• Give a Gift
  • Customer Service
  • Promotions
  • Videos
  • Blogs
  • Win
  • Free Games

Q&A With Nell Newman

Paul Newman’s daughter is leading the charge for organic farming.

Q&A With Nell Newman

Photo Credit: Ron Galella/Wire Image

Special Offer

Q: You started Newman’s Own Organics in 1993 with seed money from your father, along with his approval on your first product, an organic pretzel. Within a year, you’d paid him back and had yourself a stand-alone company. How did you manage to come up with organic snacks that didn’t taste like dog biscuits?
A: Just exclude the pesticides and herbicides, and you know what? It doesn’t taste bad. It’s just using good ingredients that have been farmed organically. In a blind taste test, I bet most people couldn’t tell the difference.

Q: How did you ever convince Nabisco, the original owner of Fig Newtons, to let you use the name “Fig Newmans” for your fig bars?
A: My dad wrote a very sweet, short letter to the president of Nabisco that said, “My daughter’s got a great idea for a product. Could we sit down and talk about a small royalty deal? All the profits will go to charity.” And the guy just sent back a letter that said, “Dear Paul, I love what you’re doing, we’ll just say it’s a dollar a year, and I’d love to sit down and have a beer with you.” The legal department of Nabisco had a fit, but there was nothing they could do.

Q: Is buying organic really worth it? If I see a $1.99 bunch of conventional broccoli next to a $3.99 bunch of organic, I think twice.
A: If you saw a list of what had been sprayed on it during the season, it might help you to make up your mind, but conventional agriculture doesn’t want you to see that. Organic is more expensive because it’s more labor-intensive. You have to get out there and weed those rows when the plants come up—you can’t just spray them with [the herbicide] Roundup. When I took a course put on by the Farm Bureau here in Santa Cruz, I visited a brussels sprouts farmer who said, “In December we hit ’em with the first round of methyl bromide, and then we follow it with the first hit of Roundup to get rid of the wheat. Then we put the young sprouts in and hit ’em with the second dose of Roundup, followed by the systemic blah blah blah” and on and on he went. It was mind-boggling. Organic farming provides a much cleaner environment for us and for the people who work the land.

Q: You don’t use trans fats in your products. What do you think of Mayor Bloomberg’s plan to ban them from restaurants in New York?
A: I think it’s a great idea. We know hydrogenated fats are bad for us. I guess the question is, should a city be able to legislate health issues or civil liberties, if you want to call it that? On the other hand, is the food industry going against your civil liberties by feeding you stuff that’s bad for you? But I guess if they can ban smoking in restaurants, they can ban trans fats.

Q: Do you think consumers make a conscious decision to buy your products—everything from cookies to coffee to pet food—because the proceeds go to charity?
A: I think it has a tremendous effect. It’s been somewhere between $4 million and $6 million that we’ve been able to donate to organizations like the Organic Farming Research Foundation here in Santa Cruz, the Homeless Garden Project here, and the Western Environmental Law Center. I wouldn’t be in it for any other reason.

Q: Were your parents sticklers about eating well when you were growing up?
A: We never drank soda, and my dad never let us have fast food because he liked his own cooking better. He’d just say, “I’m not eating those,” and take us home and make us burgers.


Advertisement
Giveaway-a-day
Cocoa Mauve Collection

Cocoa Mauve Collection

Enter Now
Latest blog entries
  • The Power of Negative Thinking: A Good Idea?

    I invite a dude to hang out with me and my friends ... and after getting his response, I have to wonder if negative-thinking might help toughen me up and make living flirtatiously easier. 11/06/09

  • 8 Reasons Guys Are Obsessed With Sex

    Sex physically resembles “VIP Access” because we have to be invited. We work for it, we convince, we campaign, strategize, and pull out all the stops. The woman controls all access. 11/05/09

  • A Good Way to Contact Someone Who Didn't Get My Digits?

    You guys remember Mr. Tweed Jeans--he of the extended flirtation at a party two weekends ago? He who, despite seeming to be quite interested and talking to me for, like, 30 minutes, didn't get my number when I said I was taking off? Yeah, well, I inv... 11/05/09

  • Save 20% on everything at Harvard Sweet Boutique

    Every brownie, cookie and cake is concocted from scratch, made freshly by hand, and while we wish we could snatch a batch for ourselves at the local supermarket, these baked goods are made for giving. 11/04/09

  • 5 Hilarious Flirtatious E-Cards

    A new site has the funniest e-cards I've ever come across. There's one you can send to an office crush, one you can send to that great guy you just went on a first date with ... and a couple that would be appropriately inappropriate for the dude you'... 11/04/09

  • See all blogs
Marie Claire On The Go
  • Start receiving the day's headlines from topics you choose and get the latest posts from our bloggers. Sign up for RSS feeds now.

  • Take Marie Claire with you everywhere you go. Our mobile site has the latest 'it' items of the season. Including: Blogs, Hair & Beauty, Nutrition, Health & Fitness, Horoscopes and so much more!

    Here's how:

    1. Start a mobile session on your phone
    2. type m.marieclaire.com into your browser
    3. that's it!

  • In Every Issue:
    The one-stop shop
    for the very best in
    fashion & beauty


    Give a Gift
    Customer Service
    Marie Claire Magazine
Answerology
More From Reports
stormy daniels
The Porn Star and the Politician

Triple-X actress Stormy Daniels plans to go head-to-head with embattled politico David Vitter in Louisiana's next Senate race.

christy turlington burns
Christy Turlington Burns: Postcard from Tanzania

Marie Claire's globe-trotting correspondent hits a corner of the world where giving birth can be deadly.

the lost child by julie myerson
Need to Read: The Lost Child

Last spring, when British author Julie Myerson came out with The Lost Child, about her son's addiction to the potent marijuana strain known as "skunk," the 49-year-old mother of three was slammed for betraying motherhood itself.

Special Offer