A Healthy Appetite

Intuitive One

This post relates to the third week’s discussion (a little late) in Hungry for Change: Food, Ethics and Sustainability, a six-week discussion course made possible by the Northwest Earth Institute. This week, we read articles by Michael Pollan, Mark Bittman, Francis Lam, Tom Philpott, Mary Vance, Alan Greene and one from The Organic Center.

Each week, we begin with an “opener,” offered by one person who shares a thought, a memory, an object—anything relating to our work in this course. It gets us thinking and talking. Beth, as an opener for Week 3, brought a bag full of packaged foods from her home cupboards, most of which were labeled “organic.” What we passed around surprised us all. One by one, we read the labels, revealing marketing claims, additives, chemicals and trans fats lurking in the fine print. Continue reading

Chocolate Dreams?

Raw Cacao with Chile Peppers

This food stuff we’re so interested in is complicated. The facts reveal themselves layer by layer, often connecting back to layers revealed days, months or years ago. Suffice it to say, we should never take at face value messages from the mass media proclaiming the healthy virtues of any food. Dig deeper, for the nuggets of truth.

Yesterday, I read that the Mars Corporation endowed a “chocolate chair” in 1997 at the University of California at Davis: the Mars Chair in Developmental Nutrition. Continue reading

What’s Eating America

Sheep at Milking Barn

Last night began the six-week discussion series, Menu for the Future, with a full, diverse group of people participating. We’re following the Earth Institute’s course book, which provides weekly readings, tips on facilitation and suggested questions for discussion. Our first week’s readings and discussion were focused on food traditions in our lives, industrial versus agricultural eating, the confusion and anxiety we sometimes feel about food choices, and our individual connections to a global food system. Continue reading

Menu for the Future

Photo of Concord Grapes at Sterling College

“Food is our common ground, our universal experience.” ~James Beard

Once again, the grass was a little greener on the other side of the fence and I found myself tempted to travel for an enticing local food experience an hour or two from home. Instead of traveling, when I found myself envying this great looking course being offered around New Hampshire’s Upper Valley, I decided to bring it to the Concord area in hopes that others like me might be interested.

Offered through the Earth Institute, Menu for the Future will be a six-week, self-facilitated discussion series open to all, exploring the connection between food and sustainability. Continue reading

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