[OKC] Think Global, Eat Local: Washington Post Q&A with Michael Pollan

cajzeeck at aol.com cajzeeck at aol.com
Thu Jun 29 11:16:37 PDT 2006


nice article 
Thank you 
Andy Zeeck 
 
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From: Patrick Schlecht <pschlecht at regionalfoodbank.org>
To: okc at sustainableokc.org
Sent: Thu, 29 Jun 2006 09:56:44 -0500
Subject: [OKC] Think Global, Eat Local: Washington Post Q&A with Michael Pollan


 
 



From: Kozer4 at aol.com [mailto:Kozer4 at aol.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, June 28, 2006 8:45 AM
To: comfood at elist.tufts.edu
Subject: Today's Washington Post Front-page Food Section
 
Q& A | Michael Pollan
Think Global, Eat Local
Wednesday, June 28, 2006; F01
You're standing in the supermarket contemplating a nice warm-weather meal -- maybe grilled fish or chicken and salad. But you worry: Is there any local or organic produce, or does that even matter? Is the salmon wild, or does it come from those fish farms that you hear might not be clean? Were the chickens raised in crowded cages and fed yellow dye? And what about the margarines, cookies and crackers that used to have all those trans fats, but you're not totally sure what trans fats are and why they're bad for you.
In America these days, deciding what to eat is a real problem, says writer Michael Pollan. An abundance of foods tempts us. Multimillion-dollar food marketing and the latest scientific finds (or fads) muddle our thinking. And we don't have centuries of traditional eating patterns to help guide our choices. In the midst of that confusion, we've become heavier and less healthy every year.
To figure out guidelines for what we should eat, Pollan set out on a five-year journey to learn more about where the foods we eat come from and just how safe they are. The result is his new "The Omnivore's Dilemma" (Penguin Press, $26.95). Staff writer Judith Weinraub recently asked Pollan to interpret some of his findings.
Your initial question was "what should we eat?" How did you go about your research?
Before I could figure that out, I had to know what I was eating. So I did the food detective work to trace what was on my plate.
You went all over the country tracking American food -- to a cornfield in Iowa, a feedlot in Kansas, organic farms, McDonald's. You even hunted, gathered and grew food for a single meal. Was there anything in particular that surprised you?
All that food, that seeming cornucopia of variety, kept taking me back to the cornfield in Iowa. So I followed a bushel of corn to see what you can make from it. I had no idea how much of our industrial system was based on corn, and turning corn into meat and processed food.
What are the implications of having such a corn-based diet?
Environmentally, it's dangerous to eat so much of one thing. Nature teaches us not to put all our eggs in one basket. Think of the Irish and the potato famine [in the 1840s]. One day a blight attacked their potato crop, and a million people died. The only way to keep a food monoculture going is with lots of chemicals -- they need more pesticides and fertilizer than mixed-cropped farms.
The other side of it is our health. We need a great variety of food. If we don't get it, we're not getting what we need.
You're very critical of the foods made from corn, and processed foods in general. Why?
Corn products are not fresh food. To make them, you're using corn as an industrial raw material.
Did researching the book make you reevaluate your diet?
I avoid foods with more than five ingredients on the label, and I eat as few processed foods as I can -- in particular, anything made with high-fructose corn syrup. It's not evil, but it's a marker of a highly processed food.
You don't eat fast foods now. Did you ever?
I had a kid who liked to go to McDonald's. What turned me off was visiting a feedlot and spending time with a steer through his life. I saw how they live and how we make them into meat. Once you've seen that, it changes the way you eat. And my talking about it turned my son off fast foods.
Do you eat any meat now?
I don't eat any industrial meat. I only eat beef that's been fed grass from start to finish.
What about chickens?
I do tend to buy organic chickens, but they don't do a lot of free-ranging. And when I can, I buy pasteurized chickens and eggs.
What about farmed fish?
Salmon are not sustainable. But shellfish are fine. Generally they purify water rather than making it filthy.
Which is more important: buying locally made or grown foods or organic foods?
Given the choice, buy local over organic. Often local food is organic, but farmers may not have the capital to deal with all the paperwork involved.
But I do buy organic chickens because they aren't fed antibiotics or growth hormones. And I buy organic milk -- but I look for milk from cows that have been grass-fed. Sometimes you can find that information on the label.
Doesn't organic food often cost more?
It's a crime that only the fairly affluent in this country can afford to eat healthy food. But the problem is not that that food is so expensive. It's that industrial food is so cheap. And the real cost is being charged to the public health. If we spent more on healthier food, my guess is we could spend a lot less on health care.
So what's an ordinary supermarket shopper to do?
Shop somewhere else. Get out of the supermarket and go to farmers markets, where the food is fresh, tastes better, is more nutritious, and you know it hasn't been processed. It forces you to be a non-industrial eater, and your children learn that carrots are not industrially lathed little bullets.
But buying everything at farmers markets isn't realistic for most people. So what specific advice can you give supermarket shoppers?
Read the labels.
And don't eat anything your great-grandmother wouldn't recognize as food.
© 2006 The Washington Post Company
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