Wednesday - Day 4: Food
Instructions for the day:
1. Take your food list from yesterday and calculate your carbon “foodprint.” Did you eat anything grown within 250 miles?. Chose five items from yesterday that were not produced locally and try swapping them out for items that are produced locally.
2. For this week define your own limits. Will you only buy food grown within 100 miles of your home, or food only grown in the U.S. (Oz in our case)? Will you give up beef or try veganism? Since you aren’t consuming packaged products (which create trash), your choices may be easier than you think.
3. Dig in! Bicycle to a farmers’ market. Learn some new recipes. Invite friends over for a potluck. Keep track of your food choices. Ask yourself throughout the day: what are the most challenging aspects of adjusting your food habits?
Wow, today’s challenge is challenging! I have no idea how far most of my food has travelled to get to me.
Ok for examples here are a few staples:
1. The coffee I brew at home every day (without fail!) is an Italian brand but I have no idea where the beans come from.
2. Sometimes I bake my own bread, which is much easier to do than most people think, but otherwise I buy Australian bread from the supermarket rather than a baker
3. Fruit and vege – I buy this at a fruit market rather than the supermarket because I enjoy the shopping experience more and I assume the farmers get a better deal, but I don’t really know!
4. I buy Australia full-cream milk but am not sure how far it travels.
Umm, what I am taking out of today’s challenge is that because this information is not made readily available to us, we need to start asking questions. I suppose this is where the living local part comes in. You need to build a relationship with the people who produce your food. I think this is easier to do with local producers at a farmers market or at a food co-op where the produce is labeled with its origin and organic status.
It is so strange that we have become alienated from the origin of something as fundamental to human life as food.
I have discussed food choices with friends quite a bit over the last two years. I think there are so many concerns: organic, fair-trade, free-range, animal welfare, overfishing.
It is easy to become overwhelmed and say that it is all too hard, but I think that we all need to make small steps to start asking where and how what we eat is produced and do we feel good about the answers to those questions? If the answers make you uncomfortable you should align your choices and your dollar with products and practices that you support.
Anyway, here is what I am going to put my efforts into:
1. Making more things from scratch like bread, pasta sauce, pesto and dips from local ingredients to avoid packaging and try and reduce my ‘food miles’
2. Become a member of my local food co-op Alfalfa House and shop there on a regular basis. Then find recipes that fit the ingredients that are in season, rather than the other way around
3. Check out my local farmers markets
4. Grow my own (below is a picture of some baby lettuce my housemate planted the other day)