Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Solstice Sustenance


Sicilian alter of light....
The winter solstice marks the shortest day & longest night of the year...it is a time to consider our relationship to the sun and all of the energy its light provides; light energy that makes possible life on earth.  

Though today is also the first calendar day of winter, we've been in full snow mode for quite a while here in the upper Midwest.  Its times like these when our food traditions just seem to make both poetic and actual sense--our bodies crave the nourishing hearty greens, root vegetables, winter squash, and other "good keepers" like apples, onions, shallots, and so on that have graced larders for centuries.  All those foods that have undergone the remarkable process of storing up the sun's energy so that we can be fed.

Having recently returned from Terra Madre, Slow Food's international meeting in Italy, I was fortunate to learn about many different countries food traditions.  Here in the Great Lakes region, winter fruit and veg are part of our food heritage and the joy of eating in place. As a cook and a dietitian, I encourage people to eat their veggies all year round...not just because  they are good for us, but because they taste divine.  Earlier this morning I visited the Wake Up team on Fox 6 for Get Active Today to share some of my favorite seasonal produce recipes to celebrate the season.  You can watch the clip below and get the recipes here.

Friday, December 10, 2010

Happy Terra Madre Day 2010

From a letter to Slow Food WiSE chapter contacts:

Terra Madre Day, December 10th, is the day the worldwide Slow Food community has set aside to celebrate our connections to the land; terra madre; mother earth. This is a day to reflect on our relationships to food and community and on ways we can deepen these relationships.

This October, I was honored to attend Terra Madre—Slow Food’s biennial meeting in Turin, Italy. From our own food community, Larry and Sharon Adams of Walnut Way, and myself, a dietitian and good food advocate, joined the more than 6,000 delegates, from over 150 countries. Small producers, chefs, farmers, fishers, educators, and activists, came together to connect, share stories, and strengthen their voices through the collective, international work. Over sixty meetings and workshops took place at Terra Madre, exploring subjects such as Food Policy, Sustainable Education, Healthy Food in Schools, Eco-Friendly Farming, Fair Trade, Agro-biodiversity, Food Sovereignty, Hunger & Poverty, Slow Fish, Cooks & Places, the Youth Food Movement, and so much more. The experience was, in short, amazing.

I ran into other Wisconsinites, such as Chef Dan Fox of the Madison Club, and Joe Sabol of Sabol Family Farm, in the bustling halls of Terra Madre. And while next door at the Salone del Gusto, an incredible exposition hall of place-based foods from around the world, I was delighted to find a larger than life picture of my friend and past delegate, Martha Davis Kipcak, former Slow Food WiSE chapter leader, current Slow Food Regional Governor, and food activist, along with a prescient quote, “To act locally means to know your community and be a part of it.” This led me to think about other past delegates from our community—chef Dave Swanson of Braise, urban farmer Will Allen of Growing Power, farmer Jeff Preder of Jeff-Leen Farms, farmer Katie Bjorkman of Earth Harvest Farm, and student (at the time) Lianna Bishop, now of Slow Food WiSE & Center for Resilient Cities. All people devoted to creating a good, clean, and fair food system, here and beyond.

Terra Madre is not just a simple meeting or conference. It is a network of people from around the globe working together to create a united voice in support of transforming the way we eat. “Food is life. Food is us,” said an Ethiopian elder at the Opening Ceremony. On this Terra Madre day, if not every day, we can take time to remember this concept because food is life. Happy Terra Madre Day to you and yours!

If you’d like to talk about Terra Madre, food traditions, or biodiversity, please contact me at jcasey@slowfoodwise.org.

Peace,
Jennifer Casey

Read more about Terra Madre.

Monday, November 22, 2010

In Gratitude



The world wide web is a flurry of Thanksgiving articles and blog posts.  I have added my own to the throng with a healthy, local food themed piece on Get Active Today’s website, replete with recipes made with ingredients sourced at the winter farmer’s market.

This year, I’ve noted that the many people harping on the gluttony and over consumption that can often be involved in American holidays has ratcheted up a notch; some have gone so far as to boycott Thanksgiving.  That seems a shame.  I like to think that this is one holiday where we can truly, easily, observe and celebrate our eternal connection to the land.  To give thanks for the many things that make the act of eating together possible is something I feel we should do more often.   So while many feel this holiday has gone too far (and really, its easy to agree when you consider the average Thanksgiving meal holds more than double our daily calorie needs) I think the answer is not to banish it, but to bring it back down to its earthly origin.

While Thanksgiving is an American holiday (and though we get the origin story of the original Thanksgiving wrong over and over again) giving thanks for a good harvest is something all cultures have done for the millennia. More generally speaking, gratitude is something that all cultures, all religions express, and nowadays science has shown us that gratitude is associated with well-being.

So in this spirit of gratitude I reflect on what I am thankful for this year:  I’m thankful for the birds and the bees and all the pollinators of our fruit trees and plants, the farmers who’ve worked on bent knee and with sore backs to cultivate food from the soil for my table, the little garden that could still flush with herbs in my yard, the great diversity of lifeforms around the globe, the clean water that flows out of my tap from the fresh water reservoir that is Lake Michigan, and for the people I love both near and far that nourish my soul...

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Reflections on Terra Madre 2010

 

Having just returned from Terra Madre, Slow Food’s international conference in Torino, Italy, I find myself in awe of and inspired by the beautiful people I met from around the world—sustainable farmers and fishers, food producers, chefs, educators and activists working towards a food system that is good, clean, and fair. For everyone. Thousands of people from over 150 countries came together to share their stories. At the Opening Ceremony an Ethiopian man said, “Food is life. Food is us.” This seemed to me to sum up the spirit of Terra Madre. The practice of Terra Madre is found in the continuing use of traditional knowledge about food, land and sea stewardship to guide our way forward.

To some, this may sound obvious. To others, it may seem naive, unrealistic. But this is not pure rhetoric. In moving towards an industrialized, anonymous food system over the last several decades, we have lost our close connection to food and land and with great consequences. We are besieged by the problems of global warming, hunger, chronic disease, pollution, resource depletion, loss of biodiversity, and the marked injustices faced by people on both ends of the spectrum—eaters and producers alike. The further away we’ve removed ourselves from the source of our food, from knowing and understanding our food, the worse things have become. A Guarani man from Brazil put it like this, “The world is sick.” But, he went on to say, “There are other ways. The world can and must change.”

Terra Madre stands for change through recognizing our roots—seeking innovative solutions to modern problems through the collective wisdom of our tried and true foodways. Those sane traditions that have kept people and places happy, healthy, and whole for generations; practices like sustainable fishing, ecologically sound farming, gardening, seed saving, cooking, and preserving can tie together the past and the future. Corporate interests would like us to believe that they have the key to feeding the world, but while they may have a monopoly, big ag can never feed the world in a way that fosters true health of people and places. We need the diversity of our worldwide communities instead of “putting all of our eggs in one basket.” The one size fits all mentality found in the practices of industrial ag’s GMOs, monocrops, and seed patenting only compounds the problems we face.

Over sixty meetings and workshops took place at Terra Madre, exploring subjects such as Food Policy, Sustainable Education, Healthy Food in Schools, Eco-Friendly Farming, Fair Trade, Agro-biodiversity, Food Sovereignty, Hunger & Poverty, Slow Fish, Cooks & Places, the Youth Food Movement, and so much more. One of the most exciting workshops I attended was a global meeting of indigenous people working together to create the Terra Madre Indigenous People Network. The TMIP Network will host their first meeting in 2011 to form a united voice, strong enough to take to the United Nations and to be heard around the world. “We have a lot to tell the world,” one woman explained. She affirmed what Carlo Petrini, founder of Slow Food, had said at the Opening Ceremony, “Keepers of traditional knowledge; natives, farmers, women, elderly….should be listened to.”

Next door to Terra Madre was the Salone del Gusto –a vast artisanal food marketplace and exposition of food producers that embody the principles of Slow Food. Here, delegates from Terra Madre, and thousands of other visitors were able to taste food and drink from Europe, Asia, Africa, the America's and beyond. Raw milk cheeses, fruit preserves, cured meats, pastries, breads, dates, wild rice, legumes and beans, nut pestos and pastes, wine, spirits, seaweed, seafood, fermented foods, and much, much more were on display.  Foods especially in danger of extinction were highlighted through Slow Food's Presidia projects. (In the USA we have only a few Presidia, including wild rice or Manoomin, but the Ark of Taste, a catalogue of more than 200 foods, works along these same lines of preserving biodiversity.) The Salone helped me to truly understand the concept of terroir-- the unique flavors that come from the soil, geography, weather, of where a food was produced. One cheesemaker said to me, “I want you to taste my land.” And I did.

After the conference was over, I had an opportunity to explore a bit of my own cultural food heritage. Taking the train down to Sicily, I was able to find my grandmother’s birthplace. A small mountain village overlooking the sea with terraced groves of olives and citrus dotted with figs, persimmons, grapes, prickly pears, wild mint, fennel, hens, and sheep. In Sicily I tasted the sea in the anchovy, sardine, octopus, squid, eel, swordfish, and jackfish that the small fisherman had brought to the fish market that morning. I tasted the land in the olive oil, sheep’s milk cheeses, almonds, pistachios, tomatoes, eggplants, peppers, beans, strawberries, grapes, olives, and vino. It was lovely. And the people of Sicily seemed warm and welcoming and truly happy. My friend said of the fishermen at the market, “they seemed the happiest people on the planet.” Imagine, living in close concert with your surroundings, living in balance, and finding pleasure… In my travels throughout Italy I witnessed people eating together. In homes, cafes, street-scapes, restaurants, markets I saw people enjoying each other’s company.

I left Italy at first with some reluctance, but in the end, returned with a renewed passion for seeking out the terroir of my home: the wild rice, winter squash, raw milk cheeses, hickory nuts, apples, organic oats in my pantry, the wild asparagus that will shoot up next spring, and the berries that will follow, the lake fish, the wild game. All places have foods worth celebrating. It is our job as humans to ensure that this food diversity remains. So, as my Sicilian grandmother would say, “Mangiare, mangiare!” Jc

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Slow Food on Fox!

 

In this morning's interview on Fox 6, as a Get Active Today advisory board member, I got a chance to talk about Slow Food. I will indeed be traveling to Terra Madre (Slow Food's international conference in Italy) tomorrow to meet, share with and learn from farmers, producers, chefs, educators, activists, and youth dedicated to a sustainable food system. Learn more at slowfoodwise.org, terramadre.info, and getactivetoday.com. I will be certain to share upon my return...ciao!

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Eat Local Challenge 2010


The Eat Local Challenge begins today in Milwaukee--everywhere, people will be seeking out their local farms, markets, gardens, and restaurants for sustenance. To celebrate this fourth year of an increasingly successful challenge, I thought I'd share some local food menu ideas I put together for the 2007 challenge...people are always asking me for menu suggestions.  Also, you can scroll down to watch yesterday's television spot on Fox 6 where I try to make some connections between eating locally and eating healthfully...

Eat Local Challenge Menu Suggestions
September in Southeastern Wisconsin presents us with the opportunity to choose from a wide array of beautiful locally grown & made foods. The harvest is in full swing & so it becomes easier than one might expect to “eat local”. I’ve compiled some menu ideas to help celebrate the season in a nutritionally balanced way (i.e.; not eating solely tomatoes for a week). Suggested foods range from home-grown to locally-produced and rely heavily upon our local farmers’ bounty. There are a few ideas for those who want to go “100% local” as well as for those who are interested in exploring the idea, but are constrained by time or taste.
Just the main ingredients are listed; the seasonings & techniques are up to you. I’ve assumed use of butter over oil (unless you decide to purchase Wisconsin made pumpkin seed oil or use what’s already in your pantry) and creative use of brightly flavored dairy products like plain yogurt, blue cheeses, sour cream over vinegars & lemons (unless you can find locally made apple cider vinegar), along with heaps of fresh herbs to provide the major flavors. I’ve included some sourcing information at the end. This is in no way a comprehensive list, but one to build upon. Enjoy the challenge…
                                                                                   - Jennifer Casey, Sep 2007
 
Breakfast
Omelet with Feta Cheese, Tomatoes, & Herbs
Breakfast Red Potatoes
Sliced Watermelon
Milk

Whole Grain Toast with Butter (Apple, Maple, or Cream Butter)
Yogurt sweetened with Maple Syrup
McIntosh Apple
Fair trade, Locally roasted Coffee with Honey & Cream

Locally baked Breakfast Pastry
Homemade Crepes stuffed with Ricotta & Sautéed Pears
Sparkling Apple Wine

Apple Pancakes
Sliced Cantaloupe
Cornmeal-Apple Porridge
Yogurt, Plum, & Granola Parfait

Lunch
Simple Soyman Burger on Whole Grain Bun with Arugula & Tomato
Potato & Scallion Salad

Pita pockets spread with Herb Cream Cheese & stuffed with Sprouts & Bell Pepper
Sliced Carrots & Apple
Yogurt

Chicken & Wild Rice Salad with Broiled Fennel
Grilled Cheddar Cheese & Heirloom Tomato-Basil Sandwich
Mixed Green Salad

Egg Salad & sliced Cucumber Sandwich
Watercress Salad

Toasted Summer Sausage, Button Mushroom, & Gruyere Sandwich
Spinach Salad

Cauliflower Asiago Quiche
Tomato, Basil, Fresh Mozzarella Salad

Dinner
Grass-fed Beef Filet topped with Caramelized Onions
Mashed Potatoes with Rosemary
Sautéed Swiss Chard
Apple Pie
Stone’s Throw Pinot Noir

Creamy Polenta topped with Tomato-Garlic Salad
Pan-seared Chicken wit Thyme & Garlic
Sautéed Onions, Bell Peppers, & Fennel
Honeyed Melon with Mascarpone

Chicken Bratwurst
Sweet Corn
Grilled Zucchini & Eggplant
Blue Cheese & Chive Potato Salad
New Glarus Fat Squirrel Ale

Roasted Butternut Squash or Pumpkin with Sage
Wild “Fried” Rice with Eggs & Scallions
Fresh Shelled Pinto Beans & Green Beans

Pan-seared Brown Trout
Roasted Root Vegetables (Beets, Sweet Potatoes, Red Potatoes, &/or Parsnips)
Green Salad with Goat Chevre & Shaved Fennel

Selection of Wisconsin Cheeses
Wild Grapes, Apples, Pears, &/or Ever Bearing Strawberries
Baked Garlic
Potter’s Crackers

Farmers’ Market Soup
possibly made of
Onions, Celery, Carrots, Garlic,
Potatoes, Tomatoes, Swiss Chard, & Herbs


 

Sunday, August 29, 2010

ocean's decline



When a friend recently told me about a new report out showing that phytoplankton, the source of much of the world's oxygen and which stands at the very base of much of the planet's food chain, has declined by forty percent since 1950, I was shocked.  Jaw droppingly shocked.  Oh my.  This is big news.  Phytoplankton makes the world go around. The reason for the decline, scientists say, is global warming.  You can read about the research in this Nature news piece,  "Ocean greenery under warming stress, A century of phytoplankton decline suggests that ocean ecosystems are in peril."

(Closer to home we've seen what happens when plankton is depleted.  When invasive zebra mussels depleted Lake Michigan's plankton supply, native perch, much beloved for its starring role in Friday fish fries, drastically declined.  Local outdoors writer, Paul Smith, wrote about the 90% reduction in Lake Michigan perch in less than twenty years in this Journal Sentinel article.)

This phytoplankton research adds to what we already know about the precarious state of sea life. Earlier this summer, we learned about the massive worldwide decline of the much beloved, warm blooded, blue fin tuna population in an epic New York Times Magazine piece by Paul Greenberg titled "Tuna's End."   Blue fin tuna is one among many species that are over-fished world wide.  Pair that with suboptimal ocean habitat, due to ocean acidification and ruination of breeding grounds due to industrial fishing practices and pollution, and we can expect to soon see the end of the "Age of Tuna."  Many groups are calling for a complete moratorium on blue fin tuna fishing.

What's an eater to do?  Of course we know the health benefits of seafood, especially those with flesh rich in omega 3 fatty acids, such as wild salmon and tuna.  (It's interesting to me to note that within the sea-food-chain, the omega 3's in fish originate in phytoplankton.)  I explored this issue back in 2008 in the blogpost "Finding Sustainable Seafood."  That post identifies some options for non-marine sources of dietary omega-3s and includes a link to a sustainable seafood selector tool.  Here's another great resource:

Quick Tips from the Sustainable Seafood Guide on the NRDC website.
Eat lower on the food chain
Buy American
Buy wild
Eat local
Buy from trusted retailers
Ask where your fish came from
Look for the blue, Marine Stewardship Council sticker




Sustainable Nutrition Bottom-line:  Obviously, global warming must be halted if we hope to allay the very worst effects of ocean acidification and species decline.  As eaters, we can choose to follow a low-carbon diet and to think carefully about our seafood choices.  We do have power in the food choices we make everyday.  Our appetites shape the world.

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Procuring Nourishment


A trip to the farmer's market this morning, and an afternoon spent in the garden yesterday, left me musing about the procurement of food. The word procure, comes from the Latin term procurare, meanings, "to take care of."  Pro = for + cura = care.  Just how much care do we, en masse, spend in obtaining our food?

Farmer's market shoppers with reusable bags brimming with gorgeous produce aside, I see evidence all around of just how little time, thought, or care goes into to how, why, and when people get something to fill their bellies or quench their thirst.  The good food movement is on the upswing, but most Americans remain out of touch with the source of their nourishment.

Once upon a time humans spent a great deal of time and care feeding themselves.  Now we leave it up to a small handful of very powerful food corporations (which bring us factory made burgers and industrial grade sweeteners) to do it for us.  In the neighborhood in which I work, as I walk to our health center's community garden plot, I find garbage cans and sidewalks littered with fast food wrappers and empty sweetened beverage containers and people guzzling high fructose corn syrup like it's going out of style.  Not to point fingers.  Federal policies and corporate campaigns have led to these easily obtainable, cheap, processed foodstuffs.  Each convenience store and gas station I walk past proudly announces they accept food stamps inside.  Peering down the aisles of these stores, I find little that would qualify as healthy options.  You know this scene.

Ironically, or maybe tragically, only two farmer's markets in the Milwaukee metro area currently accept food stamps.  There does exist the Farmer's Market Nutrition Program for seniors and WIC participants, but the elders I know who signed up for the SFMNP came home with a $25 coupon for the season.  Twenty five dollars won't get people their recommended daily servings of vegetables for an entire season, maybe not even an entire week.  Why is it, I keep asking myself, do we subsidize cheap food on the agricultural level with corn and soybean subsidies?  (see Gov Ag Policies and Obesity.)  Wouldn't the sane thing to do, from a public health perspective, be to make it as easy as possible for all people to get the foods that help to prevent and control obesity, diabetes, heart disease, and such?

Bottomline: The change we so drastically need to make in our food system can't just come from the top down in the shape of smarter food assistance & subsidy policies; it must come from individuals and communities as well.  This is why local groups such as the Victory Garden Initiative, Growing Power, Walnut Way, and even our little Circle Garden project are so important--because it is these initiatives that teach people to be more self sufficient by growing nutritious food...to take more care in finding something to eat.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Gov Ag Policies and Obesity


Just what do government agricultural policies have to do with obesity? 
It seems, to me, a short jump from current government ag subsidies to our toxic, obesogenic and diabetogenic food environment.  If we are what we eat and we eat what’s available and what’s available is what we grow a lot of (read: subsidized corn and soy) and what’s not available is a lot of whole plant foods (read: unsubsidized vegetables) then we end up eating a lot of the easily accessible, cheap, processed junk.  But we know this. 
Maybe the thing to ask ourselves is, “why are we eating a lot of cheap junk?”  Is it because we are human and born with a sweet tooth and are wired to eat whenever able?  I think so. Yes. In part.  Eating past our current caloric needs is evolutionarily ingrained.  It wasn’t until very recently in history when humans had more than enough to eat.  “Feasting” was protective for the once commonplace times of “famine”.   We can blame it on our genes.  But not completely.  Because the genes for problems like Type 2 Diabetes and Obesity are really only expressed when the environment promotes it.  It also wasn’t until very recently in human history that we had twin epidemics of diabetes and obesity.  Take home point: when we flood the market with consumable junk, we consume it. 
In light of this dynamic, I found it interesting to read, on the same day, one article about how the USDA has agreed that a soda tax would help combat obesity, and another article about how the USDA is entrenched in subsidies (which prompt cheap soda.)
In the American Prospect article “Slowed Food Revolution” author Heather Rodgers does a great job explaining why organic/sustainable food costs more, why small farmers aren’t able to make a living, and exploring why our policy makers in Washington are opposed to change.
One of the salient points she makes is that the USDA is trying to support organic while not altering support for industrialed ag.  This climate makes it impossible for the small organic farmer, in part because it interferes with the real costs of food to show up at supermarkets.   Without changing the way the USDA treats industrialized ag, artificially cheap food (propped up by subsidies and other support mechanisms) will continue to be cheap at the market while small farmers can barely keep their land, let alone pay themselves a decent wage.
If the USDA agrees that a “sin tax” on soda would result in a significant decline in obesity, why would they continue to, literally, subsidize it?
The average American child and adolescent gets 10-15% of their total calorie intake from beverages.  With more than a third of our children overweight or obese this is a major problem requiring a significant shift in policy and perspective...
The upcoming 2012 Farm Bill is the major battleground in which these issues will be fought over.  Many have argued the name changed to Food Bill because it is the primary instrument of the government to shape national food policy (think school lunch, food stamps, subsidies and so on.)   Changing the Farm Bill to include real food policies will make a difference for real people.
Sustainable Nutrition Bottom-line:  The vast majority of government support for ag in this country is geared toward big time, industrialized operations.  To review: subsidized corn and soy is turned into the vast quantities of processed foods and feed lot animal products that line our supermarket shelves.    What if we instead supported sound ag practices?  Like growing fruits and vegetables.  And pasturing animals.  Then supermarkets aisles might not be so crowded with cheap junk.  And the nations’ eaters might not be so sick.  


Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Endangered Apple Finds A Home

The concept of food biodiversity and it's essential role in health of people and planet has been explored here in past blog posts on this site.  All food groups have suffered loss of diversity at the hands of industrial agriculture, including the dear pomme. Read about the work we've been doing locally to help recover forgotten fruit on the Slow Food USA blog. And for more information about endangered foods of Southeast Wisconsin, check out Food Biodiversity.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Gulf Grief

Image from Huffington Post slideshow of oil spill photos.

The BP oil spill warrants the growing outrage with its monstrous impact.  While most people I speak with are worried about how this will impact the price of gas, I’m worried about the price of fish.  Not about how it will affect my wallet, but what it means for ocean ecology as  hundreds of species are at risk.  Add this insult to the already injured—the Gulf of Mexico, an important biological, economic and gastronomic region, has not been thriving for quite some time.  The notorious dead zone, a hypoxic area the size of New Jersey created by Midwestern industrial ag fertilizer runoff carried to the Gulf via the mighty Mississippi, has already taken a toll on aquatic life and industry. Now, post oil spill, thousands of miles of Gulf waters are closed.

Who knows how this will affect seafood prices at your local grocery store.  Sources disagree as to how much of our nation’s fish intake comes from the Gulf catch; I’ve read as little as 1% and as high as one-third.  But certainly, we get most of our seafood from places far, far away.  Gulf shrimp is one of the many edible sea creatures that will certainly be affected by the spill, and unfortunately, Gulf shrimp is one of the few sustainable shrimp options.  Most of the shrimp eaten in the states come from places like the shrimp farms of Malaysia: where the factory like methods of raising shrimp degrade coastal habitats and communities.  (See the Environmental Justice foundations article: Farming the Sea - unregulated shrimp farming, the environment and people.)  Can we continue to export these ugly practices just so we can buy our seafood cheap?  

Even if the cost of shrimp doesn’t go up, this has cost us.  At the rate we are spoiling ecosystems and waterways it is becoming increasingly hard to support a growing population on this small planet.

Sustainable Nutrition Bottom-line: Finding sustainable seafood appears to be getting harder, but the nutrition benefits make it worth researching.  SlowFood USA recently stated in their monthly Food Chain, “We can also support the ongoing rebuilding of the Gulf and other regional seafood industries by making sure the seafood we buy is domestic and sustainably harvested.”  See past post: Finding Sustainable Seafood to learn more.  And if you’d like to get involved with relief efforts, consider supporting organizations like the Gulf Restoration Network.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Another Reason to Go Organic

                            Crop Dusting Helicopter-(Ironically Beautiful)

Not to be overly dramatic, but toxic chemicals in our food may be messing with our kid's heads.  

The newest addition to the growing list of reasons to choose organic food: high urinary organophosphate concentrations have been linked to twice the incidence of ADHD in children 8-15 years old.  Organophospates (OP), which are used in agriculture precisely because they attack the nervous system of insects, are known to accumulate in human tissues, though its often believed to be in low enough levels to not impact our health.  We are, afterall, a lot bigger than insects.  But if size matters, than wouldn't our children be the canaries in the coal mine?   A new study in the journal Pedriatrics, Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder and Urinary Metabolites of Organophosphate Pesticides, explores the high rates of ADHD and pesticide metabolites.   From the authors:
WHAT’S KNOWN ON THIS SUBJECT: Exposure to organophosphates has been associated with adverse effects on neurodevelopment, such as behavioral problems and lower cognitive function. Studies have focused, however, on populations with high levels of exposure, relative to the general population.

WHAT THIS STUDY ADDS: We conducted a study with 1139 children 8 to 15 years of age, representative of the US population. The findings showed that children with higher urinary levels of organophosphate metabolites were more likely to meet the diagnostic criteria for ADHD.
So what does this mean for eaters?  Though this study has not shown a causal relationship (meaning we can't say that OPs cause ADHD) I do think it is better to be safe than sorry. I whole heartedly recommend choosing foods grown without toxic pesticides (or at least those grown without a lot of pesticides or those that are known to have lower residues of pesticides.)  The Environmental Working Group has published a list, called the Dirty Dozen, of the twelve typically most  contaminated fruits and veggies: peaches, strawberries, apples, domestic blueberries, nectarines, cherries, imported grapes, celery, sweet bell peppers, spinach, kale, collard greens and potatoes.  These foods would be best to buy organic or to grow naturally in your own garden plot. The foods found by the EWG to have the least pesticide residue, the Clean Fifteen, (sixteen are actually listed) are onions, sweet corn, sweet peas, asparagus, cabbage, eggplant, sweet potatoes, avocados, pineapples, mangoes, kiwi, domestic cantaloupe, watermelon, grapefruit and honeydew.

Sustainable Nutrition Bottom-line:  Eat your organic veggies and fruits and plenty of them!  For a clear explanation of what organic means and many more reasons why you might want to choose organic, read the past blog post, "Is Organic Better for You?".  For those folks who don't have the extra money for pesticide free food at the market, consider growing your own.  Check out Kitchen Gardeners International or the Milwaukee's own Victory Garden Initiative for more information and gardening resources.


Thursday, April 22, 2010

Earth Day 2010


Earlier today, someone asked me what they could do to celebrate Earth Day. I responded, "Planting a tree or giving up factory farmed meat for a day (or forever) would be a good place to start."  Then I found this brilliantly begun message in my inbox and felt I had to pass it on....

Dear Jennifer,
You are destroying the ocean. We all are. We're polluting oceans with plastic waste and chemicals, we're overfishing, and we're causing climate change to warm and acidify our ocean waters.
But this Earth Day, you can do something about it. Since we are the problem, we can also be the solution. We can change our habits and protect our oceans forever.
We've partnered with our friends at Participant Media, the entertainment company behind such films as An Inconvenient Truth and Oceans, to help start a movement of people dedicated to taking simple steps to reduce three of the main threats to oceans: plastic waste, overfishing and climate change.
Here are the three most important steps you can take to help protect our oceans:
1. Choose reusable bottles and bags instead of plastic ones. Americans together use 2.5 million plastic bottles every hour and each use 500 plastic bags annually. These can take anywhere from 1,000 to 1 million years to degrade, and are why plastic constitutes 90% of all trash floating on the ocean's surface.
2. Eat non-endangered seafood. Due to our over-consumption of seafood, 90% of the world's large fish, such as tuna, swordfish, flounder and sharks have been killed in the past 50 years. If we continue at our current rates, all salt-water fish could be extinct by 2048.
3. Reduce your carbon footprint. Carbon intensive activities such as driving, flying, and inefficient home heating are warming ocean waters, which could be catastrophic for millions of ocean species unable to adapt to higher temperatures. The extinction of any number of these species could in turn cause a collapse of the marine food chain, affecting everything from plankton to polar bears.
We can change all this by together changing our own individual behavior. Together we can ensure healthy, clean oceans for future generations. It all starts with people like us deciding to make small changes that can have a big impact.
Thank you for taking a stand,

– The Change.org Team in partnership with Participant Media

Sustainable Nutrition Bottom-line:  There are many ways to celebrate Earth Day with good food.  If you need more ideas, check out last year's post Eating Green for Earth Day.

Monday, April 19, 2010

smaller = < climate change


"Can we imagine smaller?"  Bill McKibben, author of Deep Economy, The End of Nature, and now Eaarth, asked in talk last Friday night at the Urban Ecology Center.

Smaller, as opposed to business as usual, is what it will take to mitigate the very worst effects of global warming.  Smaller seems revolutionary, but as we are already running into the limits of growth, what is really radical is not doing anything.  Smaller is necessary to slow down the heartbreaking losses related to climate change that are already occurring: the arctic melting, island nations disappearing, glacial water supplies being lost faster than they can be replaced, extinction of species, increased flooding & stronger storms.  "We are not allowed to bet on this," said Bill.  We are not allowed to gamble away the things we collectively need and love as humans.

Bill explained how we have already "built a new" planet in the past 200 years of burning fossil fuels, releasing carbon into the atmosphere that took millions of years to lay down.  The result: the earth's temperature has been raised by one full degree, there is 5% more moisture in the atmosphere, and 30% increase in oceanic acidity.  Each of these changes has led to myriad of problems, as mentioned, but the things that make it seem real to us are the stories with which we can identify.  In the face of all the dramatic stories, I was surprised how deeply I was saddened when Bill shared, very matter of factly while he was really talking about something else, that his home state of Vermont (once my home state) is losing their maple trees.  Just imagine; no sugar on snow.

Many people, especially leaders of large nations such as ours (as evidenced by the outcome of Copenhagen,) are in a state of denial, but the science is clear: it's real, we've caused it, and we need to take some drastic actions now.  The safe level of carbon in the atmosphere is 350 parts per million (ppm), as found by leading climate scientist Jim Hansen and his team (tipped off when the arctic started melting in 2007.)  We're now at 387ppm.

Enter the 350 campaign.  Bill Mckibben and a few grad students have started a global campaign to draw attention to climate change.  350.org is home to a global network of citizens of the earth concerned about the present and the future.  October 24, 2009, the international day of action on Climate Change,  was reported by CNN the most widespread day of political action in the planet's history.  Go to 350.org to see thousands of pictures of people from every continent taking action.  Maybe you'll see the photo of the Bangladeshi orphans who apparently sent a not along with their photo that said something like, "even though no one cares for us, we care about the earth."  The environmental movement is often seen as elitest, but Bill made the (too often missed) point that those with the least resources suffer the worst from environmental disasters; climate change is no different.

The 350 campaign has announced 10/10/10 as a Global Work Day.   From the website:

2010 is the year we
Get To Work.

With ideas and input from thousands of organizers from around the world, we've formed a climate action plan for 2010.
We'll get to work to start changing our communities, and get to work to make our leaders realize that they actually need to lead. It's a plan that may well break the logjam and get us moving. But only, of course, if we work together to make it happen.

What will you do in your community?

One final point that resonated with me and I think is important for us all to think about.  When asked about personal lifestyles, Bill responded by talking about how our choices do matter, but that we should be, "saving some of the energy we use to perfect our own lives" to get political.  Global warming is a global problem.  The 350 campaign is a way to move world leaders to the end result of putting a price on carbon to reduce emissions significantly everywhere.


Sustainable Nutrition Bottom-line:  The food system accounts for an estimated 20% of carbon emissions.  See past blog posts Changing Climate Change, Industrial Nutrition, and 50% Less Meat, and for ideas on low-carbon diets.  Changing our food system to one that emits less doesn't have to be all drudgery either.  One study found that people, on average have ten times more conversations while shopping at a farmer's market than while at the supermarket.  I'd love to see a study exploring how much more famer's market shoppers enjoy their local, fresh food too:)

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Jamie's Food Revolution



If you haven't yet seen British chef Jamie Oliver's new reality show, Jamie's Food Revolution, about trying to change school meals in one of the unhealthiest places in America, you can watch full episodes on ABC.com.  It's worth a watch: his earnest desire to help a town combat its alarming rates of overweight and obesity by serving real food instead of processed food at school stirs up mixed responses from residents.  While Huntington, WV has been singled out due to a CDC report that named it the most obese city in the country, its eating habits, its school lunch, and its public health picture is found in the towns and cities across America.    Jamie's show uncovers some of the shocking realities of school lunch, like french fries counting as a serving of vegetables.  It also puts a face to the "obesity epidemic" by featuring residents whose lives have been severely impacted by obesity. 

Jamie (and viewers) may not realize that there is a long standing grass roots food movement in America, one arm aimed directly at improving school lunch.  He might have a better chance of success if he calls on the expertise of people like Ann Cooper, the Renegade Lunch Lady, and Chef Greg Christian of Chicago's Organic School Project.

My hope is that the show will get more people involved in ongoing projects to improve school food or to start their own project.  A starting point may be to find out about a school's (federally mandated) wellness policy.

Sustainable Nutrition Bottom-line:  Kids do spend a large amount of time at school and the food served there has a dramatic impact on their overall diet quality.  School lunch funding is not adequate to serve quality meals.  The federal Childhood Nutrition Act, which regulates the school food spending, is being reauthorized and so this is an important opportunity for change.  Let your congress people know you support healthier food in schools. Learn more at Slow Food USA's campaign for good food in schools website: Time for Lunch.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Food Biodiversity


Food biodiversity (variation of life forms within the food system) is essential for good nutrition and global food security.  Traditionally, humans have relied on a wide diversity of plants and animal species foods.  Today over 98% of foods have disappeared or are at loss of disappearing. This is due to a multiplicity of factors; our industrialized food system has been built on principles of uniformity and effieciency.  The result is our monocrop agriculture has led to monocrop diets.  People have little variety in their diets, with a few varieties of corn, soy, and meat filling the national appetite for convenient and cheap meals, but our health is suffering.

The United Nations has declared 2010 as the International Year of Biodiversity.  It's time recognize the extent and the scope of the problem and find a way forward.  

Joining the many initiatives working to protect and preserve agricultural biodiversity worldwide (such as the Slow Food Foundation for Biodiversity and the Food and Agriculture Organization) is a local educational effort to promote at risk foods linked to Southeast Wisconsin.  Building off the work of Slow Food USA and its RAFT Alliance and Ark of Taste, is Endangered Food of SE Wisconsin.

Sustainable Nutrition Bottomline: To be a bit kitchy--variety is the spice of life.  But in all seriousness, the wide variety of food traditions that is our human heritage can help us to address the epidemic of obesity, diabetes, and heart disease and offer alternatives to the current food system's destructive effects on the environment and our communities.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Grains

This post is part of a series exploring the primary environmental and health issues in a particular food group.



Bread made from Turkey Hard Red Winter Wheat, an heirloom grain on Slow Food's Ark of Taste.



The cultivation of grains can arguably be called the most influential happening in the history of human kind. When the farming of cereals began, so did civilization.

Grains are an important part of a healthy diet, but much of the grain we eat today is in a refined form and heavily processed to offer us little of the nutritional benefits of whole grains. And much of this grain is grown unsustainably, profiting only agribusiness, with the ecosystem, family farmers, and eaters reaping little reward.

The Health Benefits of Whole Grains


Whole grains like whole wheat, rye, barley, spelt, oats, stone ground cornmeal, brown rice, wild rice, quinoa, popcorn, buckwheat, teff and millet support wellness. In their intact form, grains provide carbohydrates, dietary fiber, vitamins, minerals, lignans, phytoestrogens, and phenolic compounds. When the outer bran and inner germ of the grain seed kernel are removed, as in the case of white bread and white rice and the like, we are left with solely the starchy endosperm. Stripped of the rich B vitamins and antioxidants of the germ, and the fiber of the bran, carbohydrate is the primary nutrient left. In refining, the whole grain easily goes from a nutrient dense food to a source of empty calories.

The Dietary Guidelines for American’s recommendation is to “Make half your grains whole.” At least. The DGA’s go on to say, “Consuming at least 3 or more ounce-equivalents of whole grains per day can reduce the risk of several chronic diseases and may help with weight maintenance.” The benefits of whole grains stretch from reduced risk of certain cancers to lowered cholesterol to improved gastrointestinal functioning. Whole grains have been found to reduce the postprandial blood sugar surge and to increase satiety; these effects can aid in improved diabetes control as well as weight control.

The ever popular refined white flour, pasta, rice, cereals, snack foods, and sweets can be eaten without the negative consequences of high blood sugar or chronic weight gain, but the amount of these refined grain we eat as American’s is way too much for our own good and too often is joined by added sugars, fat, and sodium; contributing to higher risk of weight increases, heart disease, and type 2 diabetes. People who choose to eat whole grains at most meals reduce their risk of these problems. Unfortunately, there is confusion about what constitutes a whole grain, so here are some tips to help identify whole grains:

Ø Check the ingredient label as described above: the first ingredient should be a whole grain.

Ø Look for the grams of fiber listed on the Nutrition Facts Label: a good source of whole grains will have a higher fiber content. A good rule of thumb is to look for 3 grams of fiber for each serving, like a one ounce slice of bread.

Ø Watch for the whole grain council label. This is voluntary labeling so while anything with the whole grain stamp will be a source of whole grains, not every whole grain has a stamp.

Ø Buy raw whole grain ingredients from the bulk bins or directly from a farm or mill. Steel cut and rolled oats, whole wheat berries and flour, quinoa, wild rice, or brown rice are all clearly whole grains.

A Step Towards Sustainable Choices

If eating whole grains helps protect your own health, then choosing local and organic whole grains is a step towards protecting the health of the planet.

Locally grown grains can reduce transportation emissions as well as support your local and regional farmers. Organic grains are grown without synthetic fertilizers, herbicides and fungicides, toxic pesticides, sewage sludge, and are not genetically engineered. Both reduced transportation and reduced chemical use helps to reduce toxic runoff into our increasingly susceptible waterways. The run off from the industrial farms of the Midwest drains into the Mississippi River and is one of the major contributors to the notorious “dead zone” in the Gulf of Mexico—an area the size of New Jersey in which life has basically been suffocated; destroying biodiversity and the livelihood of many of the Gulf’s fishing communities. Closer to home, organic farming allows for more life to flourish on the farm and in nearby ecosystems like birds, bees, and small mammals.

Organic foods, by law, cannot contain any GMO ingredients, which is useful to those consumers looking to avoid GMOs because they are not labeled in this country. GMOs, Genetically Modified Organisms, are defined as “organisms with manipulated genes to introduce new, or alter existing, characteristics, or produce a new protein or enzyme” by Food Processing Technology. The biotech industry promotes GMOs as the answer to just about everything, but especially to feeding the world’s growing population while solving our environmental crises. But there is much reason to be skeptical about the claims of this very controversial industry. Around the world, people are protesting GMOs for environmental, food sovereignty, health, cross contamination concerns, and more.
“Agricultural biotechnology has been promoted as the key tool to combat global hunger and poverty by increasing the productivity of farmers worldwide...The biotechnology industry promised that farmers could increase their yields, lower production costs and reduce agrochemical use. Instead, American farmers have faced higher costs without higher productivity, risked law suits from seed companies, and applied more agrochemicals as weeds and insects have developed resistance to the genetic crop traits.” - Food and Water Watch
While the biotech industry courts favor with high level players interested in solving world hunger, it is important to keep in mind that hunger stems from the inability to afford food, not lack of food in the global supply. While global hunger increases, large agro-companies like Monsanto and Cargill are making record profits. Even the American Dietetic Association, a fairly conservative and industry friendly organization, acknowledges there may be a problem with biotech. While the 2007 ADA Position Paper on Sustainability states, “ADA affirms that food biotechnology has many potentially positive applications,” the paper goes on to say, “genetically engineered seeds present some significant contradictions regarding ecological sustainability.”

The ADA shows no concern over the potential human health impacts of GMO consumption, though certainly there have been cases of novel allergens introduced into foods like corn and kiwi. To date, there are no long-term studies that can show us that the regular consumption of the most commonly eaten GMO foods (corn, soy, canola, and cottonseed oil) is absolutely safe. We will find out someday as most Americans are now eating GMO foods on a daily basis.

At its most basic level, the fundamental problem with biotechnology seems to be that it perpetuates an industrial paradigm that furthers the pollution of our waterways and leaves the soil bereft of nutrients, requiring huge inputs of fertilizer to grow anything at all. This is no way to move forward in the face of climate change in a world of finite resources.

Finding Good Whole Grains

Local sources of grains can be found in much of the U.S. When Milwaukee’s Eat Local Challenge began a few years ago, we sought out local sources of every food we could, but had some difficulty finding local wheat. We found some freshly milled wheat flour in a farm store at the Michael Fields Agricultural Institute, but that required a 45 minute drive from the city—not all that environmentally friendly.

Since that first ELC in 2007, the market for local grains seems to have expanded; now we can buy organic whole wheat flour from Illinois at our local Co-op, we can find rolled oats at our farmers market’s year round, and one of our farmer friends shared a pound of wheat berries he grew in his nearby fields last year. The ability to find one of our region's indigenous foods, wild rice, has expanded as well. A few years back, it seemed you had to know someone, travel “up north” where wild rice grows, or special order it from the White Earth Reservation in Minnesota--where the tribe protects and maintains the sacred wild rice, known as Manoomin in Ojibwe. Now, we can purchase real wild rice from Wisconisn at a local “Trading Post” or the White Earth Wild Rice is now easily from the Outpost Co-op.

Another Great Lakes food tradition is the White Corn tended by the Oneida Nation of Wisconsin. Originally from the New York area, tribal members brought Iroquois White Corn with them when they migrated to Wisconsin as their land was taken by colonists. White Corn is eaten primarily as a grain in its dried form (when fresh it’s known as “green corn.”) It is enjoyed in White Corn Soup or as a wheelshaped delicious cornmeal bread, studded with kidney beans, known as Kanastohale. Each year at the Oneida organic farm Tsyunhehkw^, elders, youth and adults come together for the Community Harvest and Husking Bee—a tradition that has been carried on for generations.

Growing your own grain is also a possibility. While wheat, rye, or barley may be a challenge if you do not have much land or a thresher, it’s pretty simple to grow a row of grain corn in your backyard. This past year, partner grew Pennsylvania Dutch Heirloom Corn for popcorn and Hopi Blue Corn for flour. We now have a few quarts of beautiful grey-blue cornmeal, ground on a friend’s borrowed mill attached to their food processor.

Sustainable Nutrition Bottom-line:

Eat whole grains for your own health. Choose organically and locally grown grains for the health of the planet and of future generations. There is a continuum of food choices within any food group: at one end of the Grains continuum, you may find heavily processed foods like snack cakes and white bread and on the other end you may find locally grown, organic oats, homegrown corn, and real wild rice. Though the reasons to choose well are plenty, change does not easily happen overnight; take small steps in the direction you'd like to go. Wherever you are on the continuum, there is room to grow. If you currently eat white bread regularly, consider switching to whole grain bread. If you currently eat whole grain bread, but don’t cook, try making wild rice, brown rice, quinoa, or barley for dinner two or three times this week. If you eat and cook whole grains regularly, it might be time to seek out local sources at your farmers market or on localharvest.org.