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Environment

Pollan: Nutrition 'Science' Has Hijacked Our Meals -- and Our Health

By Terrence McNally, AlterNet. Posted April 3, 2008.


Much of what lines supermarket aisles is not food. It's merely foodlike, and it's making us sick.
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Why would anyone need to write a book called In Defense of Food? If we can afford it and can get our hands on it, we eat food several times a day. Or do we?

According to Michael Pollan, most of what Americans consume isn't food. He calls it "edible foodlike substances." He also says that the way we consume it is not really eating. It's something we do pretty unconsciously as we work or drive or watch TV.

We all know about the U.S. epidemic of obesity and diabetes over the past 25 years, on top of the steady rise of chronic diseases over the past hundred. Paradoxically, this happens just as Americans and the food industry are ever more aware of nutrition. What's going on here?

Pollan claims that in the Western diet, good old food has been replaced by nutrients, mom's good advice by nutritional experts, common sense by confusion, and for most, a relatively good diet by a bad and dangerous one. The book in which he makes all these claims and advises us simply to "Eat Food. Not too much. Mostly plants," has topped the New York Times bestseller list.

Michael Pollan's previous books include The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals, named one of the ten best books of 2006 by the New York Times and the Washington Post, and The Botany of Desire. Pollan is a contributing writer to the New York Times Magazine and a Knight Professor of Journalism at U.C. Berkeley.

Terrence McNally: How did you grow to focus on plants and then food?

Michael Pollan: Well all my work really begins in the garden. I was a very passionate gardener beginning at age 8, although I fell away from it for a few years. In the 1980s I was living in New York and took up gardening at a weekend house in northwestern Connecticut. I got very absorbed in the garden as a place to look at our relationship to nature.

Like a lot of Americans, my understanding of nature and our relationship to it was shaped by Emerson and Thoreau and Melville and Whitman. When I actually started to garden, I realized all those ideas about the romance of nature were distinctly unhelpful. Thoreau's love of wilderness and worship of the wild really doesn't equip you when the pests come and destroy your crops, when the woodchuck attacks your broccoli.

I got into trouble following their philosophy. I didn't have a fence, for example. I thought a fence was too alienating from the natural world. I got into a war with a woodchuck -- just like Bill Murray in Caddyshack -- until I was defoliating my property and pouring gasoline down a woodchuck burrow. I was like William Westmoreland in Vietnam, willing to destroy the village to save it.

I realized then that the garden was a very interesting place to examine our relationship to the natural world. Traditionally, when Americans want to think about nature, we picture the wilderness, we go camping, we go to Yosemite. But nature is happening in our homes, in our gardens, in our lawns, and on our plates.

TMN: At that point you were writing about other things?

MP: I was an editor at Harper's Magazine, and I began writing a series of essays about what was happening to me in my garden, my woodchuck war, my dad's battle with the neighbors over his front lawn. These kinds of issues became my first book, Second Nature.

I started looking at our relationship to plants and animals, and at drugs, since a lot of drugs are plants that change our consciousness.

TMN: And that shows up in The Botany of Desire?

MP: Yes. When I was working on Botany of Desire, I visited industrial farms in Idaho to see how industrial agriculture works, and I was shocked. I was absolutely floored by these vast monocultures, the amount of pesticides that are used, the fact that the farmers are afraid to go into their fields for five days after they spray for fungus, because they know how neurotoxic this stuff is.

TMN: Stuff which will later end up on our plates?

MP: In fact, they would often have a little patch of organic potatoes by the house for themselves, because they could not eat the food coming out of their farms.

I suggest they are more irresponsible than they are. Over time the potatoes leech out the worst chemicals, so you can't just dig industrial potatoes and eat them right away, or you'll get too heavy a load of residues.

I also visited organic farms and realized that there were alternatives. People were having great success growing organic on a fairly large scale in Idaho with a completely different mind-set. Not monoculture being the key fact. Heavy rotations, poly-cropping.

When I realized that eating is our most profound engagement with the natural world, I got very excited to take a hard look at the food chain that we're a part of.

What happens on our plates dictates the composition of species in the world, which ones we favor, which ones we don't -- the reason there are plenty of cows and not too many wolves left. It's the way we've shaped the landscape in terms of deforesting it for our fields. What we choose to grow and not grow has a huge bearing on our health and our happiness.

TMN: You point out a paradox. As people talk more about nutrition, food becomes less healthy.

MP: It's not a coincidence. We've stuffed our brains with biochemistry. Ordinary people in the street are talking about antioxidants, cholesterol, fiber, polyphenols, phytochemicals, all this has become the language of food, while the food is disappearing. If you read packages in stores, it's all about nutrients.

This is an ideology: nutritionism -- an ism, not a science. The ideology has four premises.

The first is that nutrients are what matters, not food. See that you're getting enough of the good ones and avoiding the bad ones.

Second, like any other ism, it divides the world into good and evil.

TMN: There's always a good nutrient and a bad one, and when one is up the other is down.

MP: I remember my mother dutifully giving us all margarine instead of butter. She would say, "Some day they're going to figure out that butter is actually better for you than margarine," and we thought she was nuts. In fact, it turned out that margarine was lethal and butter is fine.

TMN: She was still feeding it to you suspecting that would happen...?

MP: The authority of mothers was essentially destroyed by the food industry. The $32 billion a year in marketing muscle out there has undercut culture's role in determining what we eat, and culture is a fancy word for your mom.

TMN: Just to emphasize that number, that's not the food industry, that's the food marketing industry.

MP: That's advertising, studying us, packaging, figuring out how to get us to eat more.

TMN: Food industry folks say, "We don't think we should regulate this sort of thing because Americans believe in individualism and free choice, but we're all for public education." So maybe we'll throw $100 million of education up against that $32 billion of marketing.

MP: $100 million is one snack food's annual budget. The entire USDA/FDA effort to educate people about food equals one chip. [laughs] There's no contest. They control the information about food.

Third premise: the whole point of eating is to advance or ruin your health, and that's what food is about.

Americans accept that idea, but it's actually quite strange. If you go to other countries, you remember very quickly that people have eaten for a great many reasons other than health. They eat for pleasure, they eat for community and communion, they eat to express their identity. And these are all equally legitimate reasons to eat.

The fourth premise is, of course, that the nutrient is the key unit in food.

Nutrients are invisible. No one's ever seen, tasted or smelled a nutrient. So you need experts to guide you in your food choices. You need scientists. You need journalists. It's like a religion. If what matters is invisible and inaccessible to you directly, you need a priesthood. And now we have a food priesthood.

And we have the health claims on the packages. We have the nutritionists that we listen to on radio and television. And we have lost any confidence in our mothers or in ourselves, in our instincts to determine what is good food. It's understandable that we would not trust our instincts, because so many of the foods now lie to us with artificial flavors and sweeteners and fats.

In this book -- by taking apart the science -- I'm trying to show you that we can't rely on food scientists to feed us. Their advice hasn't been that good. Not out of any evil intent, but to put it charitably, nutrition is a very young science. They've only been at it for about 170 years. They may get better.

The whole history of nutrition science is one missed nutrient after another. They would design a baby formula with macronutrients. Somehow the babies didn't thrive. Or you'd send men on long sea voyages with plenty of carbohydrate, protein and fat -- and they still got sick.

So then we discovered we need vitamins, but baby formula still wasn't successful. What was missing? Well, it turns out omega 3 fatty acids were missing.

That's the whole history: Every decade or two discovering another level of absolutely critical nutrients that we've previously overlooked.

TMN: Science does get better at pulling things apart and finding the single nutrients, not necessarily better at actually delivering something that's good for us.

You've got just three basic recommendations: "Eat food. Mostly plants. Not too much."

But you also lay out corollaries from those to navigate our way through those big three. One of them is: "Avoid anything your great grandmother wouldn't recognize." Our mothers and grandmothers have been around as things have gotten cloudy. How did that begin? What led to this crazy upside down reality?

MP: I think it's built into the nature of the food industry and the economics of selling food. It's very hard to make money selling normal unprocessed foods. Ask any farmer who's growing broccoli or oats; it's a very hard way to make money.

The more you process the food, the more profitable it is. If I go to the supermarket, I can buy a pound of organic oats for 79 cents. Now that's a lot of oats, and nobody's making much money. But if you turn it into Cheerios, suddenly you have a brand. You've got your little doughnut shape, you've got an ad campaign, and suddenly you're charging four bucks for a few ounces of oats.

Then you come up with a Honey Nut Cheerio Cereal Bar with a layer of artificial milk in the middle. Now you've got a convenience food that's very much your own, because you've got this special formula to make your fake milk. And kids can eat them in the car or on the way to school. Now you're charging $10 or $20 for a few penny's worth of oats. That's the gist of the food industry. That's the economic imperative.

TMN: So, as usual, follow the money.

I was in Battlecreek, Michigan, a couple of years ago -- the home of Kellogg's. Some local women told me cereal sales were way down. I asked why, and they said, "Because you can't eat them in the car." Thus your cereal bars.

MP: Exactly right. And now we have cereal straws.

The problem is that the more you process food, the less nutritious it is. So the economic imperative takes you in one direction, while the biological imperative is saying, "Leave it alone." There's nothing better for you for breakfast than plain oats. Cook them yourself.

To counter that, you need to make a health claim for your processed product. So you fortify it. You throw in whatever the hot nutrient of the moment is.

TMN: When you process it, you remove some of the value and nutrients. That's why you have to --

MP: -- add them back in.

TMN: You purify, you process, you refine. Then you add things back in and make claims for what you've added back in.

MP: As if you've done a big favor.

TMN: If the stuff that our great grandmother was putting on the table gives us what we need and tastes good, why have we fallen for this?

MP: A lot of reasons: marketing and convenience. We want to be liberated from the drudgery of cooking, or at least we've been convinced that we do.

TMN: And even the drudgery of eating.

MP: That's right. I mean as Wendell Berry said back in the '70s, if the food industry could profitably digest your food for you, they would. They would reach down your throat and mush it up for you. They want the meal in a pill. That's the ultimate dream of the food industry. They have to show value added, and the value they've added most successfully is convenience. Liberating women from the kitchen, cooking for us, chewing for us.

TMN: I often say that this civilization is going to die by convenience.

How did you come up with your three rules, and what's underneath them?

MP: I tried to boil everything down as much as I could, and realized I could say this whole thing in seven words. I give it away on the cover.

Eat food seems obvious, but how do you distinguish the food from the edible foodlike substances that are masquerading as food? So I spend 14 pages defining food in this book, which is something that really shouldn't need to be done.

TMN: If you'd told someone 100 years ago --

MP: -- I'm going to write a bestseller telling people how to eat real food -- it's a crazy idea to contemplate.

I have a bunch of rules to help you find the actual food. One is, "Don't eat anything your great grandmother wouldn't recognize as food." That's kind of an algorithm. Carry her with you in your imagination as you're rolling down the aisles of the supermarket. Would she know what to do with portable yogurt tubes? Would she recognize the ingredients in it? And the answer is no, she wouldn't. That's not really food. Yogurt is a very simple, wonderful food. It's milk in a bacterial culture. So what are those other 15 ingredients doing there?

Another rule: "Shop the perimeter of the supermarket." That's where you'll find the foods that have been least fiddled with: fresh produce, meat, fish, dairy products. What's really going to get you in trouble with added fat, sugar and salt, is the stuff with the long shelf life.

You'll be even better off if you leave the supermarket entirely and do your shopping in a farmer's market. That's food your great grandmother would recognize. There might be some exotic vegetables, but basically she knows what that stuff is, and she knows what to do with it.

TMN: Okay -- "Not too much."

MP: The amount we're eating is a big part of our problem, especially because we're so sedentary. It's not enough to tell people to eat less. I try to find other cultures and cultural rules that would govern appetite. The Japanese in Okinawa, and this is true of the Chinese too, have a cultural rule that you eat until you're four-fifths full. How do you know when you're 80 percent full? Well, if you just stop before you're completely full, that would be huge progress.

TMN: About eight years ago, I noticed I weighed about a dozen pounds more than I ever had. My metabolism must have changed with age. I decided to simply be more conscious about when I wasn't hungry anymore, and in a little over a year I lost 25 pounds. I've regained some so that I'm back where I want to be.

MP: Americans are particularly driven by visual cues in their eating. Psychologists have compared us to the French. Ask an American, when do you stop eating? And they'll say, when the plate or the bag is empty. If you ask a European, they'll say when I feel full.

We also eat too fast. It takes the stomach about 20 minutes to notify the brain that it's had enough. But, if you finish your meal in ten minutes, that will never happen. Slowing down is a very important part of eating better.

TMN: So not too much and not too fast.

MP: The slower you eat, the less you will eat -- even if you're spending a lot of time. The French get more food experience on fewer calories. Spending time with food, enjoying food, savoring food, thinking about it, anticipating it.

What do you really want? Do you want calories, or do you want food experience? I think most of us would say we want food experience. The two things aren't necessarily correlated -- except in the mind of the American consumer, who's been taught that food is about quantity rather than quality.

TMN: "Mostly plants."

MP: Especially leaves. Scientists may disagree on what's so good about plants, but they do agree that they're probably really good for you. Also, by eating a plant-based diet, you'll be consuming far fewer calories, since plant foods -- except seeds -- are typically less "energy dense" than other things you might eat.

TMN: I want to finish with a big question. Over the last few weeks, I've had the privilege to interview Lester Brown, founder of WorldWatch, about his book, Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization, a big-picture look at energy and environment. And Nobel Peace Prize winner, Mohammed Yunus, about creating a world without poverty through social business. And Laura Flanders, about the power of the grass roots in the presidential campaign.

All of these share something: They look at systems and relationships, at bottom-up and local rather than top-down and mass market. It makes me hopeful that all this stuff is percolating, and it seems that it's about a worldview. Rather than food, I could be having this conversation with someone about the American healthcare system where we focus on symptoms, we look for magic bullets, we suffer with side effects ...

MP: That's a great example. The food issue and the healthcare issue are seen as separate. Of course, they're not. When I was a boy in 1960, we spent 18 percent of our national income on food -- twice as much as we do today -- and only 5 percent on healthcare. Today it's flipped. We spend 16 or 17 percent of our income on healthcare and only 9 percent on food. The less money we've been willing to spend for food, the more we've settled for processed, highly refined, cheap, fast food, the more our healthcare problems have escalated.

TMN: That statistic is even more amazing considering the fact that we eat out much more than we used to.

MP: Half our food dollars.

TMN: You point out that we've learned to increase yields, to make energy and calories cheaper.

MP: We're using the original solar technology, photosynthesis, making food from sunlight, but we've mistakenly focused on fossil fuel. We're taking 10 calories of fossil fuel energy to produce one calorie of food energy. It doesn't have to be that way.

No question about it, there's value in seeing things as systems -- seeing food as a system and your body as a system and these two things interacting. And learning to think ecologically, asking where did the energy come from that's feeding me? Of course, thinking ecologically is not strictly about the environment -- it's about the whole system in which we live.

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See more stories tagged with: health, food, diet, eating, whole foods, nutritionism, nutrition science

Interviewer Terrence McNally hosts Free Forum on KPFK 90.7FM, Los Angeles (streaming at kpfk.org).

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I don't even need to read this article
Posted by: davesilvan on Apr 3, 2008 1:35 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Avoid processed foods at all costs. I prefer to eat fresh vegetables, fresh meat, fresh poultry, none of which contain 'partially hydrogenated soybean oil,' 'high fructose corn syrup,' or 'blue #3.'

Processed foods are full of fillers and chemicals, which are cheaper for large companies to buy and therefore lower the bottom line of what that 'food' costs.

I do have a soft spot for Pepsi cola, and while I've greatly limited it's intake in the last few years, my mother is more or less addicted to it and always has a bottle on hand. Amazingly, when I read the label, it actually included 'sugar' instead of high fructose corn syrup, which has it's own woes; studies have shown that is is the high fructose corn syrup which, even in diet colas which contain no calories, still contributes to the expanding waist-line. (I feel sorry for my sister, who is overweight and drinks nothing but Pepsi One, which claims to only have 1 calorie per can. Of course, no one can tell her that even though it only contains 1 calorie, she's not losing any weight, and sadly, the only true solution is exercise.)

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» RE: super collider lawsuit Posted by: abbadon2007
Excellent!
Posted by: armorypk on Apr 3, 2008 1:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But without at least some government oversight and regulation, the priorities of the food mega-corporations will always be profit first, the health of their customers second.
Here's a simple first step that the FDA can take that will instantly improve the quality of our food and positively impact the health of all Americans:
Ban the use of high-fructose corn syrup as a food additive!

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» RE: xcellent! Posted by: donl51
» RE: xcellent! Posted by: zorba1
» RE: xcellent! Posted by: armorypk
» RE: xcellent! Posted by: peacefullaim
The Root Cause
Posted by: BlackbirdHighway on Apr 3, 2008 3:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You need to get to the root cause. People didn't just wake up one day and decide they wanted fake food. No consumer demanded that polysorbate-80 get added to their favorite foods.

The root cause is that these fake foods are made by big corporations. Giant corporations have taken over our governments and our lives. They have far too much control . In a democracy, the people decide what's right and wrong, but big corporations are deciding that for us.

Over time corporations have accumulated power and rights that were never explicitely given to them. Corporate "personhood" must be reversed. don't expect to see that on the platform of either Democrats or Republicans, Both parties are owned completely by the corporations.

Watch the documentary, "The Corporation" to see what I'm talking about.

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» RE: The Root Cause Posted by: Drume
» RE: The Root Cause Posted by: e rice
» RE: The Root Cause Posted by: Drume
» RE: The Root Cause Posted by: e rice
» RE: The Root Cause Posted by: peacefullaim
» RE: The Root Cause Posted by: manatthewindow
Grandmother Said...
Posted by: tnrider on Apr 3, 2008 3:37 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One of my Grandmother's frequently heard sayings was "You either spend money at the grocery store, or you spend money at the doctor's office." And of course she was NOT talking about processed foods being the majority of the diet, although she did have a few processed items like cereal around the house.

I find that I have even fewer processed items around than she did. Like women of her generation, she used margarine and canned goods, while I stick to butter and fresh veggies. Attitudes can change, but marketing must make it incredibly difficult for adults that have children to avoid junk like "cereal straws."

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» RE: Grandmother Said... Posted by: henderson
Huh?
Posted by: Cowardly_lion on Apr 3, 2008 3:58 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's funny how this is because I remember back a few years ago when Burger King first released their onion rings I peeled the breading off and took a look at the "onion." It was a paste! I showed it to my father and said out loud to him in the store, "they're feeding us onion paste!" He laughed and said, "no that must be what happens to it when you deep fry it."

He'd make a great spokesman for a large corporation.

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» Funny... I've never seen that... Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: Huh? Posted by: Cooltruth
In Mexico
Posted by: CommentCulture on Apr 3, 2008 4:02 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Young people call American food "Frankenfood." It started with American genetically manufactured corn. Corn is the most basic staple of the Mexican diet. But American corn is called "Frankencorn."

I'll spare you all the stories about what this corn does in your bodies. But just let me say it is very grotesque!

Dont eat ANY Frankenfood !

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» RE: In Mexico Posted by: fringedweller
buy local
Posted by: Fat Man at the Buffet Line on Apr 3, 2008 4:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
you get what you pay for.

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Exercise and don't eat junk food, period
Posted by: Bobsays on Apr 3, 2008 4:25 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My cousin made a fortune on processed food: she is a big old feminist role model.But she is fat because she eats what she makes. My sister-in-law sucks on 'diet' cokes all day long. She is fat and gets fatter by the day (I feel sorry for her skinny husband - she once looked like a hot Swedish woman).

I always stick with fresh meat, veggies/fruit, and grains. My cupboard barely has anything that is processed.

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Processed not cheap either
Posted by: Allstar Cookie on Apr 3, 2008 4:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The irony, is that you have to pay for all of that "processing".......and then you eventually pay with your own health.

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» RE: Processed not cheap either Posted by: bittershaman
Food contains thousands of nutrients
Posted by: PaulK on Apr 3, 2008 4:58 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For example, mixed carotenoids are better for you than one carotenoid called "Vitamin A". When you get a package (that has been sitting on a store shelf for 2 months), it now lists only a very few nutrients on the package. So, the few people who read the label can monitor two to ten variables.

Most people don't know what they're getting.

Genetically modified food, where a pesticide production gene is inserted into corn or where a fish gene is inserted into strawberries, adds new chemicals to the food at the source. We don't know what dozens or hundreds of organic chemicals the fish DNA produces in a strawberry. The fish has been tuned to hundreds of millions of years of immunological response to various threats to the fish. How does all of that inner firepower interact with the thousands of chemicals produced by the strawberry?

As for the pesticide embedded in the corn, the consumer doesn't know and the multinational who made the corn doesn't care. Certain sensitive people eat the corn and have medical reactions to the pesticides.

Worse, the Frankencorn pollen doesn't stay on one field's corn. It sometimes blows over to the organic farm across the road, contaminating the seed corn with pesticide genes.

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What's happened to eating?
Posted by: Pau on Apr 3, 2008 5:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why is it that some cultures find a pleasure in the basic life act of eating, enjoying the flavours and textures and feeling that in the act they are experiencing one of the basic pleasures of life and yet others solely feel the need to stuff something in their mouths, in the process destroying that sense for choice of foods that millions of years of evolution, trial and error have given us?
Why is it that some people prefer to follow a usually miscontructed sentence made by an imagologue, to those years of experience? Don't they realize that those sentences are constructed purely for the sole purpose of increasing the profits of corporations?

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Dumb and dumber
Posted by: Miguel Sastre on Apr 3, 2008 5:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sadly, most people select their "food" based on appearance, taste, and texture. Equally as lamentable is the act of eating for recreation instead of looking at food as fuel.

Blame it on a lot of things, but since the advent of television people read less, exercise less, and consume much, much more - of just about everything. Critical thinking has been replaced with advertisements full of misleading statements and false promises, marketing ethics have disappeared as quickly as Wal-Mart appeared!

Eat less and stop buying junk!

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» RE: Dumb and dumber Posted by: plantsareneat
» RE: Dumb and dumber Posted by: e rice
A long history
Posted by: GPFrank on Apr 3, 2008 5:05 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Processing, chemical conversion of food has a long history.
Take barley and rye, first converted to beer, a slow process. But beer, ale and especially stout from oats as brewed before 1950 is fundamentally nutritious. But with the invention of the still, what happened?
As the mountaineer said, "I don't eat anything I can drink"
But he and Schenley's make good money on it.
But this stuff has no vitamins, to say the least.
Let's go to salt pork: the great assistant in sea voyages allowing spreading of civilization, and all its amenities along the globe. But then salt pork went to smoking it using saltpeter and everybody knows the old joke about what saltpeter does. Birth control at the nozzle.
About wine, allowing water consumption without
cholera, the subject of a great Biblical miracle.What they do with wine nowadays is too much for this small space. But then what is the meaning of the "water into wine" story except as an old Presbyterian said to me, that fresh spring water is the greatest delight?

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» RE: A long history Posted by: Shey
If the Western diet is so bad...
Posted by: Drume on Apr 3, 2008 5:06 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree with most points of what Michael Pollan says. However, my question is, if our diet is so bad, why is it that we are not all dying at, say, age 55 or 65 even? I know we used to, back when we smoked a ton, pollution was worse, we drank a lot more, and so on...but now we don't. We die mostly, for the least well off starting at 69 and then for the most well-off, we die at about 78 or 79. So that is my question.

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» Good point. My grandparents... Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: If the Western diet is so bad... Posted by: kitchencoach
» RE: lies, damned lies, and statistics Posted by: nochicagoboys
» my typo Posted by: e rice
» RE: lies, damned lies, and statistics Posted by: photon's feather
» RE: If the Western diet is so bad... Posted by: bittershaman
» to answer your question...we will... Posted by: undrgrndgirl
High fructose corn syrup, fungicides, pesticides, and antibacterials...
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Apr 3, 2008 5:29 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The high fructose corn syrup is an industrial product itself, and using it as your main carbohydrate source appears to be just as unhealthy as eating margarine, as it promotes obesity and type II diabetes.

That's why people who move here from other countries start developing obesity problems that were unheard of in their own countries.

The fungicides and antibacterials are added as the food is processed to increase shelf life, and pesticide residues are left over from the industrial agricultural system.

The solution is not to buy any processed foods, to buy direct from organic farmers whenever possible, and also to get all the sugary junk food banned from our nation's public schools - just like tobacco manufacturers, junk food producers know that children who are hooked early remain lifelong consumers (even if their lives aren't so long).

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Don't worry. These junk snacks will be outta here once Peak Oil kicks in.
Posted by: maxpayne on Apr 3, 2008 5:30 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Before the age of oil, this kind of junk food was unimaginable. It's takes loads of crude oil to manufacture this shit inside and out let alone transport it.

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» Amen Posted by: xenocyd
It's not personal, just strictly business
Posted by: snowhound on Apr 3, 2008 5:31 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Corporations are motivated by profits not your health. Whether it's food, vaccines, or drugs..whatever, it's all about the money. You can not rely on any information from government agencies or mainstream news sources for truth. You have to use critical thinking and ultimately your own common sense.

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"Death By Supermarket" Nancy DeVille (Barricade Books, 2007)
Posted by: Woodpecker on Apr 3, 2008 5:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sorry to disabuse Mr Pollan, but I'm WAY ahead of him. May I recommend the above tome for his perusal!

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ever wonder?
Posted by: bomec on Apr 3, 2008 6:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ever wonder why the French and other Europeans have such wonderful, tasty, healthful cuisine and appear slimmer and healthier in all respects than Americans? Duh! Every little village, and not just in Mediterranean countries but Northern Europe and England as well, has a weekly market selling locally grown produce, meats and dairy. Not just in summer but year round, the French are able to buy good fresh food that has not been injected with preservatives and food color because it has had to travel hundreds or even thousands of miles to get to the grocery store. French bread is without question the best in the world because it is made fresh twice daily and doesn't last more than a day. Why? Absolutely no preservatives and it is not wrapped in plastic and shipped from elsewhere.

Americans suffer from a Candide-like naivete, which is really a type of arrogance. They have been fed the fable from their youth that they live in the best of all possible countries. Everything here, they are conditioned to believe, is the best--health care, nutrition, housing, economy, standard of living, you name it. We are the best.

NOT!

Open up your eyes and your minds to see the wider world and you will see clearly that in many respects we are lagging far behind the Europeans, health care and nutrition being two major areas where we have a lot to learn from our friends across the pond.

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» oh, that was just cruel! Posted by: e rice
» RE: ever wonder? Posted by: walldodger1969
» RE: ever wonder? Posted by: blitzmesser
» RE: ever wonder? Posted by: Spot
» RE: ever wonder? Posted by: AlineSE
» RE: ever wonder? Posted by: roxz67
Splitting hairs.
Posted by: ShrubtheWarcriminal on Apr 3, 2008 6:32 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ok, some may think I am splitting hairs here but it is NOT science that is responsible per say for the issues in this article, but corporate fascism. For some perspective:

Science: the STUDY of the physical and natural world and phenomena, especially by using systematic observation and experiment.

Facism: any movement, ideology, or attitude that favors dictatorial government, centralized control of private enterprise, repression of all opposition, and extreme nationalism

OUR government is run by corporations, is becoming more dictatorial by the day, more centralized, repressive and un-amerikkkan to even suggest that we eat more natural foods (Article: Food industry folks say "We don't think we should regulate this sort of thing because Americans believe in individualism and free choice, but we're all for public education.".)

Science just wants to find out things. Applied science is in the control of corporations, who just pimp the science and/or scientist. Science is neither good nor bad; it is how you decide to use it.

I tried to make these clarifications because there is a concerted effort today to demonize, and destroy science in its purist form. But of course when the corporate fascists NEED it to make a buck science is good and even can serve as a cover for their greed. (“The scientist made me do it!”)

One other point. It seems to me as I look around me with a lot of fractured families and people having kids later in life that most people will have to imagine their grandmothers let alone their GREAT grandmothers. I doubt very few even met their Greats, let alone know what they experienced.

Great article otherwise.

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you are what you eat
Posted by: roxz67 on Apr 3, 2008 6:40 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have been a server and catered for many years while going through school, I have been witness to how Americans eat. I worked for many types of restaurants through out NYstate. I noticed that most Americans freak out if their food tastes like something.......They usually call it too spicey. They all claim that it will irritate their stomach...but when I see them gorp down that sausage or 2lb prime rib I wonder about their delicate stomach. I have passed trays at many parties and get to see face to face many reactions to the( very good) food I was serving which at the time was contemporary fusion dishes ( using ethnic flavors and foods but dumbing it down a bit for American tastes, or lack of, all prepare by CIA graduate chefs.) The maturity in which alot of those people displayed while I encouraged them to try something new was embarassing. I have had people spit things out and make horrible noises of disgust. The key word is maturity....I don't see a mature approach to food with most people. I have learned to expand my tastes in food by trying it more then once and exploring, I understand this because there was a time did not like many foods, I was not encouraged as a youngster to try new and healthy things so I did not build up a food vocabulary. Today I realize how much I would of missed out on if I never changed my ways. I see this with many people today. They would prefer to eat that boxed frozen broccoli drenched in the chemical cheese sauce rather then a chunk of fresh and healthy raw broccoli. Americans need to grow up!!! We can't eat "candy" for the rest of our lives!!!!

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» so true, so true Posted by: e rice
» it's hilarious how Posted by: AlineSE
» RE: you are what you eat Posted by: Drume
» RE: you are what you eat Posted by: e rice
» Just outta curiosity... Posted by: Cooltruth
» RE: Just outta curiosity... Posted by: roxz67
Ironically, there's another side to this story
Posted by: navy-vet on Apr 3, 2008 6:44 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To someone who's been co-manager of a health food co-op in new York City, and a historian, there's a flip side to this story. The irony is that 100 years ago it was the unregulated FRESH FOOD industry that was causing serious illness and death. And it was the processed food industry, starting with the absolute necessity of pasteurized milk, that began the vast increase in human longevity--which has almost doubled since 1880.

So, there's nothing wrong with nutrition, dietetics or processing, as long as it doesn't get captured by the Multinationals for their Bottom Line. There could be no problems with food additives as long as these are actually nutritious and not doing harm--which means HEAVY REGULATION AND OVERSIGHT BY CONSUMER-FRIENDLY WATCHDOG AGENCIES. I remember years ago reading a book ("The Nuts Among the Berries"), a sympathetic study of the much-maligned leaders of the first wave of nutritional concern in the US, around 1890-1910. The detractors were conservatives in the fresh food industry (organically grown in those pre-chemical days) at all levels. Ordinary farmers were feeding the public crops poisoned by highly polluted human and animal runoff, unwashed farm laborers, and rats and mice in silos laving fecal matter all over the stored crops. Unregulated grocery stores cared little about cleanliness, vermin, or dating of perishables. The monopolistic meat packers, whose filthy conditions were exposed by Upton Sinclair in THE JUNGLE, had the money and funded the opposition. In fact, the entire food industry from farmers to grocers opposed careful scrutiny and regulation of what people ate and spent a lot of advertising money making fun of it. (To this day, "health nut" is a derogatory term.)

At the turn of the 20th century "health nut" encompassed vegan-ism, eaters of exclusive diets like fruit only, and also those who demanded clean food. Cleanliness required some amount of processing--if only to wash it under sterile conditions. The struggle for clean nutritious food was part of the anti-monopoly, strict regulation, radical wing of the Progessive era that led to creationof Pure Food & Drug laws and the FDA. It was led by two men of Battle Creek, MI, Will Keith Kellogg who founded Kellogg's Food and his brother, Dr John Harvey Kellogg. Both were vegetarians, peace activists, and promoters of social justice causes. They were called "health nuts" by the food industry, but they had the last laugh since both brothers lived to age 91. Will, an inventor and a highly regarded anti-trust lawyer, refused to leave his children more than tiny legacies, giving his vast fortune to social work and charity. He said he expected his kids to work, not be lazy heirs. (Can you imagine the Bush family saying that?) Will Kellogg invented processed dry cereal, and at first it was used exclusively in Dr John Kellogg's vegetarian health sanitarium, then caught on by word-of-mouth. I remember the book emphasized that around 1900 too many children ate no breakfast whatsoever (my parents were of that generation)--a highly unhealthy life style--and went off to school hungry. That was because town and city families no longer grew food, in poor families both parents worked and factory-working parents had no time to prepare a farm breakfast with eggs, even if they could afford eggs that weren't rotten, which most couldn't. Kellogg's Wheat Flakes and Corn Flakes, safe, clean, inexpensive and providing numerous nutrients, rapidly became popular.

The point is--it's not fresh food OR processed food that's the culprit. It's LACK OF WATCHDOG REGULATION of what goes into our food, whether pollutants, unnecessary or even dangerous chemicals, fat-makers, or questionable DNA experiments. DEregulation does nothing but promote the corporate interests. It always, invariably, harms the public!

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» Excellent comment Posted by: wheresarah
» very good points Posted by: e rice
» Thank you, good reality check Posted by: stilldreaming
» thank you for a good reality check Posted by: stilldreaming
smilingweasel
Posted by: smilingweasel on Apr 3, 2008 7:25 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a nutritionist and writer, I thoroughly enjoyed this interview, but I now don't feel the need to read the book!

I do, however, take issue with Pollan's assertion that avoiding supermerkets and buying exclusively from farmers' markets is the solution we should be selling to the general public.

The nutritional science community in the UK has finally woken up to the difference between 'food' and 'nutrients' and now tends (though not always) to make recommendations based on foods, that consumers can understand. Now we are at the stage of encouraging people to buy fresh produce, but to buy wisely, to maximise health benefit and minimise waste. This may, in some cases involve re-education and is by no-means an easy process. Farmers' markets in the UK at least, are an financially expensive option for many (myself included) and, as a shopping concept need to be approached in a different way by those of us on a budget. Once this has been achieved, then perhaps farmers' markets will become an affordable option.

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» RE: smilingweasel Posted by: macdon1
» RE: smilingweasel Posted by: Cooltruth
my mother cried to me all of her life
Posted by: bitsfick on Apr 3, 2008 7:55 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
about the poor diet she had as a child. Her diet consisted of what they could grow in the garden, home made bread and the occasional chicken. My mother will be 94 this year, and can out walk people half her age. One of the results of her belief of what constituted poor food, is that my diet as a child consisted of the worst food you can eat, large amounts beef, pork, organ meats etc, "eat that liver it is good for you" The best thing that happened to her (though she won't admit it) was her so-called poor diet.

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» 'progress' and luxury Posted by: e rice
» My parents and grandparents Posted by: Cathyc
Living like helpless children,
Posted by: wisewebwoman on Apr 3, 2008 9:36 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But without the curiosity. The great dumbing down of the sheeple, bought and paid for by Big Corp. Unquestioning as to how the food supply, the very core of life, is grown, harvested and managed.
The joy of eating is taken away. Families sit with their own little TV tables gobbling mindlessly while they absorb even more toxic sludge from the screens in front of them.
What happened to the whole social intercourse of preparing colourful, good food, mainly plants, and sharing the meal with good conversation?
Oh right, there's no time - everybody's out there working like dogs to buy more processed crap and the health care to offset its horrific effects.

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Don' worry, be happy
Posted by: willymack on Apr 3, 2008 10:14 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Only eat & drink from the Basic Four food groups: 1. tha Spam group. 2. The Chips Group. 3. The Twinkie Group, and 4. The Suds Group. Bon apitite!

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» your forgot chocolate Posted by: e rice
» Mais oui! Posted by: Cathyc
» RE: Don' worry, be happy Posted by: pizzmoe
Interesting article
Posted by: dancelady on Apr 3, 2008 11:10 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
this is an

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Interesting article
Posted by: dancelady on Apr 3, 2008 11:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
great article

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» wich one? it's a portal Posted by: stilldreaming
FDA Rules High Fructose Corn Syrup Not A Natural Substance
Posted by: bcgirl125 on Apr 3, 2008 1:30 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
According to a recent article
http://www.nutraingredients-usa.com/news/ng.asp
?n=84404-fcs-natural

It is unknown what effect this will have on its use in the food industry, but at least food manufacturers can no long make the false claim of "all natural ingredients" in products which contain this substance.

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Food Industry and Psychiatry - Weird Sisters
Posted by: Dorothee on Apr 3, 2008 2:06 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Michael Pollan is doing a great job. Food additives like monosodium glutamate (MCS) and aspartame are the major cause of obesity. John Olney, a neuroscientist, predicted the obesity epidemic. Research about these excitotoxins is mainly ignored by most of so-called experts who are either on the payroll of the food corporations or get funding from them. Dr Russell Blaylock is a rare exception. Read the Bressler Report, a damning indictment of Searle, the original producer of aspartame, and the FDA who allowed a neurotoxin to be put into food, deliberately turning a blind eye to blatant scientific fraud. Aspartame is the cause of many neurological and mental problems. MCS plays a role in Alzheimer's.
As psychiatry deliberately ignores the causes of mental illness people are drugged although a change in diet could bring about a complete recovery, even in the case of schizophrenia that can be cured with simple linseed oil, high in omega3 fatty acids that help to produce the necessary neurotransmitters.

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Food Conspiracy?
Posted by: macdon1 on Apr 3, 2008 2:24 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think the food industry is trying to knock us off...
High fructose corn syrup is poison and it is now in almost everything including catsup and sweet relish. I guess it is very profitable for agribusiness because it is a filler and extender. Unfortunately, an increasing number of people cannot afford to shop at places like Whole Foods that feature real food instead of this garbage. Neither do renters usually have a place to grow things and here it is a wait of years to get a much sought after community garden plot. Maybe this is the way the right wing intends to get rid of poorer people...kill them off with junk food.

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» Food Conspiracy? - etc... Posted by: Cathyc
Evil Intent
Posted by: Cathyc on Apr 3, 2008 3:01 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Michael Pollan: "I'm trying to show you that we can't rely on food scientists to feed us. Their advice hasn't been that good. Not out of any evil intent, but to put it charitably, nutrition is a very young science."

Not out of any evil intent? I would disagree with that claim. The Big-Business Corporate Food Industry know very well that the additives they put in the general/ mainstream food supply is detrimental to human health. They just don't care what damage they do the unwitting victims of their greed - all they care about is their mega profits. That's my definition of evil.

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» Let's face it~ Posted by: wisewebwoman
...
Posted by: Cathyc on Apr 3, 2008 3:57 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...

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Unfair to Transcendentalists!
Posted by: noir on Apr 3, 2008 5:45 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Where in the writings of Emerson et alia does it say that fences aren't allowed? Thoreau famously grew his beans very successfully. Whitman praised the fruits of American agriculture (not, in his day, agribusiness, and entirely, albeit necessarily, organic). The legacy of America's visionary writers is highly relevant to the contemporary scene, a valuable cultural resource in our search for inspiration and corrective measures.

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rn
Posted by: mnatra on Apr 5, 2008 8:44 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yawn, We have known this since Kellogs etc starting coating breakfast cereals with sugar
decades ago. So what is so new about un nutritious foods/Tell us a somthing new.

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When grocery stores close......
Posted by: Beepath on Apr 7, 2008 5:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
due to Peak Oil we have to have vegetable gardens growing. I'm raising polite hell with my apartment complex because I want to use a 10'x10' piece of ground to get a garden started. They look at me like I'm crazy, these SUV-driving, child-breeding, Starbuck-drinking, xmas-tree-killing, Seinfeld/Friends-rerun and Olympic watching 30-somethings. Fine, I'll use 10 containers to grow everything in.

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No one has TIME for real food
Posted by: Desert Ravengrrrl on Apr 8, 2008 1:08 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As much as I agree that corporate advertising and pusing of processed food is to blame... a huge problem these days is the fact that so few people have the TIME and regular schedule to buy fresh produce, prepare it for a meal, cook it (or not!), and clean up. Squeezing a tube of yogurt in the car is now all the time anyone allows themselves.

Its a tough dilema. We have to slow our lives down, which is difficult since there are so many wonderful possibilities for us in this modern world (in addition to the fact that there are so very many responsibilities, bills, and chores).

People need to collectively decide to slow down in order to have the time to create a better quality of life. Its a switch... the idea that achieving LESS is a greater success...

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How To Reclaim Some Of Your Power - You Can Pull It Off:
Posted by: fringedweller on Apr 9, 2008 9:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Go to the library or bookstore.
Find a good cookbook, like Laurel's Kitchen.
Start working your way to vegetarian.
Be miserly with the cheese, buy free range organic eggs.
Or vegan.
Buy whole organic grains and beans in bulk.
Cook them in large ammounts and freeze portions.
Crokpots & pressure cookers are great.
Supplement the whole grains with vegetables bought as local as possible.
Also can be blanched and frozen.
With forethought, even a single working parent can pull it off.
I did it with a fairly low income.

Organic costs more in some ways, but it's offset in others: calculate how much a box of Kellogs cereal or frozen food costs pr. pound unit. Or the cost of drugs or vitamins.

It gets easier. Keep at it.
You'll find what you do with this most basic act of feeding self and family will spill over into other areas.
Those who've done this find that industrial food eventually starts tasting like crap. The food is nutritous & You'll eventually lose it for empty calorie snacks like candy bars,

Benefits:
- Teaches us to take control of and respect their bodies.
- Keeps you away from Drs. & drugs.
- Reconnects you to the earth.
- Social(Show others how to live well on less:
Invite others over to help on main prep day, maybe with a bottle of wine.
Or trade frozen meals.)
- Feels great to become part of the solution instead of part of the problem.


Old Chinese Proverb:
"Cultivating one's own garden is the politics of the humble man."

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