sustainability Archives - Real Food Media https://realfoodmedia.org/tag/sustainability/ Storytelling, critical analysis, and strategy for the food movement. Wed, 02 Aug 2023 20:59:11 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.1 No Meat Required: The Cultural History and Culinary Future of Plant-Based Eating https://realfoodmedia.org/portfolio/no-meat-required-the-cultural-history-and-culinary-future-of-plant-based-eating/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=no-meat-required-the-cultural-history-and-culinary-future-of-plant-based-eating Thu, 29 Jun 2023 19:15:13 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?post_type=portfolio&p=5460 A culinary and cultural history of plant-based eating in the United States that delves into the subcultures and politics that have defined alternative food. The vegan diet used to be associated only with eccentric hippies and tofu-loving activists who shop at co-ops and live on compounds. We’ve come a long way since then. Now, fine-dining... Read more »

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A culinary and cultural history of plant-based eating in the United States that delves into the subcultures and politics that have defined alternative food.

The vegan diet used to be associated only with eccentric hippies and tofu-loving activists who shop at co-ops and live on compounds. We’ve come a long way since then. Now, fine-dining restaurants like Eleven Madison Park cater to chic upscale clientele with a plant-based menu, and Impossible Whoppers are available at Burger King. But can plant-based food keep its historical anti-capitalist energies if it goes mainstream? And does it need to?

In No Meat Required, author Alicia Kennedy chronicles the fascinating history of plant-based eating in the United States, from the early experiments in tempeh production undertaken by the Farm commune in the 70s to the vegan punk cafes and anarchist zines of the 90s to the chefs and food writers seeking to decolonize vegetarian food today.

Many people become vegans because they are concerned about the role capitalist food systems play in climate change, inequality, white supremacy, and environmental and cultural degradation. But a world where Walmart sells frozen vegan pizzas and non-dairy pints of ice cream are available at gas stations – raises distinct questions about the meanings and goals of plant-based eating.

Kennedy—a vegetarian, former vegan, and once-proprietor of a vegan bakery—understands how to present this history with sympathy, knowledge, and humor. No Meat Required brings much-needed depth and context to our understanding of vegan and vegetarian cuisine, and makes a passionate argument for retaining its radical heart.

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Real Food Scoop | No. 62 https://realfoodmedia.org/real-food-scoop-no-62/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=real-food-scoop-no-62 https://realfoodmedia.org/real-food-scoop-no-62/#respond Thu, 04 May 2023 16:58:47 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?p=5421 Did you know it’s possible to grow crops without using poison? But they don’t do it, because they forgot how. And the people who sell the poison don’t want them to remember. They don’t want us to remember that we used to grow beautiful corn and wheat without using any chemicals at all. That’s why... Read more »

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Did you know it’s possible to grow crops without using poison?
But they don’t do it, because they forgot how.
And the people who sell the poison don’t want them to remember.
They don’t want us to remember that we used to grow beautiful corn and wheat without using any chemicals at all.
That’s why it’s important for you to know
that people and nature have to be friends.
If we harm nature, we end up harming ourselves. – Fabián Tomasi

 

 

Argentine farmworker Fabián Tomasi was an iconic voice against the use of pesticides until his death from cancers caused by pesticide exposure in 2018. He was, as many have been and continue to be, a literal body of evidence of the dangers of pesticides.

Research has shown that more than 90 percent of Americans have traces of pesticides in our bodies, most of which comes from the food we eat. Yet, despite the mass amounts of evidence of the dangers of pesticide use, the world has never used as many pesticides as it does today. The United States uses more than any other country, including some of the most dangerous pesticides that are banned in other countries. 

With the release of the US edition of the Pesticide Atlas, a powerful compendium on the state of pesticide use and why it matters, leaders at prominent US civil society organizations working for common sense pesticide action (including Pesticide Action Network (PAN) North America, the Center for Biological Diversity, Hawaii Alliance for Progressive Action, and Real Food Media) highlight the alarmingly persistent use of toxic pesticides in the United States—and what we can do about it. 

 

In community and solidarity,

Tiffani, Christina, Tanya, and Anna

 

Read Issue No. 62 of the Real Food Scoop

Download the Pesticide Atlas

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Silent Earth: Averting the Insect Apocalypse https://realfoodmedia.org/portfolio/silent-earth-averting-the-insect-apocalypse/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=silent-earth-averting-the-insect-apocalypse Thu, 15 Sep 2022 18:10:19 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?post_type=portfolio&p=5283 In the tradition of Rachel Carson’s groundbreaking environmental classic Silent Spring, an award-winning entomologist and conservationist explains the importance of insects to our survival, and offers a clarion call to avoid a looming ecological disaster of our own making. Drawing on thirty years of research, Goulson has written an accessible, fascinating, and important book that examines... Read more »

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In the tradition of Rachel Carson’s groundbreaking environmental classic Silent Spring, an award-winning entomologist and conservationist explains the importance of insects to our survival, and offers a clarion call to avoid a looming ecological disaster of our own making.

Drawing on thirty years of research, Goulson has written an accessible, fascinating, and important book that examines the evidence of an alarming drop in insect numbers around the world. “If we lose the insects, then everything is going to collapse,” he warned in a recent interview in the New York Times—beginning with humans’ food supply. The main cause of this decrease in insect populations is the indiscriminate use of chemical pesticides. Hence, Silent Earth’s nod to Rachel Carson’s classic Silent Spring which, when published in 1962, led to the global banning of DDT. This was a huge victory for science and ecological health at the time.

Yet before long, new pesticides just as lethal as DDT were introduced, and today, humanity finds itself on the brink of a new crisis. What will happen when the bugs are all gone? Goulson explores the intrinsic connection between climate change, nature, wildlife, and the shrinking biodiversity and analyzes the harmful impact for the earth and its inhabitants.  

Meanwhile we have all read stories about hive collapse syndrome affecting honeybee colonies and the tragic decline of monarch butterflies in North America, and more. But it is not too late to arrest this decline, and Silent Earth should be the clarion call. Smart, eye-opening, and essential, Silent Earth is a forceful call to action to save our world, and ultimately, ourselves.

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KQED Newsroom Special: The Power of Mothers https://realfoodmedia.org/kqed-newsroom-special-the-power-of-mothers/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=kqed-newsroom-special-the-power-of-mothers https://realfoodmedia.org/kqed-newsroom-special-the-power-of-mothers/#respond Sat, 28 May 2022 19:26:29 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?p=5251   Anna was featured on a KQED special segment, The Power of Mothers, talking about the 50th Edition of Diet for a Small Planet and how she is continuing and evolving her mother’s critical work. Watch the whole segment here (Anna’s segment starts at 10:03).  

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Anna was featured on a KQED special segmentThe Power of Mothers, talking about the 50th Edition of Diet for a Small Planet and how she is continuing and evolving her mother’s critical work. Watch the whole segment here (Anna’s segment starts at 10:03).

 

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Celebrating the 50th anniversary of Diet for a Small Planet at the Bay Area Book Festival https://realfoodmedia.org/celebrating-the-50th-anniversary-of-diet-for-a-small-planet-at-the-bay-area-book-festival/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=celebrating-the-50th-anniversary-of-diet-for-a-small-planet-at-the-bay-area-book-festival https://realfoodmedia.org/celebrating-the-50th-anniversary-of-diet-for-a-small-planet-at-the-bay-area-book-festival/#respond Sun, 08 May 2022 01:43:43 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?p=5271 by Anna Lappé It was my first in-person event since the start of Covid, and I was delighted to be with my mom and my dear friend Davia Nelson of Kitchen Sisters. If you catch me smiling at folks in the audience it might be my husband, my daughter, my brother, my 4th grade English... Read more »

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by Anna Lappé

It was my first in-person event since the start of Covid, and I was delighted to be with my mom and my dear friend Davia Nelson of Kitchen Sisters. If you catch me smiling at folks in the audience it might be my husband, my daughter, my brother, my 4th grade English teacher, my kids’ school principal… it truly was a family affair. My mother and I got to talk about the anniversary edition and all the fun we had pulling it together. You can learn more about Diet for a Small Planet at 50 and get yourself a copy at our website here.

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Healing Grounds: Climate, Justice, and the Deep Roots of Regenerative Farming https://realfoodmedia.org/portfolio/healing-grounds/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=healing-grounds Mon, 28 Feb 2022 17:54:33 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?post_type=portfolio&p=5198 A powerful movement is happening in farming today—farmers are reconnecting with their roots to fight climate change. For one woman, that’s meant learning her tribe’s history to help bring back the buffalo. For another, it’s meant preserving forest purchased by her great-great-uncle, among the first wave of African Americans to buy land. Others are rejecting... Read more »

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A powerful movement is happening in farming today—farmers are reconnecting with their roots to fight climate change. For one woman, that’s meant learning her tribe’s history to help bring back the buffalo. For another, it’s meant preserving forest purchased by her great-great-uncle, among the first wave of African Americans to buy land. Others are rejecting monoculture to grow corn, beans, and squash the way farmers in Mexico have done for centuries. Still others are rotating crops for the native cuisines of those who fled the “American wars” in Southeast Asia.
 
In Healing Grounds, Liz Carlisle tells the stories of Indigenous, Black, Latinx, and Asian American farmers who are reviving their ancestors’ methods of growing food—techniques long suppressed by the industrial food system. These farmers are restoring native prairies, nurturing beneficial fungi, and enriching soil health. While feeding their communities and revitalizing cultural ties to land, they are steadily stitching ecosystems back together and repairing the natural carbon cycle. This, Carlisle shows, is the true regenerative agriculture – not merely a set of technical tricks for storing CO2 in the ground, but a holistic approach that values diversity in both plants and people.
 
Cultivating this kind of regenerative farming will require reckoning with our nation’s agricultural history—a history marked by discrimination and displacement. And it will ultimately require dismantling power structures that have blocked many farmers of color from owning land or building wealth. 
 
The task is great, but so is its promise. By coming together to restore these farmlands, we can not only heal our planet, we can heal our communities and ourselves.

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Diet for a Small Planet — 50 Years Later https://realfoodmedia.org/diet-for-a-small-planet-50-years-later/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=diet-for-a-small-planet-50-years-later https://realfoodmedia.org/diet-for-a-small-planet-50-years-later/#respond Thu, 09 Sep 2021 08:04:52 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?p=5097 by Anna Lappé   Fifty years ago, while experts published scary tomes about imminent world famine, my mother was a 26-year-old researcher curious about exactly why there was so much hunger around the globe. She buried herself in the stacks at the Giannini Library on UC Berkeley’s campus. What she discovered was so shocking, she... Read more »

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by Anna Lappé

 

Fifty years ago, while experts published scary tomes about imminent world famine, my mother was a 26-year-old researcher curious about exactly why there was so much hunger around the globe. She buried herself in the stacks at the Giannini Library on UC Berkeley’s campus. What she discovered was so shocking, she felt she had to share the news with the world: There was actually enough food (there is still today). We humans were actually creating scarcity through then-just-emergent grain-fed, industrial livestock production systems. 

She turned her insight into a pamphlet, which became a longer essay, which became the book, Diet for a Small Planet.   

Last year, as Covid-19 kept our family thousands of miles from each other, I set out to help my mom celebrate the 50th anniversary of this seminal book with a new, special edition.  

This edition includes a new opening chapter by my mom—trying to distill her life’s work into just 15,000 words! And, with the expert hand of the wonderful and talented recipe developer, Wendy Lopez—and loads of Zoom calls and dirty dishes—we also refreshed the recipe section. No more soy grits and margarine! The 85+ recipes include more than a dozen from some of our very favorite cookbook authors and chefs, including several beloved Real Food Reads authors!  

You can pre-order your book today at www.dietforasmallplanet.org and please join us with friends and family for one or both of our book launches

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Diet for a Small Planet: 50th Anniversary Edition https://realfoodmedia.org/portfolio/diet-for-a-small-planet-50/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=diet-for-a-small-planet-50 Wed, 01 Sep 2021 21:10:45 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?post_type=portfolio&p=5058 Discover a way of eating that revolutionized the meaning of our food choices and sold more than 3 million copies—now in a 50th-anniversary edition with a timely introduction plus new and updated plant-centered recipes. In 1971, Diet for a Small Planet broke new ground, revealing how our everyday acts are a form of power to create health... Read more »

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Discover a way of eating that revolutionized the meaning of our food choices and sold more than 3 million copies—now in a 50th-anniversary edition with a timely introduction plus new and updated plant-centered recipes.

In 1971, Diet for a Small Planet broke new ground, revealing how our everyday acts are a form of power to create health for ourselves and our planet. This extraordinary book first exposed the needless waste built into a meat-centered diet. Now, in a special edition for its 50th anniversary, world-renowned food expert Frances Moore Lappé goes even deeper, showing us how plant-centered eating can help restore our damaged ecology, address the climate crisis, and move us toward real democracy. Sharing her personal journey and how this revolutionary book shaped her own life, Lappé offers a fascinating philosophy on changing yourself—and the world—that can start with changing the way we eat.

This new edition features eighty-five updated plant-centered recipes, including more than a dozen new delights from celebrity chefs including Mark Bittman, Padma Lakshmi, Alice Waters, José Andrés, Bryant Terry, Mollie Katzen, and Sean Sherman.

 

For all press inquiries, please contact Maya Franson: mfranson@penguinrandomhouse.com

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Real Food Scoop | No. 47 https://realfoodmedia.org/real-food-scoop-no-47/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=real-food-scoop-no-47 https://realfoodmedia.org/real-food-scoop-no-47/#respond Fri, 27 Aug 2021 14:14:07 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?p=5083 “Hunger is not caused by a scarcity of food, but a scarcity of democracy.” —Frances Moore Lappé   It was the early 1970s. With books like Paul Ehrlich’s The Population Bomb captivating readers across the country, fears were growing that the world faced imminent, widespread famine. My mother, Frances (at the time a 26-year-old grad school dropout),... Read more »

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“Hunger is not caused by a scarcity of food, but a scarcity of democracy.” —Frances Moore Lappé

 

It was the early 1970s. With books like Paul Ehrlich’s The Population Bomb captivating readers across the country, fears were growing that the world faced imminent, widespread famine. My mother, Frances (at the time a 26-year-old grad school dropout), wanted to understand why. As she sought out the answer in the stacks of UC Berkeley’s Giannini Agricultural Library, she realized she was asking the wrong question: there was more than enough food to feed the world. Yet she was also alarmed to discover the vast resources going to raise livestock in industrial operations—and creating such waste at the same time.

As she dug deeper, her animating question became: Why does hunger persist in a world of plenty? That question would lead her on her life’s path and the answer she uncovered would become one of her most-quoted mantras: Hunger is not caused by a scarcity of food, but a scarcity of democracy.

She shared her insights in what would evolve from a one-page handout into her 1971 book, Diet for a Small Planet. In its pages, she would help readers connect the dots between the then-emergent industrial animal agriculture system and injustice in the food system. It also gave people a tasty way to buck that system with more than 100 plant-based recipes.

Fifty years later, my mother’s book still feels so relevant. Today, a whopping 80 percent of global agricultural land is used to feed livestock while providing less than 20 percent of our calories. Compared with 1970, we’ve increased our meat intake—with the average American now eating twice as much protein as their bodies can even use. And our food system, including environmentally destructive factory farming, has an enormous climate toll as well: as much as 37 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions come from the sector.

With a new opening chapter that shares lessons my mother has learned over these past five decades, the 50th Anniversary Edition of Diet for a Small Planet includes a fully revamped recipe section showcasing some of our favorite plant- and planet-centered chefs, including Real Food Reads stars like Yasmin KhanChef Sean ShermanBryant TerryMark Bittman, and Luz Calvo and Catriona Esquibel (made possible thanks to the careful curation of recipe developer Wendy Lopez).

We at Real Food Media are thrilled to share this book with all of you as the work is a reminder of the power of going deep on big questions about the world around us. We love it when those questions bring us to the delightful tastes and textures of the abundant, delicious, and diverse world of plant-centered eating.

 

In community and solidarity,

Anna on behalf of the Real Food Media hive

P.S. Join us at one of the book’s launch events. And don’t forget to pre-order the book and dive into the website to learn more!

Read the full issue of the Real Food Scoop
 

Photo credit: Paige Green for Diet for a Small Planet

 

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Fighting for a Moral Food System https://realfoodmedia.org/fighting-for-a-moral-food-system/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=fighting-for-a-moral-food-system https://realfoodmedia.org/fighting-for-a-moral-food-system/#respond Thu, 21 Jan 2021 20:24:51 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?p=4926 Anna was thrilled to be a keynote speaker at the 2020 50×40 Global Summit—the global network committed to reducing industrial animal agriculture 50 percent by 2040. Anna talked about the incredible toll of factor farming, from squandering land and other natural resources to huge greenhouse gas emissions and the exploitation of workers and abuse of... Read more »

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Anna was thrilled to be a keynote speaker at the 2020 50×40 Global Summit—the global network committed to reducing industrial animal agriculture 50 percent by 2040. Anna talked about the incredible toll of factor farming, from squandering land and other natural resources to huge greenhouse gas emissions and the exploitation of workers and abuse of animals. She shared the staggering rates of meatpacking workers contracting Covid-19, with over 50,000 workers infected as of January 20, 2021. 

We believe this conflux of crises offers us the opportunity to upend the global industrial meat model, but as Anna mentioned in her talk, only if we make it so: 

“The pandemic is an opportunity only if we make it one… When it comes to fighting for a more moral food system—one that protects workers and farmers alike, one that is humane to all the world’s creatures—we must act now and act boldly.”

 

How do we do that? We do it together. 

Here are four ways to harness our collective power:
 

  1. Be bold. Our role as organizers and advocates is to show what is possible—the policies will follow. 
  2. Be confident in communicating complexity. Silver bullet solutions won’t do the job here. We have to get to the root causes to create real, radical change. 
  3. Think globally. Focusing attention on our individual locales only creates the opportunity for agribusiness to move the problem elsewhere.
  4. Celebrate our very big tent. Issues such as the industrial meat model touch on so much that people care about. As we develop strategies, communications, and policy asks, this big tent can be our biggest asset, but only if we consciously nurture these connections. 

Watch the full speech here and make sure to check out out some additional resources:

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