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I don't care where my food comes from -- and neither should you.
UPI ^ | September 26, 2002 | Ronald Bailey

Posted on 09/29/2002 6:09:37 PM PDT by gcruse

The Reason Foundation

LOS ANGELES -- I don't care where my food comes from -- and neither should you.

By Ronald Bailey

"People should know where their food comes from," an organic farmer from Montana declared at a conference on agriculture and the environment I attended this past weekend, sponsored by the Political Economy Research Center. This notion is increasingly popular among political environmentalists. It is usually a shorthand way to express opposition to genetically enhanced crops and to convey approval for their organic equivalents.

From a nutritional and ecological point of view, the idea is bunk.

First, a bit of background. It is not at all surprising that most Americans think that chickens come plastic-wrapped without bones, that milk pours from gallon jugs, or that fresh fruit can be picked year around. After all, less than two percent of the country lives on farms today.

But when I was growing up in the 1960s I knew exactly where at least 90 percent of the food I ate came from: my family's crops. Every tomato, bean, squash, cucumber, pea, potato, ear of corn, turnip, mustard green, carrot, and cabbage I ate came from our huge garden. We picked wild blackberries and grew gallons of strawberries. We had cherry, apple, peach, walnut, and European chestnut trees. We canned nearly everything and had a root cellar. Our honey came from more than 20 beehives.

As for meat, we raised and slaughtered all the beef, pork, chicken, goat, lamb, and turkey we ate. Our milk came from our dairy herd, and we spent many hours churning butter. The domesticated meat was occasionally supplemented with squirrel, groundhog, opossum, and mud turtle. Although I didn't much care for them, our fish consisted of crappies and catfish taken from the farm ponds.

My father's standing orders for butchering the beef was to make as many steaks as possible and turn everything else into hamburger. The meat was wrapped in waxed butcher paper and stored in giant freezer chests. We had a smokehouse in which we salted our own hams. I even knew the names of the cows and pigs we ate. You can't know much more about where your food comes from than that.

It is precisely this personal food history that makes me cherish modern grocery stores and restaurants. American grocers can choose what they offer their customers from among more than 320,000 different packaged foods. As a kid, it was an enormous treat to go to the local Piggly Wiggly to buy tasty exotic prepackaged items like hot dogs, spaghetti, and Velveeta. (Incidentally, it was Piggly Wiggly that invented the novel concept that customers should be allowed to roam a store's aisles and pick out their own groceries.) And the proliferation of fine restaurants in the last two decades has been amazing.

Which brings me back to the absurd assertion that everybody should know where his or her food comes from. I knew where my food came from because it took my family a huge percentage of our time just to do the mind-numbing and back-breaking labor of raising it. Of course, we sold our surplus cows, milk, and wool for money so that we could buy incidentals like clothing, medicines, books, refrigerators, televisions, tractors, trucks, and cars. And no one hectored us about knowing where those items came from.

One of the great glories of modern life is the enormous elaboration of the division of labor and how the efficiencies gained from that division makes people much wealthier than they could otherwise be. Since we all don't have to stitch our own clothes, bake our own bread, compound our own medicines, or even cook our own meals, we are all much better off. This is why as a society we can afford to have economic niches like pet dentists and manufacturers of elastomolds for pastry chefs who specialize in baking madeleines.

And why should they care? Food today is cheap, nutritious, and safe. The last century has seen a vast improvement in food quality and safety. In millennia past, food and water were the chief sources of many deadly diseases. Consider that as recently as 1933-35, a U.S Public Health Service survey found that 5,458 children between the ages of 1 and 15 died from diarrhea and enteritis, most caused by food-borne pathogens.

By contrast, a recent survey by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control found that just 29 Americans died of food-borne illnesses between 1993 and 1997. Meanwhile, stomach cancer rates are down by 75 percent since 1950 because old-fashioned food preservation techniques like salting, pickling, and smoking have been replaced by refrigeration.

That doesn't mean people are or should be prevented from learning about where their food comes from, if that's the way they want to spend their time. Among life's greatest pleasures are fine dining and food connoisseurship. The expanding division of labor and our growing technological prowess is nurturing more and more differentiation among foods, permitting the creation and appreciation of thousands of wines, cheeses, chocolates, coffees, teas, and so forth.

I might prefer parmigiano-reggiano versus your inexplicable fondness for boursin. Or I might think that Rombauer Napa Valley Zinfandel is nectar and sniff at that swill from Australia that you quaff. Today, you can choose "slow food" (though it has some unsavory ideological baggage) over fast food, or choose both when that suits you.

Nor is there anything wrong with waking up on Saturday mornings to rush out to the local farmers market. I, too, cannot resist organic heirloom tomatoes. I buy organic not because such foods are ecologically or nutritionally superior -- they aren't -- but simply because the local lady who grows the Brandywines, Mortgage Lifters, and Yellow Pears I crave chooses that method of production. I'm glad she grows them, not least because that means that I don't have to anymore.

For those who are deluded enough to think that organic foods are nutritionally superior, the market makes the opportunity to buy them widely available, generally at a 30-percent price premium. (Ideologically motivated organic aficionados should keep in mind that organic production typically yields a third less food than other means. That means that more land is being plowed down, leaving less for forests and other wildlands.)

But there is something wrong with the puritanical notion that it's a sin to live in blithe ignorance of the ultimate sources of your nourishment. Life is too short for most people to learn how to fix their computers and cars, and too short for most to learn about food production. And that's just fine. Eating shouldn't be a moral duty; it should be a pleasure.

(Ronald Bailey, Reason's science correspondent, is the editor of "Global Warming and Other Eco Myths" and "Earth Report 2000: Revisiting the True State of the Planet.")

Copyright © 2002 United Press International
 


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: farms; food; gulla
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To: independentmind
Not only her staff. She's been passing off other people's recipes ( which she tends to butcher ), since she began cooking for her family and friends. You're right about this. :-)
61 posted on 09/29/2002 9:21:45 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: nopardons
All Martha Stewart had was an herb farm and ambition in 1983. That's when a woman friend worked for her.
62 posted on 09/29/2002 9:31:18 PM PDT by dennisw
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To: Senator Pardek
It will be a great day in America when the last "independent" farmer is on welfare.

To a certain extent they already are.

However, there will be much rueage when the last family farm is replaced by the likes of federally funded corps like ADM.

You know the outfit that just loves to shove frankenfoods down your throat when not giving plane rides to little boys to Cuba.

Me? I'll be okay. I've grown resistant to the Giros the Greeks keep trying to poison me with.

63 posted on 09/29/2002 9:40:14 PM PDT by nunya bidness
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To: dennisw
It started earlier than that ! When she was first married, she and a friend ( whom she later stabbed in the back TWICE )started to cook, from cover to cover, Julia Child's first cookbook, to impress their friends. Martha made a hash out of that and later was told to desist ( almost sued ) by Julia, for attempting to pass off one of JC's recipes as her own and in a botched manner.

I've read both books about Martha and since I live in Conn. , I've gotten to hear some local, first hand experiences of people who know her. BTW, she didn't even own an " herb farm " ; she owned a broken down house, a plot of land, and a kitchen garden, that she made her husband do all the dirtywork on. Later, she had her " friends " and family do most of the work.

When she " started " her first catering business, it was her " friend's " idea, her " friends " business, and Martha decided to join in; however, she managed to muscle / lie her way into being sole owner of that.

So much gossip and facts to spew about Martha ; so little time to type it all. Buy & read the books. LOL

64 posted on 09/29/2002 9:40:20 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: Don'tMessWithTexas
As far as meat is concerned, it is entirely possible to purchase food from local folks that are looking for a market for well raised beef, pork, lamb and chicken. We have a source for beef raised entirely on grass, fattened on organic corn. The taste is vastly superior to anything you get at the superstore.

I believe that another thing that effects the taste of beef is how the cow is slaughtered.

I was at a shooting match out in Garden City, KS, and the host was a rancher. On the last day of the match he walked up to a cow that was calmly grazing in the field, and shot it in the head. It fell over like a rock, then he cleaned it, and prepared it as a slow cooked BBQ. It was, without a doubt, the best beef I've ever tasted. He explained to me that the stress of the transportation to the slaughterhouse, and the environment of the slaugterhouse paniced the cattle, and it changed the way the meat tastes. I have no reason to disagree.

Mark

65 posted on 09/29/2002 9:50:13 PM PDT by MarkL
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To: nopardons
Thanks much for the inside stuff. I know darn well you are geographically close to the neo-hipster colony of Westport Conn. where Martha set up shop.

She (Martha Stewart) still had enough juice and buzz way back in 1983 to "attract" my friend to work (slave?) there. Martha has insatiable drive. Maybe it's made her mad but she has it.
66 posted on 09/29/2002 9:53:35 PM PDT by dennisw
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To: nopardons
The best corn is the kind you pick and shuck as the water starts to boil. Can't get that at the farmer's market. I know, because my family has been growing corn here in Ohio for over 100 years and my uncle still grows the corn that he sells at his market stand. Day old corn just don't taste the same and it doesn't matter whether it's grown in NY, CT, Wisconsin or Ohio.
67 posted on 09/29/2002 9:59:15 PM PDT by eggman
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To: dennisw
Yes, I'm quite near Westport. Even before I moved to Conn., I went to boarding school with some girls from Westport, so I have some old friends here, whose families predate the " MARTHA MOVE " and who are a source of interesting / bizzare stories.

Martha has " drive " ( if that's what you want to call it ) and it's all for the sake and enhancement of Martha ! She uses and abuses and yes, enslaves people. Your poor friend ! I hope that she didn't stay long, as worse than an indentured servant, top Mad Martha. I bet she has stories to tell. :-)

68 posted on 09/29/2002 10:02:14 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: eggman
Give me the day old or two day old corn. Give me the hog (field) corn. Overly sweet corn is just hybrid illusion . David Copperfield magic. Feed it to the crows.
69 posted on 09/29/2002 10:03:50 PM PDT by dennisw
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To: eggman
How is it " day old ", since I can pick and buy it, down the street ?

FYI ... my brother used to grow corn in the backyard, on Long Island, at our summer house, when we were kids. I know what fresh corn tatses like, as well as store bought. Get off your high horse, dear; not everyone, not even " city slickers " , have to buy " old " corn. LOL

70 posted on 09/29/2002 10:05:26 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: nopardons
Thanks NP. Thanks for the info and I won't make an a$$ out of me-self by trying to top it! Thanks!
71 posted on 09/29/2002 10:06:14 PM PDT by dennisw
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To: dennisw
There is " sweet corn " and then there is " SWEET CORN ". FYI ... " sweet corn " has been grown for centuries ; it's the name of a certain kind of seed and NOT a hybrid .

Sheeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeesh.

72 posted on 09/29/2002 10:07:38 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: nopardons
Sheeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeesh.

But if course. Legitimate sweet corn is great and OK (to everything there is a season).

It's the hybrid sweet corns that screwed it all up with sweetness that lasted 5 days after picking. That stuff tastes like crap/

73 posted on 09/29/2002 10:14:58 PM PDT by dennisw
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To: Cicero
This comes from the Reason Foundation? The author sounds like a flat earther.

Clearly you don't know much about the Reason Foundation, nor flat earthers for that matter!

The author's point is that the market economy WORKS! That we in America today have the BEST food, with the BEST selection, at the BEST prices (adjusted for inflation, of course) and with the BEST safety and health, in history. Everything this guy says is backed up by facts....the idea that organically grown is more nutritious, better for you, etc, is pure hype: IT SIMPLY DOES NOT HAVE THE SCIENCE TO BACK IT UP. Of course our market economy allows consumers to choose--and many consumers choose organic, hence its availability...and that's just fine. Lets not go about being sentimental about good ol' "life on the farm" however... (having lived on a farm, I know).

Mr. Bailey's main point is though that in historically incredibly prosperous societies as in Western republics, 98% of us DON'T have to scratch out a living on a farm, like the vast majority have throughout history, or folks in places like Haiti or Bangladesh still do... This is the wonder of our system--that people CAN be ignorant of farm life, and get along great, just because our capitalist economy works so incredibly well.

Read anything by the late economist Julian Simon to see the irrefutable proof.

74 posted on 09/29/2002 10:20:45 PM PDT by AnalogReigns
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To: dennisw
All edible corn is hybrid.

The stuff you hang on your door at Thanksgiving is "natural." Yummmm!
75 posted on 09/29/2002 10:23:34 PM PDT by AnalogReigns
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To: dennisw
Give me the day old or two day old corn. Give me the hog (field) corn. Overly sweet corn is just hybrid illusion . David Copperfield magic. Feed it to the crows.

All sweet corn has been hybridized at some point to make it sugar enhanced. Some are just more sweet than others. But the sugars in the corn begin to convert to starches soon after the corn it picked. It doesn't matter what type of sweet corn it is.

76 posted on 09/29/2002 10:24:12 PM PDT by eggman
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To: nopardons
How is it " day old ", since I can pick and buy it, down the street ?

I didn't say you couldn't get corn that was picked the same day in the city. You can get it anywhere, and it doesn't matter where it was grown, but it does matter when it was picked. Most stores don't sell corn that was picked that same day.

77 posted on 09/29/2002 10:28:17 PM PDT by eggman
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To: dennisw
That " other " stuff, tatses like cardboard !

When I talk about " sweet corn ", I mean the for real / old fashioned / antique seed variety. :-)

78 posted on 09/29/2002 10:29:12 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: dennisw
You can't make an a$$ out of yourself ... Martha stories abound and one usually tops the last. It's a never ending source of whoops and hollers here, in her stomping grounds.

Frankly, I fail to understand how so many women got taken in by her, to begin with. Just boggles the mind !

79 posted on 09/29/2002 10:32:52 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: eggman
Most stores , where I live, as well as in Manhattan, do. I, OTOH, can just go down the street, get corn, and cook it ten minutes after I picked it. :-)
80 posted on 09/29/2002 10:36:18 PM PDT by nopardons
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