesticide residue, so conventional is fine:

Avocados — thick skin protects the fruit

Sweet corn

Pineapple

Onions

Frozen peas

Mangoes

The Price Difference Is Real

Here’s what I tracked over a month at our local stores:

For the items where I buy organic, it adds about $30–$40/month to our grocery bill. For us, that’s a trade-off worth making.

Beyond Produce

For dairy and eggs, I do buy organic. The difference in how the animals are raised matters to me, and the kids drink a lot of milk (well, oat milk in our case). For packaged snacks, I look at the ingredients list more than the organic label. “Organic” cookies are still cookies.

My Practical Advice

Use the Dirty Dozen as your guide — you don’t need to memorize it, just screenshot the list

Wash everything well — even organic produce should be rinsed

Frozen organic is often cheaper — than fresh organic and just as nutritious

Don’t feel guilty about conventional — fed is best, period

Shop at farmers markets — many small farms use organic practices but can’t afford the certification

The Bottom Line

You don’t have to go all-organic or skip it entirely. Find the middle ground that works for your family’s health and budget. No judgment here — we’re all doing our best.