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Diane Conners |
Bob Russell surprised me with a question a couple years ago.
I was prepared to speak to MLUIâs advisory council about how our food and farming program helps to support the local economy. Bob was there, and his question was:
âWhat are you doing to get boys engaged in cooking?â
I remember this as MLUI, with others, launches the first in a series of book discussions in the Bob Russell Resilience Reading Project. Bob died in August of cancer after more than 30 years of leadership on issues as far-ranging as ecology, good governance, and local economies. Weâre taking a look at some of the books he recommended.
The first is Cooked by Michael Pollan, author of numerous books and articles on food and farming. Heâs as readable as ever, and as a person who loves to cook, I learned new things from his culinary and literary journey. At a staff party we used Cooked for inspirationâwith slow-cooked pork from a local farm, naturally fermented kimchi, and extraordinary sourdough bread made by one of my co-workers.
So, if you read the book, youâll salivate. Youâll learn interesting history and science and anthropology and philosophy. Cooked, in many regards, is about getting back to the enjoyment inherent in preparing our own meals, and the sense of self-sufficiency that comes when we know how. Itâs about realizing how important cooking has been in our evolution as humans, and what we might lose as a culture if we continue our trend of âoutsourcingâ our cooking to industrial food companies.
We could lose, for example, our small and mid-sized farms. Fast food restaurants and big food companies buy from big agriculture, not neighbor farms. Do you want a local food economy? If so, Pollan says, we need to cook. Otherwise, there will be no one to buy the ingredients that local farms grow.
And we could lose our health. Industrial, packaged food is filled with corn syrup, chemical additives, and flours that have been so highly processed that all the nutrition has been stripped out of them. We donât use those ingredients when we cook at home, Pollan says, so we cook healthier without even thinking about it. And he cites studies that link obesity to the decline in home food preparation.
âI love French fries, but how often are you going to cook them?â he told food writer Mark Bitmann in an interview. âItâs too hard and messy. But when theyâre made at the industrial scale, you can have French fries three times a day. So thereâs something in the very nature of home cooking that keeps us from getting into trouble.â
Pollan said heâs found a certain âcrackleâ of excitement among scientists about new discoveries related to chronic disease, diet, antibiotic resistance, and live cultures in such probiotic foods as yogurt and naturally fermented vegetables like kimchi and sauerkraut. He talks about that in this interview with Pollan and Ira Flatow of NPRâs Science Friday. Cooked is filled with fascinating characters bucking what they see as a dangerous trend of hyper-sanitization and fear of bacteria when, really, our bodies are ecosystems of mostly beneficial bacteria important to our health.
But thereâs one trend that has never been fully challenged, according to Pollan. Thatâs the division of labor between men and women in the kitchen when women started working outside the home in large numbers. The processed food industry saw a marketing opportunity and suggested, âWhy donât you just let us cook for you?â In the 1970s, he said, KFC ran billboards depicting a family sized bucket of fried chicken under the slogan âWomenâs Liberation.â
And that takes me back to Bobâs question about boys and cooking.
In my life, whoever is in charge of a meal, itâs a big timesaver if thereâs another person ready to take direction to chop up some onions or crack some eggs. Pollan notes that we all could find time to cook if we used the minutes we spend driving to a restaurant, watching a cooking show, or surfing the Internet. And itâs nice, in the kitchen and at the table, to be together.
Hereâs Pollan, in his interview with Bitmann:
âWe need to complete that uncomfortable conversation about the division of domestic labor, which the food industry deftly exploited to sell us processed food,â he says. âBut if weâre going to rebuild a culture of cooking, it canât mean returning women to the kitchen. We all need to go back to the kitchen.â
How does that happen? âFirst, we need to bring back home ec., but a gender-neutral home ec.,â he said. âWe need public health ad campaigns promoting home cooking as the single best thing you can do for your familyâs health and well-being. A tax on prepared food, but not on raw ingredients, is another good idea. And Michelle Obama could use her bully pulpit to promote home cooking, rather than spend her considerable capital persuading food manufacturers to tweak their products.â
I told Bob that, because of my circle of friends and the relationship I have in my marriage, the gender divide in who is responsible for cooking just hadnât been front and center for me anymore.
Bob shook his head. Thereâs still a lot of work to do, he said.
And, I see, it has everything to do with food, farming, health, and local economy.