Posts Tagged: Community


1
Jun 10

Growing Triscuits and ire

A couple of weeks ago, we had a pretty fantastic debate over on Facebook about this community garden project at a church in Somerville. We’ve been thinking a lot about our own anti-corporate position, our own objection to the world’s second-largest food corporation co-sponsoring a local initiative to reconnect communities to fresh veggies and all of the interesting and passionate things our localvore community on the FB had to say about this. (As a side note, I’ve been reading very fascinating stuff about what it means to be a corporation, and the history of such things, in Thom Hartmann’s Unequal Protection. Highly recommend.)

Anyway, I was recently invited to write a column for OtherWords, an op-ed syndicate that is affiliated with my day job. I chose to write about this topic. So, um, here it is.

Community Gardens Don’t Excuse What Kraft Did to American Food
Big Food won’t be absolved by tossing a fraction of its fortunes toward urban plots.

by Kristi Ceccarossi
A few weeks ago, a churchyard near my city apartment was converted into a garden. A group of local volunteers hammered together raised beds, trucked in new soil, and planted berries, tomatoes and greens with the hope of growing fresh food for a local soup kitchen.

It doesn’t get much warmer and fuzzier than that, but I’m pretty repulsed by it.

As someone who advocates for a more localized food system where we can all have a stronger connection to what we’re eating and to the backstory of how it was grown, you’d think I’d support this kind of project. And I would, were it not for the fact that it was built in partnership with Triscuit. Yes, the cracker company, which is owned by Kraft Foods, Inc., the world’s second-largest food corporation.

This spring, to mark what is the start of the growing season for most of us, the marketing machine at Triscuit is breaking ground on more than 50 gardens like this in dozens of cities around the country. According to spokeswoman Allison Goldstein, that’s because Triscuit believes in the simple joys of growing your own food in a local garden, “no matter where you live.” Apparently, Triscuit also believes in emblazoning gardens with its logo and highlighting the joy it yields through organized press events.

It’s hard to find something bad to say about any garden, and even harder to fault one that will feed hungry people. But it’s just as difficult to reconcile what could and should be a genuine community initiative with sponsorship from a corporation with about $50 billion in annual sales.

For one thing, there’s the irony. Food giants like Kraft are largely to blame for the woeful transformation of our food system over the last 50 years, and the lost connection my grandparents’ generation had to what they ate and where it came from. By churning out Cheez Whiz, Cool Whip, Oreos and other highly processed foods, which require immense farms, Kraft and its ilk have allowed us to forget how to cook every day with fresh produce and bury the memory of what it means to grow our own food.

But now, through a confluence of contamination scares, Michael Pollan books, and the obesity crisis, thousands of Americans are questioning whether we should have forgotten how to cook just because we could heat up frozen dinners. We’re taking our money out of the supermarket chains and back to local farmers and independent shops, like our grandparents used to do, and we’re supporting a food system that’s better for the planet, our economy and our health in the process. Clearly Kraft has taken note.

Perhaps Kraft officials think Big Food can be absolved by tossing a fraction of its fortunes towards urban plots that will, realistically, feed very few people. Maybe they hope that we’ll forget the dozens of food recalls it’s been subjected to over the last two years alone, and see this gesture as a step in the right direction–that Kraft is on our side.

I don’t care how many seed packets Kraft stuffs into its Original and Reduced-Fat Triscuit boxes. I don’t trust companies of this scale when they tell me they care about gardening or fresh food or my neighborhood, because everything that preserves their bottom line tells me the opposite.

But more importantly, I don’t need the mammoth corporation that manufactures Velveeta to help me clear a bit of earth and prepare it for cultivation. None of us do. If we want to build community, change our food system or plant a garden, we don’t have to look beyond our neighborhood and its collective resources to do that. And that’s true, no matter where you live.


10
Dec 09

Taking back what Big Food stole from us

cookbookcover

If you are here you probably already know this narrative: How, about 50 years ago, a confluence of women’s lib, the rise of food factories and masterful marketing of “convenience” killed our kitchens. Or, anyway, our necessary and personal relationships with them.

You probably are familiar with this other narrative too: The one where people realize that when we traded our kitchen bondage for a box of Hot Pockets and a roll of cookie dough, we got the shit end of the deal: We’ve accelerated the destruction of the environment, our health, our family farms and our economy. And all that time saved not cooking went to working more, watching the Food Network and getting fat.

We like that second narrative. And for us it is sort of the fundamental objective of the local foods movement: To give people the tools to look at the greater context of fake food and reclaim the agency (also happy bowels, happy farmers, happy soil, happier animals, etc) that is implicit in eating Real Food.

This is why we are really pleased to celebrate this community cookbook, which originated on a Boston-based message board, and is a shining example of that kind of attitude. Cook Food Every Day contributors are local artists, musicians, writers and home cooks and the book features their own recipes and their artwork. And all the proceeds are going to the Greater Boston Food Bank. (Get one for a suggested donations of $15-20.)

Take a look at their site and see what’s in the book. Also, consider going to PA’s Lounge in Somerville next Wednesday to meet the people involved, get a copy, eat a little and have a drink or three.


29
Sep 08

Wanna share a winter CSA??

Two queries came to our mailbox this weekend.

One, from a couple. They’re moving from Seattle to Somerville in a week and want to buy a winter CSA share. But they’re looking for someone to split it with. I promised to post this here to see if we could drum up any takers. Winter shares tend to be smaller and cheaper than the regular season shares (on average about $150-200 maybe…). So, anyone? Feel free to reply here. Or write us, too, info [at] bostonlocalvores.org.

The second query came from a woman in San Francisco. She wanted to know same names of restaurants that feature local food. I thought she was coming out here to travel, but as it turns out, she’s a web developer working on a site for Lexus. As a way of promoting their ‘hybrid’ vehicles, they also want to promote uhm…upscale ‘localvoreish’ places to go once you buy said vehicle. I guess. I sought suggestions earlier in this post, but I’m withdrawing that request now. I kinda can’t support Lexus co-opting the spirit of this stuff. Is this wrong of me?