• Skip to main content
  • Skip to header right navigation
  • Skip to after header navigation
  • Skip to site footer
The Healthy Home Economist

The Healthy Home Economist

embrace your right to a lifetime of health

Get Plus
  • Home
  • About
  • My Books
  • Shopping List
  • Archives
  • Log in
  • Get Plus
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Get Plus
  • Log in
  • Home
  • About
  • Subscribe
  • Archives
  • My Books
  • Shopping List
  • Recipes
  • Healthy Living
  • Natural Remedies
  • Green Living
  • Videos
  • Natural Remedies
  • Health
  • Green Living
  • Recipes
  • Videos
  • Subscribe
Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Green Living / Fresh Produce Spraying at Health Food Stores (consumer alert)

Fresh Produce Spraying at Health Food Stores (consumer alert)

by Sarah Pope / Affiliate Links ✔

Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • Toxic Antimicrobial on Your Produce
  • Fresh Cut Fruit
  • What About Other Healthfood Stores?

The shocking practice of chemical spraying of fresh produce including organics at a mega healthfood store chain. The toxic chemical bottle is conveniently tucked away from prying consumer eyes!

Have you ever seen fresh produce at healthfood stores being misted or sprayed while you were shopping?

If you’re like me, you may have assumed it was just water to keep the produce moist to preserve freshness.

As it turns out, this assumption seems to be very, very wrong!

An alert consumer recently posted a set of photos to social media that show a very toxic product being used to spray produce at Sprouts Farmers Market stores.

If you haven’t heard of it before, Sprouts is a large healthfood store chain headquartered in Arizona. The company has 35,000 employees and operates nearly 400 stores across 23 states.

Naturally, I was quite shocked by these photos and decided to investigate the situation for myself. I have a Sprouts within a few miles of my home.

I normally do not shop there, but I stopped in anyway to take a look to either confirm or disprove what the social media post was claiming.

What I found 100% confirms what I saw on social media. 🤯

On the bright side, it provided yet another reason why buying produce from independently owned and operated healthfood stores, local farms, and farmers markets is worth every second of inconvenience and slightly more additional cost!

Toxic Antimicrobial on Your Produce

What exactly is the spray bottle hidden above the organic produce at the Sprouts store?

It’s called Sterilox. Here’s a closeup picture I took which matches the viral social media post.

What exactly is in this stuff?

In a nutshell, Sterilox is a disinfectant approved by the FDA in 2007 for use as a food-safe sanitizer to be used when re-hydrating or rinsing fresh produce, including leafy green vegetables. (1)

The Sterilox System uses salt, water, and electricity to generate a food-safe sanitizer on site and on demand and is currently used in thousands of U.S. retail supermarkets, the company said. (2)

While only salt, water, and electricity may have been used in 2007, it appears that Sterilox is quite a bit different now!

Chemstar, the company that manufactures Sterilox has on their website a bottle of the stuff with organic produce in the background. (3)

At the Sprouts where I took the photograph, the Sterilox was right above the organic produce section.

And yes, this stuff is allowed to be sprayed on organics! (4)

Here’s the safety data sheet on Sterilox Produce Maxx. (5)

Doesn’t look very safe or “organic”, does it?

Hypochlorous acid and 6000 ppm of Free Available Chlorine (FAC)?

For comparison, only 4 ppm chlorine is considered safe in drinking water, and it isn’t even safe to drink that! (6)

Consider that this antimicrobial being sprayed on your fresh produce contains 1500X that amount of chlorine. Granted, the product is diluted with tap water before spraying, but the amount of chlorine that remains on the produce itself will be astronomical and not in any way safe!

Fresh Cut Fruit

If you thought that spraying an antimicrobial on fresh produce was concerning, here’s the really bad news.

Sterilox (or Aqualox or Aquatine… the same thing, just different names) is being sprayed directly on the fresh cut fruits and vegetables sold in containers too.

Believe it or not, restaurants often use it to crisp up the veggies on salad bars as well.

Have you ever opened a container of fresh-cut organic produce from the health food store and washed it before eating?

I know I haven’t.

This is from the company’s website on using Sterilox with fresh cut fruit. (7, 8)

To keep up with time-starved consumers, the fresh cut fruits and vegetables has become a high value signature category for the produce department.  Rinsing fresh cut fruits and vegetables in Produce Maxx [Sterilox] reduces spoilage-causing non-public health bacteria to enhance shelf life of the product while also protecting against cross contamination.

Significant consumer and retailer economic benefits include:

  • Protects against cross contamination when rinsing cut fruit in the same process water
  • Reduces spoilage-causing non-public health bacteria and product breakdown for better quality
  • Enables retailers to extend code date through purge reduction
  • All these benefits with no organoleptic impact to the product

Here’s a screengrab in case the company disappears the page.

So, while you may think that, “no big deal, I can wash off the Sterilox sprayed on the fresh produce before eating”, it’s a whole different issue with the fresh-cut produce, wouldn’t you agree?

Convenience seems to always have a price, doesn’t it?

Is it just me, or does it seem like we’re being poisoned at every turn even if we try to avoid the chemicals?

Cut up your own organic fruit and veggies my friends!

What About Other Healthfood Stores?

While I have not found a bottle of Sterilox at Whole Foods or Trader Joe’s, these companies are certainly applying the same or a similar product to their produce as well. (9)

My advice would be to shop only at a locally owned health food store where you can speak to the manager directly and confirm that the produce is not being sprayed with an antimicrobial product.

Other great options are to get your produce from a real farmer’s market (not a fake one like Sprouts) or from local farms directly.

Big corporate chains cut corners and your health is not of primary concern. Profits are.

References

(1, 2) FDA Approves Sterilox Food Safety Solution for Food Contact

(3, 8) Sterilox Produce Maxx (scroll down for fresh cut fruit)

(4, 9) BUYER BEWARE: Things May Not Be What They Seem in the Produce Department!

(5) Sterilox Produce Maxx Safety Data Sheet

(6) Water Disinfection with Chlorine and Chloramine

(7) Chemstar Sterilox Fresh Solutions

FacebookPinEmailPrint
Category: Green Living
Sarah Pope

Sarah Pope MGA has been a Health and Nutrition Educator since 2002. She is a summa cum laude graduate in Economics from Furman University and holds a Master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

She is the author of three books: Amazon #1 bestseller Get Your Fats Straight, Traditional Remedies for Modern Families, and Living Green in an Artificial World.

Her four eBooks Good Diet…Bad Diet, Real Food Fermentation, Ketonomics, and Ancestrally Inspired Dairy-Free Recipes are available for complimentary download via Healthy Home Plus.

Her mission is dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. She is a sought after lecturer around the world for conferences, summits, and podcasts.

Sarah was awarded Activist of the Year in 2010 at the International Wise Traditions Conference, subsequently serving on the Board of Directors of the nutrition nonprofit the Weston A. Price Foundation for seven years.

Her work has been covered by numerous independent and major media including USA Today, ABC, and NBC among many others.

You May Also Like

Quick and Easy Homemade Fly Trap (REALLY works!) 2

Quick and Easy Homemade Fly Trap (REALLY works!)

asparagus in aluminum foil on wooden cutting board

Aluminum Foil (and Plastic Wrap) Alternatives

fluoride toothpaste on children's toothbrush

Harvard: Fluoride During Childhood Can Lower IQ and Delay Neurological Development

local farm with a barn and pasture

Tips for Evaluating a Grassfed Dairy Farm

How Green is Your College?

home with solar panels on the roof

4 Reasons Why I Will Never Install Solar Panels on My Home

Is Your Home Making You Sick?

Get a free chapter of my book Living Green in an Artificial World + my newsletter and learn how to start creating a living environment that supports and enhances health!

We send no more than one email per week. You will never be spammed or your email sold, ever.
Loading

Reader Interactions

Comments (16)

  1. Ss

    Jan 7, 2025 at 9:25 am

    Yesterday I found this solution container in Hy-vee above the organic produce section wide open for everyone to see. They don’t even bother to hide it anymore.

    Reply
  2. Claudia

    Sep 19, 2024 at 8:01 am

    Disgraceful practice. That is why we have so many people sick in Western societies. Buy form Farmer’s Markets if you can can.

    Reply
  3. Ky

    Apr 24, 2024 at 1:25 pm

    I really don’t see the harm in this. I think you should read more into it. If you’ve ever heard of a company called Briotech or Force of Nature, they make products using hypochlorous acid, for skin, cleaning, and pets. I’ve actually used Briotech skin spray often during the covid shutdown instead of alcohols and harmful hand sanitizers. It is safe and has no toxic fumes or residues! Force of Nature has several certifications including Green Seal Certified and Clean Label Award. If you read from their website:
    “Our technology uses an electrical current to break apart molecules of salt, water and vinegar and form them into two new ingredients:
    Hypochlorous Acid:
    an antimicrobial so gentle it’s used in wound healing, eye care & veterinary products and kills 99.9% of germs.
    and
    Sodium Hydroxide:
    the detergent that dissolves grease, grime & soap scum. Gentle concentration of just .0000003%.
    These two powerhouses create your all-in-one cleaner, deodorizer, EPA-registered disinfectant.”

    Hypochlorous Acid even kills scary viruses like MRSA, Covid, staph, salmonella, and Norovirus, to name a few. For those of us who live in areas where farmers markets aren’t common or where it’s cold for more than half the year, buying organic produce at a store is the best we can do. And knowing we’re getting cleaner produce without viruses from a non-toxic spray is reassuring.
    However, I do plan on contacting my local Wegmans to see what they use in their produce sprayers so I can be an informed consumer. Thank you for bringing this to our attention.

    Reply
    • Sarah Pope

      Apr 24, 2024 at 1:40 pm

      Did you see the label in the post? You are not even addressing the very high levels of chlorine in the product.

      It seems similar to the same scam of “salt water” swimming pools that convert the salt to chlorine! At the end of the day, it’s still just a chlorinated pool that kills probiotics on your skin, in your lungs (vapor coming off the surface of the water) and ultimately in your body as well (the vapor is breathed in and gets into the blood).

      Not sure how you would consider this “no harm”, but it’s up to you whether to buy or not! I will stick with unsprayed produce from my local farm.

      If you don’t have farmer’s markets, I would consider Azure Standard. They have drops all over the country (hundreds if not over a thousand?) and they have safe organic produce.

      As an aside, your comments seems like something a customer service rep from Sprouts would say. Just sayin’

  4. Judy

    Apr 24, 2024 at 8:06 am

    So sad. Thanks Sarah!

    Reply
    • Sarah Pope

      Apr 24, 2024 at 8:26 am

      Yes, I thought so too. What are these companies thinking??

  5. Beth

    Apr 24, 2024 at 6:50 am

    Natural Grocers, formerly Vitamin Cottage, mists their produce. Does anyone know if they use or avoid these chemicals? I expect not, since they don’t sell anything with Apeel or Organipeel, but would like to know for sure.

    I saw your previous article on the invasion of hydroponic in organics, and wonder if Natural Grocers avoids hydroponics.

    It’s hard to find local, independently owned health food stores (none in my area). And the most popular produce booth at my local farmers market (in Parker, CO) uses fertilizer manure from a conventional farm so I expect it’s got undesirable residues of antibiotics, synthetic pestisides and herbicides, added hormones, vaccines, etc. What a challenge it can be to find wholesome food.

    Reply
    • Sarah Pope

      Apr 24, 2024 at 8:26 am

      The misting system at Natural Grocers probably mixes in a similar product with the tap water. Just a guess as I don’t have one of these stores in my area to physically go and confirm like I did with Sprouts.

      My locally owned health food store does not have a misting system … big difference in handling of the organic produce compared with the large chains.

    • Beth

      Apr 30, 2024 at 4:47 am

      UPDATE: Natural Grocers assured me that they do not use products like this in their misters. Also, they filter the tap water that is used.

    • Sarah Pope

      Apr 30, 2024 at 11:54 am

      Great news! Thank you for following up with this important information.

  6. Rose Carson

    Apr 23, 2024 at 11:00 pm

    Many stores are also using Apeel on all sorts of whole fruits and vegetables. What in the world can we do?

    Reply
    • Sarah Pope

      Apr 24, 2024 at 8:31 am

      Here’s the solution. You must buy local and independent. I buy zero organic produce from big health food stores. I buy all of my produce from independently owned health food store in my area and an urban farm I visit once a week.

      You pay dearly for convenience and the lowest price of the big chains.

  7. Mary Schurr

    Apr 23, 2024 at 9:57 pm

    Oh my, Sarah! I shop at my farmers market every week and pre-order from a few as well. It does seem like we are being poisoned at every turn, but at least I’m finding out about it. Thank you for that! I do buy some fruits (not usually pre-cut) at the health food store and try to shop at a smaller one, but it is part of a small chain. So, I do wonder about some things. They have pledged not to have Apeel/Organipeel products there, but I still check behind them. I worry that their vendor could slip things by them at times. I do that with Azure as well. I still wonder about the Australian beef and when they will have mRNA shots. We really do have to verify for ourselves and share. Again, thank you for doing that.

    Reply
    • Sarah Pope

      Apr 24, 2024 at 8:33 am

      Yes, you must always verify for yourself …. and be constantly rechecking as a “no, we don’t use Apeel” can change the next month. Bait and switch is a common tactic.

    • S

      Apr 24, 2024 at 4:15 pm

      I would buy more from my local farmer’s market in Pinellas County, FL (Clearwater) but they don’t sell much organic produce, no grass fed meat either (all I buy).

    • Sarah Pope

      Apr 25, 2024 at 8:43 am

      You will have to travel to other counties then. Nearby counties have a lot!

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




Sidebar

Mother Nature’s Medicine Cabinet

5 Secrets to a Strong Immune System

Loading

The Healthy Home Economist

Since 2002, Sarah has been a Health and Nutrition Educator dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. Read More

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Check Out My Books

Mother Nature’s Medicine Cabinet

5 Secrets to a Strong Immune System

Loading

Contact the Healthy Home Economist. The information on this website has not been evaluated by the FDA and is not intended to diagnose, treat, prevent, or cure any disease. By accessing or using this website, you agree to abide by the Terms of Service, Full Disclaimer, Privacy Policy, Affiliate Disclosure, and Comment Policy.

Copyright © 2009–2025 · The Healthy Home Economist · All Rights Reserved · Powered by BizBudding Inc.