Monday, April 7, 2008

The Omnivore's Blind Spot



I just finished reading Francis Moore Lappe's Getting a Grip. It wasn't what I expected, from the glowing reviews I'd seen. ("She's done it again!")

The book's premise is that we can come to terms with our fears about the future by finding concrete entry points to start making changes. It wasn't that I disagreed with anything she said. I just craved some new insight, and I didn't find it here.

I'm a big fan of Lappe's Diet for a Small Planet. I didn't even read it until a few years ago, but its central idea--that there is enough food to go around, we just feed too much of it to livestock--had long been familiar to me by the time I cracked the its cover, no doubt because the book had such a strong impact on my generation.

There was an editorial titled "Grains Gone Wild" in today's New York Times by the economist Paul Krugman. He explains the current global food shortages as being caused in part by the rising standard of living in China, which has enabled more people to eat more meat, as well as by the the widespread cultivation of corn for ethanol and the rising price of petroleum products because of the war in Iraq. At the end of the article he calls for increased food aid for poorer nations, as well as a rethinking of policies promoting the use of biofuels. Not a word about eating less meat.

I'm afraid that we have a huge collective blind spot when it comes to our consumption of meat, even though many of us intellectually understand the connection between meat-based diets and food scarcity. Sustainably raised meat is one solution, in fact, virtually every argument I've ever heard for switching to a vegtetarian diet is weaker when you're eating grass fed and sustainably raised animals rather than livestock from feedlots. But there just isn't enough grass or space on the planet for everyone to eat sustainable meat on the same scale that we've been eating industrial meat. At some point we're just going to have to face the fact that we need to eat less meat.

I'm not a vegetarian, although I don't eat a lot of meat. Francis Moore Lappe isn't a vegetarian either. In the introduction to the 20th anniversary edition of Diet for a Small Planet she explains that she eats small amounts of meat, as a flavoring or as a component in a larger dish. As she explains, this is how most people have eaten for most of our history.

My business makes only vegetarian food. For the past twelve years I've been selling vegetarian food at farmers' markets, listening to people's comments when they learn that my food has no meat. Seattle is a pretty enlightened city, but I still encounter ambivalence--and sometimes outright hostility--virtually every day. I tell people that you don't have to be vegetarian to eat vegetarian food, just like you don't have to be Thai to eat Thai food, but many folks just aren't convinced.

I do a lot of work with vegetarian organizations. I deeply admire the activists I know who dedicate their lives to getting people to stop eating meat, but I'm not sure that this all-or-nothing approach is the answer. Even the groups that treat vegetarianism as a process to be approached in stages still operate with the assumption that the ultimate goal is to get people to give up eating meat, rather than persuading them to eat less.

Meat is a special food. It always has been special for us, even before the emergence of our unique species, homo sapiens. We were scavengers of meat before we were hunters, taking the leavings from other predators who were more skilled or better adapted. But even to our early ancestors, meat was a windfall. It kept its special status, through the generations who learned to hunt, and later among those who first domesticated livestock. In many prehistoric societies, meat was sacred, and only eaten when it was sacrificed to the gods.

I suspect that the most effective way to reduce our collective consumption of meat is to somehow make it sacred again. Its rising cost lately certainly contributes to its longtime status as a special food, a symbol of living well. But that also makes it more desirable. I think our best hope is to somehow rotate that blind spot into our field of vision, to eat less meat as a choice, and also as a necessity, a way to improve our collective odds for surviving as a species.

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Ginger-Mint Iced Tea

I sell this unsweetened iced tea at my farmers' market booth. We only make it between April and October because it has a short shelf life and we don't sell enough to make it worthwhile during the rest of the year. People are always asking for the recipe so I'm posting it here, in honor of the fact that it's April now so we've started making it again.

1 quart water
2 peppermint tea bags or 1/2 cup fresh mint leaves
1/4 cup finely chopped fresh ginger (no need to peel)

Combine the ingredients in a medium-sized saucepan and bring them to a boil. Turn off the heat and steep for at least ten minutes. Strain the mixture and pour it over ice to cool it, or cool in in the refrigerator and then dilute it to your desired strength.

Saturday, April 5, 2008

Spring Butter



I got some butter at the market today, from Golden Glen Creamery. It was only their second week at the U District Market, and I was thrilled to see them there.

You don't see much butter at our local farmers' markets. Spring butter in particular is special, because of the flowers the cows are eating, and also because of the unique flavor that the milk gets from spring grass.

Friday, April 4, 2008

HT Market



I love the HT Market. I love it in spite of the fact that it carries virtually no local or organic food.

I've never seen a place with such a wide range of ethnic foods, from the vast array of Asian staples which are their specialty, to the Eastern European, Hispanic, and African products that fill their shelves.

Wierd as it may be, considering my mostly-vegetarian orientation, I prefer to see entire pig carcasses hanging than antiseptic styrofoam trays of meat. They have the styrofoam trays as well, with specialties you don't find at Safeway, like pig kidneys and goat skins.

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Outsourced Pickles



The Seattle PI ran a cover story yesterday about Nalley Foods shutting down their local pickle plant and cancelling their contract with northwest cucumber growers . Although the jars say "Northwest Grown", soon the product in the jars will have been grown in other parts of the country, and some will even come from India.

Here's my vision of a positive outcome for this story:

The farmers who lost their contracts will use their land to plant crops that they can market directly to consumers, charging a higher price per pound than they were getting from the pickle manufacturers. Maybe some of them will even start pickling their cucumbers themselves, creating a local, artisan product.

They'll transition their land to organic agriculture, again enabling them to earn more money for the work they do. They'll diversify their mix of crops, making their land healthier and ensuring they won't have to rely so heavily on a single type of plant, or a single buyer.

And maybe the Nalley company will discover that this wasn't a good move after all, once northwest shoppers stop buying their product, and they get hit with the price of shipping cucumbers from India.

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Mozzarella and the Mob



Last week Japan suspended shipments of buffalo mozzarella from Sicily, after finding traces of dioxin in some of the product they were importing.

The problem can be traced to problems with garbage collection, a service that is controlled by the area's Mafia. The dumps are full and the trash hasn't been getting collected. People have taken to burning the piles that are accumulating in the streets. This adds pollutants to the air, which is breathed by the water buffalos whose milk is used to produce the area's famous mozzarella.

The Italian government and the European government have been pressuring the local garbage agency to to clean up its act. It's an unfortunate business: negative publicity about a product that's so strongly associated with the region's identity.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Pea Starts


This time of year, as the winter produce wanes and the spring offerings haven't yet stepped up to fill the gap, you see a lot of vegetable starts at the markets.
This gives the farmers something to sell, and it gives the die hard customers something to buy.
I'm not much of a gardener, but the past couple of years I've been buying a couple of plants and giving it a try.