fauren

Food for Thought

  • Alton Brown
  • Avec Eric
  • Center for Science in the Public Interest
  • Chefs Collaborative
  • Chocolate & Zucchini
  • Council on the Environment of New York City
  • Eat Local Challenge
  • Eat Wild
  • Farm To Table
  • Green Edge Collaborative
  • Grist
  • I Heart Farms
  • Leite's Culinaria
  • Local Harvest
  • Michael Pollan
  • Michael Ruhlman
  • Outstanding in the Field
  • Smitten Kitchen
  • Stone Barns Center For Food and Agriculture
  • Sustainable Agriculture A-Z
  • Sustainable Table
  • The Amateur Gourmet
  • The Ethicurean
  • The Food Blog Blog
  • The GRACE Factory Farm Project
  • USDA Farmer's Market Directory

Categories

  • Appliances
  • Baking
  • Beef
  • Blogs
  • Books
  • Breakfast
  • Cheese
  • Chefs
  • Cocktails
  • Conferences/Events
  • Cookbooks
  • Dairy
  • Dessert
  • Drinks
  • Entrées
  • Family
  • Farm Bill
  • Farms
  • Farmstands/Farmer's Markets
  • Film
  • First courses
  • Fish
  • Friends
  • Fruits/Vegetables
  • Gardening
  • Grains
  • Herbs/Spices/Seasonings
  • Hors D'Oeuvres
  • Life
  • Local
  • Low GI
  • Massachusetts
  • MP3
  • Music
  • New York
  • News
  • Officially Ridiculous
  • Organic
  • Politics
  • Pork
  • Poultry
  • Recipes
  • Restaurants
  • Retail/Grocery Stores
  • Reviews
  • Sauces/Marinades
  • School
  • Science
  • Side Dishes
  • Site
  • Snacks
  • Soups/Stews
  • Technology
  • Television
  • Travel
  • Utensils/Tools
  • Vegan
  • Vegetarian
  • Wine
Subscribe to this blog's feed
Blog powered by TypePad

FishPhone!

Well, if you're unsure of buying and eating a certain fish next time you're craving seafood, Mark Bittman has a suggestion in his latest post on Bitten, his blog with the New York Times: send a text message. The Blue Ocean Institute has a service that allows you to send a text with the name of the fish in question and receive a message in return that contains the Institute's rating, along with other information about safety, population, and certification where it applies.

I'm going to try this during my grocery excursion this evening. Too bad they can't also send me a message about the guy selling me the fish... last time I went to this particular market, the fish man picked his teeth with his gloved hand just after handing me my salmon.

New York Times: Shopping for Fish
Blue Ocean Institute: FishPhone

February 12, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0)

USDA Weighs In On Cloned Meat

I was momentarily hopeful to see the headline in Wednesday's Washington Post, "USDA Recommends That Food From Clones Stay Off the Market." Then I started reading, and it turns out that recommendation is only temporary:

Bruce I. Knight, the USDA's undersecretary for marketing and regulatory programs, requested an ongoing "voluntary moratorium" to buy time for "an acceptance process" that Knight said consumers in the United States and abroad will need, "given the emotional nature of this issue."

Thanks, USDA. That's awful sweet.

More disturbing, though, is the fact that meat from the offspring of cloned animals has apparently been on the market for quite some time, despite a request from the FDA not to enter these animals into the food chain. No particular surprise that it wasn't made public, I suppose, since many proponents of cloned meat don't even want to label the stuff that will legitimately enter the marketplace.

I remain highly skeptical that meat and milk from cloned animals pose no more a health threat than those from non-cloned animals, but that issue aside, it disturbs me to no end when consumers are not given the choice to know what they are buying and eating. Sure, farms that don't raise cloned animals could theoretically go the route of producers of non-GMO foods and label their meat and dairy "non-cloned," but why on earth should that burden befall the people that are not doing it?

Well on that note, it's the end of the work day. I think I will not stay at my office any longer.

January 18, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Déjà Moo

Good morning, world.

And what a wonderful day it is, because today! Today it's officially safe to eat meat from cloned animals in the United States.

The European Union's Food Safety Agency made its announcement to this effect this past Friday, with the Food and Drug Administration expected to follow suit shortly thereafter. Well, the Washington Post has obtained a copy of the FDA's report, which has not yet been officially released, and it indeed draws the conclusion that meat from cloned pigs, cows, and goats is no less safe to eat than meat from their non-cloned counterparts. That is all they are at liberty to conclude, however:

"Moral, religious and ethical concerns . . . have been raised," the agency notes in a document accompanying the report. But the risk assessment is "strictly a science-based evaluation," it reports, because the agency is not authorized by law to consider those issues.

Like Bonnie over at the Ethicurean, I'm kind of horrified that these conclusions were drawn after mere months of study. The FDA research is based on an inconsistent pool of animals, and because it is so difficult to determine what will actually predict the safety of food from cloned animals, the FDA is just going with what's (only kind of) worked so far:

...agency scientists decided to use the same simple but effective standard used by farmers since the dawn of agriculture: If a farm animal appears in all respects to be healthy, then presume that food from that animal is safe to eat.

Somehow, I'm not reassured... E. coli, anyone? Added bonus: as of now, when that cloned meat starts hitting the grocery shelves, it will not be required to be labeled as such, à la the current guidelines for genetically modified foods.

Though the few articles I've looked at this morning haven't really touched on this, the only point I can see in cloning animals for food is to give cloning companies business and boost meat production in the States, like we need it. Is that so crazy, or am I missing something? Well, count me among the folks who would rather eat meat from a known farm upstate once every couple of days than have cloned meat from who knows where for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

New York Times: Cloned Animals Safe to Eat, FDA Concludes
Washington Post: FDA Says Clones Are Safe For Food
Washington Post: Animal Cloning: A Risk Assessment (excerpts from the FDA report)
The Ethicurean: FDA approves food from cloned animals

January 15, 2008 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

Farming on the Y-Axis

On my way to class this afternoon, I was listening to an interview with Dr. Dickson Despommier, a professor at Columbia's Department of Environmental Health Sciences, on the Leonard Lopate show.  Despommier is doing work on vertical farming, an agricultural model for an increasingly populated world with increasingly limited resources.  From the abstract to the Vertical Farm Essay:

Over the next 50 years, the human population is expected to rise to at least 8.6 billion, requiring an additional 109 hectares to feed them using current technologies. That quantity of farmland is no longer available. Thus, alternative strategies for obtaining an abundant and varied food supply without encroachment into the few remaining functional ecosystems must be seriously entertained. If traditional farming could be replaced by constructing urban food production centers - vertical farms - then a long-term benefit would be the gradual repair of many of the world’s damaged ecosystems through the systematic abandonment of farmland.

Some upsides to the initiative hold a lot of appeal (cutting down on fossil fuels, converting abandoned property) while others seem just a little far-fetched at this point (we can't go to the moon or to Mars until we know how to farm indoors on Earth), and, as with any innovation, it's probably not out of the question for some drawbacks to reveal themselves in time.  But on the whole I have to say I'm intrigued, and I'll be really curious to see if this or something like it comes to fruition in the coming years.

January 30, 2007 | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

Food, Ethics & the Environment on the Web

I'm happy to report that the webcasts of the Food, Ethics & the Environment conference sessions are finally up on the Princeton WebMedia site for your listening pleasure.  I would particularly recommend the presentation given by Paul Shapiro of the Humane Society in Session III and the entirety of Session IV, which was a pair of talks given by Michael Pollan and Bob Langert, the Vice President of Corporate Citizenship at MacDonald's (quite a pairing, to say the least). 

If you listen to no other part of the latter, I would suggest at least skipping to the Q&A at the end, beginning right at minute 58.  Mr. Langert, to whom I give much credit just for being willing to speak to a roomful of people who probably haven't patronized MacDonald's in years precisely for ethical reasons, was put to the test, and the back and forth between him, Pollan, and the conference attendees was unlike much I've ever experienced: entertaining, frustrating, tense, and engaging.  (Mr. Langert makes reference to the MacDonald's corporate responsibility report in his talk, and it can be found here.)

Enjoy.

Food, Ethics & the Environment webcast
(no permalink available; search for November 16 and 17, 2006)

 

December 08, 2006 | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

My Photo

About

Love

  • Add to Technorati Favorites

Recent Posts

  • Vote for a Victory Garden at the White House!
  • A 50-Year Farm Bill
  • Acorn Squash with Wheatberry and Cremini Mushroom Stuffing
  • Right. Let's try this again.
  • Runaway Summer! and Fava Bean Spread with Bitter Greens
  • Quinoa Salad with Spring Onions, Tomato, and Feta
  • Cherry Almond Chocolate Chunk Ice Cream
  • Celebrating Our Independence with Gran Dan's Bar-B-Que Sauce
  • Mark Bittman's Picnic Picks
  • Garlic Scape Deviled Eggs

Archives

  • January 2009
  • December 2008
  • October 2008
  • August 2008
  • July 2008
  • June 2008
  • May 2008
  • April 2008
  • March 2008
  • February 2008

More...