Wednesday, January 29, 2020

When there's nothing decent on Netflix

I'm not sure why I am just discovering this resource now: live streams and then archived interviews and panels on food system issues from the Haas School of Business at UC Berkeley in cooperation with The Edible Schoolyard. https://edibleschoolyard.org/ee101
I must say that I find a little Alice Waters goes a long way, but the speakers are top notch and the topics timely. I'm going to watch a few of these - perhaps even some in real time this evening, or a week from tonight when they tackle regenerative agriculture - and then offer a few substantive reviews. Stay tuned.

Monday, January 20, 2020

Book review

Eat Less Water 
by Florencia Ramirez (Pasadena; Red Hen Press, 2017)


My overall impression of this book is that Ramirez tries to do too many things. Part travelogue, part
cookbook, with facts (some footnotes and references) and opinions, it’s an interesting book to stroll through or dip into, but a bit scattered in its argument. 

I do like the food-by-food chaptering, which encourages one to think about one facet of diet at a time. For example, with ecotarian goals I need to think more about the amount and sources of dairy in my diet. I’m not sure, though, that the numbers at the chapter’s head make sense. Does a pound of butter really require more than eight times the water to produce than a pound of cheese does? Maybe I ought to give up butter and just eat more cheese? Or it may be  that the numbers don’t tell the whole story, since the by-products of both cheese and butter making do have uses that share their water burden. I am also really sure that I don’t need to purchase milk from dairy cows treated with homeopathy. 

Which leads me to mention that I’m not sure the author’s always choosing organic in everything she
purchases is best. There are farmers using no or greatly reduced tilling whose crops are not certified
organic, and may be a better choice than products of large scale organic farms. 

On the positive side, I’m still pondering Ramirez’s instructions for purchasing flour. If you don’t know
how the wheat was irrigated, purchase flour from the Dakotas and Montana where it isn’t irrigated,
she instructs. I was happy a year or so ago, thinking closer is usually better, to find organic whole
wheat flour from California; am I wrong to be buying it? 

Finally, a big plus is the author’s inclusion of beverages: coffee, wine, tequila, and beer. I’m a
cider drinker myself these days; but do you know how many gallons it took to produce that
six-pack of beer? 


Monday, January 6, 2020

Climate Change and our food supply

I can't possibly include all the resources I have amassed in the short paper I'm working on for the Episcopal Networks Collaborative. So here's an article on one of my favorite fruits, cranberries - just so I won't lose it.
https://foodprint.org/blog/cranberries-climate-change/