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| I'll share this link as fuel for discussion.
"Author and journalist Tracie McMillan went undercover along the American food chain - "as a picker in the garlic fields of California, a stocker in a Detroit-area Walmart, and a kitchen worker at a Brooklyn Applebee’s - "to write her myth-busting book The American Way of Eating. Her astute observations about our food system got our attention well before they rankled Rush Limbaugh, who attacked her book on-air. Here she shares with us her top 10 American food myths, in her own words. Myth 1
Fact
Trending Food Story: 15 Salads Worse Than a Big Mac Myth 2
Fact
Myth 3 The price of produce is directly proportional to farm worker wages; lower prices mean lower wages, and vice versa. Fact
Myth 4
Fact
Myth 5
Fact
Like water and electricity, real food - "not processed, packaged food - "is a natural resource all our communities should have ready access to. Myth 6
Fact
Myth 7
Fact
Myth 8
Fact
Myth 9
Fact
Myth 10
Fact
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Here is a link that might be useful: Food myths.
Follow-Up Postings:
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- Posted by donna_loomis (My Page) on Fri, Jul 27, 12 at 12:35
| Interesting. Just a funny note on the last comment about restaurants serving meals not from scratch and in particular, Applebee's. One of the very few times I ate at Applebee's I ordered a vegetable dish, in part because it featured squash, which is one of my favorite vegetables. The picture of the dish was gorgeous and showed lots of squash. In reality, I got TWO tiny slices of squash. When I complained about it, they took the dish back and when they returned it I had two more little slices of squash. I looked at the waitperson and said "Really?" She explained that the vegetables came frozen in a pouch and she had to open a whole pouch to give me those two extra slices and that was the best they could do. |
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| Nothing I didn't know....but for the actual numbers. Someone needs to show people how to make hamburger helper from scratch. |
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| There's no need for America to grow more fruits and veggies because the majority of people just don't want to eat them. I live in a fairly poor town where many of the mothers receive vegetables from WIC- only $36 worth a month. What happens to most of those veggies? They rot, or are sometimes given to me. "It's just so much... I don't know what to do with it all." I'm not saying this is how all people are, and it's very sad for the people who do want to eat well but can't afford to. But most of my friends and family think they're getting enough veggies by having a 1/2 cup of canned peas and a baked potato each night. |
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| Great article, Eileen. Like Linda, I've always known this. I have always shopped carefully and thought about the price of convenience vs scratch cooking, not to mention the quality. When we had the deli, my eyes were opened to the vast selection of premade foods that the food services offered. The reps looked at me like I was nuts when I told them I was only interested in certain ingredients. They soon understood and even bought from my deli for their own lunch. Linda mentioned Sloppy Joe's....I still like to make them once in a while, made a batch last week in fact. One of my old comfort foods. Nancy |
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| Nothing new to me here either. Small farmers have been folding up and selling out for some time, you can't make a living farming unless you are big or find a niche. I think the numbers on the fresh produce are a little skewed, maybe not enough to be statistically significant. many of us, however, grow and preserve our own produce, which wouldn't factor into the equation. As for Hamburger Helper, I won't touch the stuff, it's disgusting. It takes little time and less money to make it from scratch if that's what you're making. I agree, Nancy, that would make a good thread. There are a lot of things that can be made in that amount of time that don't involve a box of anything pre-made. Annie |
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