I wondered about this too

It recently occurred to me, though, that I have no idea what the energy usage or environmental impact of keeping a pound of strawberries frozen for a year, as compared to shipping them fresh from Mexico in February, is…. Similarly, those bagged salads look convenient, but they have kept at a constant temperature of 34° from picking, through trimming and prep and packaged, to shipping and storage.


On the other hand, we buy frozen berries all the time, and this seems perfectly reasonable to me. Pick it when it’s ripe, and freeze it — it won’t be fresh, but at least it’ll have some flavor. It recently occurred to me, though, that I have no idea what the energy usage or environmental impact of keeping a pound of strawberries frozen for a year, as compared to shipping them fresh from Mexico in February, is. It seems perfectly possible that I’m pluming myself on eating low-impact, while actually doing more environmental damage. Anyone have any idea how the math works out on this one?
[From Unfogged]

The same question applies to seafood and fish. I suspected the frozen variety has lower costs that the out of season tran-shipped version, with the added benefit of better taste and texture. Similarly, those bagged salads look convenient, but they have kept at a constant temperature of 34° from picking, through trimming and prep and packaged, to shipping and storage. Better to buy whole heads and trim: compost the trimmings.

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