Re: OT Gallon of gas vs Gallon milk



Every gallon of milk you find at your grocery store required a
surprising amount of oil to get there - see Michael Pollan's new book,
_The Omnivore's Dilemma. I haven't read it yet, but I have included a
review below.

- Bob T.

From The Washington Post's Book World/washingtonpost.com

Most of us are at a great distance from our food. I don't mean that we
live "twelve miles from a lemon," as English wit Sydney Smith said
about a home in Yorkshire. I mean that our food bears little
resemblance to its natural substance. Hamburger never mooed; spaghetti
grows on the pasta tree; baby carrots come from a pink and blue
nursery. Still, we worry about our meals -- from calories to carbs,
from heart-healthy to brain food. And we prefer our food to be
"natural," as long as natural doesn't involve real.

In The Omnivore's Dilemma, Michael Pollan writes about how our food is
grown -- what it is, in fact, that we are eating. The book is really
three in one: The first section discusses industrial farming; the
second, organic food, both as big business and on a relatively small
farm; and the third, what it is like to hunt and gather food for
oneself. And each section culminates in a meal -- a cheeseburger and
fries from McDonald's; roast chicken, vegetables and a salad from Whole
Foods; and grilled chicken, corn and a chocolate soufflé (made with
fresh eggs) from a sustainable farm; and, finally, mushrooms and pork,
foraged from the wild.

The first section is a wake-up call for anyone who has ever been
hungry. In the United States, Pollan makes clear, we're mostly fed by
two things: corn and oil. We may not sit down to bowls of yummy
petroleum, but almost everything we eat has used enormous amounts of
fossil fuels to get to our tables. Oil products are part of the
fertilizers that feed plants, the pesticides that keep insects away
from them, the fuels used by the trains and trucks that transport them
across the country, and the packaging in which they're wrapped. We're
addicted to oil, and we really like to eat.

Oil underlines Pollan's story about agribusiness, but corn is its
focus. American cattle fatten on corn. Corn also feeds poultry, pigs
and sheep, even farmed fish. But that's just the beginning. In addition
to dairy products from corn-fed cows and eggs from corn-fed chickens,
corn starch, corn oil and corn syrup make up key ingredients in
prepared foods. High-fructose corn syrup sweetens everything from juice
to toothpaste. Even the alcohol in beer is corn-based. Corn is in
everything from frozen yogurt to ketchup, from mayonnaise and mustard
to hot dogs and bologna, from salad dressings to vitamin pills. "Tell
me what you eat," said the French gastronomist Anthelme
Brillat-Savarin, "and I will tell you what you are." We're corn.

Each bushel of industrial corn grown, Pollan notes, uses the equivalent
of up to a third of a gallon of oil. Some of the oil products evaporate
and acidify rain; some seep into the water table; some wash into
rivers, affecting drinking water and poisoning marine ecosystems. The
industrial logic also means vast farms that grow only corn. When the
price of corn drops, the solution, the farmer hopes, is to plant more
corn for next year. The paradoxical result? While farmers earn less,
there's an over-supply of cheap corn, and that means finding ever more
ways to use it up.

Is eating all this corn good for us? Who knows? We think we've tamed
nature, but we're just beginning to learn about all that we don't yet
know. Ships were once provided with plenty of food, but sailors got
scurvy because they needed vitamin C. We're sailing on the same sea,
thinking we're eating well but still discovering nutrients in our food
that we hadn't known were there -- that we don't yet know we need.

We've lost touch with the natural loops of farming, in which livestock
and crops are connected in mutually beneficial circles. Pollan
discusses the alternatives to industrial farming, but these two long
(and occasionally self-indulgent) sections lack the focus and intensity
-- the anger beneath the surface -- of the first. He spends a week at
Joel Salatin's Polyface Farm in the Shenandoah Valley, a farm that
works with nature, rather than despite it. Salatin calls himself a
grass farmer, though his farm produces cows, chickens, eggs and corn.
But everything begins with the grass: The cows nibble at it at the
precise moment when it's at its sweetest and are moved from pasture to
pasture to keep the grass at its best height. Their droppings fertilize
the grass, and the cycle is under way. There's a kind of lyrical
symmetry to everything that happens on this farm. Even the final
slaughtering of chickens is done quickly and humanely, in the open air.
It isn't pleasant, but compared to the way cattle are fattened and
slaughtered in meat industry feedlots and slaughterhouses, it is
remarkably reasonable.

We needn't learn how to shoot our own pigs, as Pollan does; there's
hope in other ways -- farmers' markets, the Slow Food movement,
restaurants supplied by local farms. To Pollan, the omnivore's dilemma
is twofold: what we choose to eat ("What should we have for dinner?" he
asks in the opening sentence of his book) and how we let that food be
produced. His book is an eater's manifesto, and he touches on a vast
array of subjects, from food fads and taboos to our avoidance of not
only our food's animality, but also our own. Along the way, he is alert
to his own emotions and thoughts, to see how they affect what he does
and what he eats, to learn more and to explain what he knows. His
approach is steeped in honesty and self-awareness. His cause is just,
his thinking is clear, and his writing is compelling.

Be careful of your dinner!

Reviewed by Bunny Crumpacker
Copyright 2006, The Washington Post. All Rights Reserved.

.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: OT- You Do What You Eat... For John S.
    ... >>"A SHARP DECLINE IN THE NUTRITIONAL VALUE OF FOOD ... >>I was born on a farm in Minnesota, and was amazed the first time I came ... >>south at all the corn in the diet; ... >>hardly ever ate corn back on the farm. ...
    (alt.machines.cnc)
  • Re: I have decided to not go to the Texas Pinball Festival
    ... gas and also grow food in the desert. ... Corn squeezins is a joke. ... Base wheat and corn per bushel on oil prices and let Opec set whatever ... They screw us on oil and they have cheap gas. ...
    (rec.games.pinball)
  • Re: the rapidly growing clash between food and biofuels....
    ... "Biodiesel consumed about 45 percent of Europe's rapeseed oil output last ... using food and turning it into fuel. ... US corn imports, which signals that Beijing will no longer stand in the ... A manager from Xiwang, one of China's top corn sweetener producers, said ...
    (uk.politics.misc)
  • Re: The ethanol scam
    ... It may be worth noting that corn growers are getting NO federal crop subsidies, since the price is currently high. ... we become dependent on a foreign power for our food, and the impoverished in other countries suddenly find us outbidding them for their own produce. ... The way we beat the oil cartels during the fuel crisis of the early '70s was we simply pointed out that we can live for some time without oil, but those countries were almost wholly dependent on us for food. ...
    (rec.aviation.piloting)
  • Re: Sunday Times Scans reveal brain damage from cannabis.
    ... that the government spend less on everything except business. ... food manufacturers. ... turning part of the Dutch countryside into a runway. ... the oil subsidy ?was mysteriously inserted in the final energy ...
    (uk.politics.drugs)