Sunday, July 12, 2009

Your soul resides in your stomach.

Last Sunday morning, I took my mom to the Dupont Circle farmer's market. Amid the splendiferous array greens like purslane and French sorrel and the tables full of locally-made saffron-scented sheepsmilk cheese, we found a table selling real, honest-to-god black raspberries. You see red raspberries all over the place. Every once in a while, even Trader Joe's carries golden raspberries. And I'm not talking about blackberries. Black raspberries are different -- something special.

Personally, I haven't seen any of those little purple guys since I was a very small kid. When I lived on the farm out in West Tennessee, we actually had all three varieties of raspberries in our garden. In truth, I had no idea that raspberries were a luxury until I noted that you pay $5 for a quarter-pint in most grocery stores. As a kid, I ate them by the fistful--such opulent gluttony!

So, when I put the first one in my mouth, the sense memory of the summers when I was 4, 5, 6... was so terribly intense that it pricked tears into my eyes. I'm not exaggerating. I was standing right there on 20th, willing tears away. Tears over a raspberry.

This is the kind of experience that, I'm pretty sure, is unique to the farmer's market milieu. Unique in an urban environment, anyway. My raspberry was organic, grown in neighboring state Pennsylvania and flawlessly mold-free. Probably, it had been picked yesterday--at the very earliest.

And then, feeling freshly virtuous from our locavore's shopping expedition, I took my mom to see the new documentary, Food, Inc. Now, since I began this blog, one of the recurring themes (besides my own narcissism and my desire to have a lot of sex, I mean) is my conviction that the American food supply has long since gone to hell, tipped out of its handbasket and danced around in its own fecal matter once it got there. How many eco-food films have I admonished you, fair readers, to go see? Milk in the Land, Flow, Fast-Food Nation ... I can't even remember all the others. It's not new news that my anxiety about what we all eat and how we choose our foods is ever ratcheting itself higher. And as a result, I feel as though it's not even possible for me to scream loud enough. Especially considering my readership is, you know, modest.

On a day-to-day basis, I am frustrated that I'm not making any headway with even my closest friends and family members. My own dad insists buying organic half-and-half is a waste of money. I had an argument just the other day with a friend who prioritizes saving money in the short term over the exorbitant costs to the planet, to underprivileged peoples, to conventionally raised animals and to our bodies that buying from mainstream corporate venues makes inevitable. And even the friends who I know buy the argument that sustainability, organics and locally grown foods are not just the best way to eat, but the only way to eat, will still swing over to the grungy local Safeway more often than they'll admit aloud to me.

I blame bottlenecks in the information flow. The information that is to be found in a movie like Food, Inc. is simply not available to those who don't pointedly seek it out. Most people haven't seen footage of a feedlot (and probably don't want to). Most people don't have the foggiest clue as to what the inside of a corn refinery looks like. Most people, in fact, hear of a salmonella outbreak caused by contaminated spinach and simply stop eating spinach. They don't understand that spinach should never be contaminated with an animal-borne bacteria, or that the only way spinach could possibly encounter salmonella would be for it to be grown in the path of run-off from a corporate chicken house.

Now, I could go into plenty of detail as to the ecological and dietary carnage that you'll see in this film. Feedlots look like Auschwitz for cows, people. Commericial chicken houses? Chickens, grown too fast and too fat to support their own body weights on their little chicken legs, teem in dusty clouds of dried fecal matter, squawking like banshees. The brevity of their miserable lives is almost a blessing. And corn. I can't even begin to address the giant clusterfuck that compose the corn-producing entities in this country. So, I'm not going to.

I will, however, take this moment to offer a plea: see this film. See all the other films I liked above. Read The Omnovore's Dilemma. Read Fast-Food Nation. Read anything Alice Waters ever wrote. Read Mark Bittman. Read Deborah Madison. And then learn how to eat anew. How to value quality, untainted food over cheap food. How to consider the longterm ramifications of every dollar you spend affect every other single solitary human with whom you currently share the planet -- and all those who'll come after you.

And consider this: in 1950, the average American spent 10% of his or her family's income on food. Today, the average American spends only 3% on food. And bitches constantly about the price of an anti-biotic-free, non-rBGH, organic jug of milk. If these statistics don't show us that our priorities are out of whack, I don't know what might.

So, in lieu of a full-on review (in hopes that my guilt trip and paucity of my characteristic spoilers will lead you to the theater), I offer three takeaways:
  • Our mainstream food supply chain was designed by Heironymous Bosch. Everything we eat may as well be coated in petroleum, then shit, then money. That's not a metaphor. At least not the oil and shit parts.
  • Michael Pollan and Eric Schlosser are the prophets of our age. If you're not listening to them, not reading them, not taking their wisdom to the bosom, you are tolling the death knell for middle class, comfortable American life as we know it. Clean the fucking cobwebs from your eyes. They know the light and are desperate to bring it to you.
  • Activistic consumerism is the most viable, valuable, powerful tool for social change we've got. Engage your soul when you spend. If your money is going in the opposite direction of your personal code of ethics, you're either underinformed or a hypocrite. More than likely, you're the former. Fix that. Educate yourself about the companies from which you buy. Do they mistreat their work force? Do they raise sick animals that are bound to make your family sick as well? Are they contaminating the water tables with their putrid run-off? Will their practices make this planet uninhabitable in under two generations? If the answer to any of these question is yes, show them you don't believe in their practices by not buying their products. The demand for organic foodstuffs is growing by 20% every year. That's consumer, not corporate, power, folks. And 20% remarkably high number--one of which we should be proud. It's us--not the corporations--who control where we spend our money. We are in control of the food industry because if they aren't making products we'll buy, they'll start making ones we will. We're witnessing a sea change, my friends. On which side will you be when the tide comes in?
Because I mean to put my own efforts and money where my mouth is, I've renewed my commitment to the locavore life. Because it is my strongest of convictions that every person's individual sense of responsibility with regard to ethical consumerism is the very thing that need reach the proverbial critical mass in order to turn this heavy boat around, I mean to make a tangible adjustment in my own life. I'm putting it in print because I hope telling you, a handful of strangers I may never meet and a slightly bigger handful of friends and family members, of my resolution will help hold me accountable. And also... well, maybe because I secretly hope that I can motivate at least a handful of you into changing your buying habits alongside me. Ultimately, though, I can't, in good conscience, spend another dollar on food without considering the effect that dollar will have on the global community.

So here you go:

Every weekend, I'm gonna haul myself out of bed at a very early o'clock and buy as much of my weekly rations as I can at one farmer's market or another. DC is full of farmer's markets, with representatives mostly from farms all over Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina and Pennsylvania. The variety of products is certainly ample enough to support the most omnivorous diet. For any local readers, check out the DC Harvest blog (their tweets are plenty informative as well) for some great tips on what's good where. Everyone else? Your research is only a google away.

This morning, I went back to the Dupont Circle market. It was a glorious morning. Healthy farm boys handed out apricot samples. Pretty women pushed strollers or flicked ponytails. Everyone had on a maxi-dress. And I found grass-fed lamb summer sausage and beer-washed sheepsmilk cheese. I bought some pitch-perfect cucumber mint vodka gelato. The tomatoes--dear goddess, I would have sold my firstborn for those tomatoes. And apricots that boy handed me were flavorful like you just can't get, not even at Whole Foods. It's expensive to do this, no doubt. But I don't think I've ever felt so happy forking it over.

So, because all this puts me in a good mood, how about a recipe for a salad I just made up?

A Mid-Summer's Night's Salad

For the salad:
2 small fennel bulbs, chopped
1 bell pepper, chopped (I found purple ones--gorgeous--but any color will do.)
3 small new carrots, chopped into rounds
1 luscious summer tomato, chopped
5 or 6 radishes, sliced
2 tbsp chopped fresh tarragon leaves

For the dressing:
1 1/2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
Juice of 1/2 a lemon
1 clove garlic, minced
pinch of salt
1/2 tsp cumin
cayenne pepper to taste

Pour the dressing over the salad and toss. This would probably serve up to 3 people, but I just ate the whole thing for dinner. It was a lot of vegetables, but it felt so virtuous (after all the sheep cheese I ate earlier) that I couldn't stop.

Bon appetite!

13 comments:

Sean said...

Many big, beautiful and necessary truths are contained in this post.
Preach on, sister!

Jen said...

That salad sounds luscious. I wish I had a husband/wife who would throw together such things for me!

And, I never, ever shop at Safeway. Just so you know.

Anonymous said...

I saw Food Inc. at the Belcourt a couple weeks ago. A real eye-opener. It is a rather shocking indictment of the American Way of Life (Corporate Version). Certainly makes you appreciate the value of Real food. Thanks for a nice blog. Dana.

brownrabbit said...

Jen-- I KNOW you'd never shop at the icky grocery stores. When you say it, I believe you.

And Dana--I suppose I find it a little disappointing to hear anyone describe the content of Food, Inc. as "shocking." I mean, It's not like this is the first documentary or first publication that's saying these things. I know it's been a pet interest of mine for years and so I've sought out this information, but the truth is that I'm not sure I learned anything NEW, per se, from that film. All that information has been readily available to anyone looking for quite some time. So, I come back to the problem being one of the existence of an information bottleneck. I mean, WHY is it that people DO find this shocking when those men I called prophets have been harping on all of it for YEARS?

In any case, I'm glad you got to see it-- I read on Twitter that Belcourt, of all places, had the 2nd biggest roll-out for the film of any theater in the country. Apparently Film Forum in NYC was the only place that did better. Way to represent, Nashville foodies!

Anonymous said...

What was shocking to me was to actually see what I had only read about before. There is a difference in reading that chickens are grown twice as big in half the time, and seeing those chickens unable to function because of the out-of-whack rates of development of their franken-chicken bodies. And that they apparently slaughter hogs by simply mashing them. And the Monsanto Mafia stuff was pretty new to me, as well. A lot of this had not been on my radar screen since I don't eat a lot of chicken/beef/pork. Since I basically gave up on the American Meat'n'Sugar diet decades ago (with lapses), I had not realized quite the levels to which corporate food producers had fallen, or stooped.
About the Belcourt: the premiere was sold out when I went online to get a ticket, and the night I went in the middle of the following week, there was a Long Line waiting outside. Kinda made me proud of Nashville, too. Plus, the applause as credits rolled at the end was another nice touch. Dana

brownrabbit said...

Interesting--

There is a documentary called The Future of Food that I got off Netflix a couple of months ago. It's actually about 5 years old already. It goes into much more detail about the total creepiness of all the wrongdoing over at Monsanto. In comparison to that film, I actually thought Food, Inc. barely skimmed the surface.

And then I take it you never saw the fictionalized film of Fast Food Nation? That one has some very graphic representations of the whole commercial animal-ag business, from the feedlots to the slaughter houses. And it's pretty wretched to watch. A lot of the most graphic footage was so brutal that I'm pretty sure it's real. And the DVD has some pretty good extras on it too.

Anyway, I guess my point is that it IS out there-- and it has been. It's just that not enough of it is making the big ol' glowing blip on the collective radar that it should be. STILL. I'm glad this film HAS done a lot of that work, and maybe folks who see it will start looking for other films that go into more detail about one aspect or another of this particular narrative. But that still means we have to take the initiative to inform ourselves-- because it doesn't look like that MSM is much help in that department.

Anonymous said...

MSM is so owned by many of the same corporations that create the "foodlike substances" they represent as actual food, that it is little surprise that the subject is seldom seen on "Good Morning, America". I have been reading The End of Overeating by David Kessler, where I discover that enough fat and sugar in a food makes it affect the brain just like a drug. There is a long history, in human evolution, of why that happens, but suffice it to say that the food and chain restaurant industries have discovered the effects, and made devastating use of them. No wonder there is a pandemic of obesity in this country. Thanks again for a good blog, and the other films you have recommended. Dana

brownrabbit said...

Yes-- I believe that same argument about the ways the body processes high-carbohydrate and high-fat food appears, if in less fleshed-out form, in Omnivore's Dilemma and, of course, that Morgan Spurlock film, Supersize Me! It is, indeed, a mess.

# said...

WoW!
I mean... that's impressive... Indian federal government recently allowed GM crops to be marketed.. and there is huge uproar over it... personally, I agree with every fucking word you wrote over there... it's time we take the responsibility on ourselves instead of whingeing all the time... carry on! spread the word

Melissa said...

Well, Ms. Wine. Interesting read here. Google found you, and I'm going to have to spend a little time reading through what you've been up to.

You will be happy to know that I shop primarily at my local co-op, where my 2 year old has actually both peed on the local organic produce, and in fact been welcomed back the next week to do it all again, and I went to Trader Joe's today for the first time and was totally skeeved by the fact that organic fare was so cheap b/c it must mean that some little Chilean child had gotten my grapes for me for free....

Anyhow, nice to see you here in the internet world... gonna read on-- reader beware.

brownrabbit said...

Whoa, chick! From whence did you come? Feel free to drop an email, if you so desire.

Very cool to hear from you!

M

Melissa said...

Oh, good grief. I poke around here for three seconds and see that you also have your MFA in creative writing-- from where? In what? I got mine about 6 years ago (poetry, from the University of NC in Greensboro) although I don't use it much these days (the husband has one, too, in Poetry. Now he's a corporate lawyer. But we no longer have to eat Ramen noodles for dinner.)

And would you believe it-- now I'm a children's fashion designer? I seem to recall you had fashion aspirations once upon a time. Just launched my own label this year...I'm in full-on bizzaro mode here.

brownrabbit said...

Ha-- yeah, I linked over to your blog-- it did, I admit, take until I saw a picture of you to figure out you were THAT Melissa (you look totally THE SAME! Unbelievable!)-- and got that general gist. Curious where life's led us, eh?

Anyway, yeah, I got my MFA in CW-poetry from UofA in Tucson (still miss the desert every day!). I guess I finished my manuscript in...2004? I write still here where the rabbits roam... but not really much in terms of poems anymore. The poems became more about obfuscation than anything else. And then I lost the fun in writing them. So the stuff I put here is really much more in tune with my naturally exhibitionistic tendencies. Oy. Yeah, there's that.

I'd tell you about my actual method of making a living, but I write about so many dirty things here that I've kinda had to learn my lesson: don't mention your day job on your blog unless you want the brass getting hard-ons... and then threatening to fire you if you dare let on where your professional associations lie.

So, seriously-- my email is in my profile. Drop me a line! Let's catch up!