I did score some local booty yesterday at work; Kara brought me some pork liver to try from Millan's Custom Butchering and I bought some Menominee-grown garlic from a veteran- not those itty bitty cloves they sell at the supermarket, but seven giant bulbs with stalks attached and held together with bailing twine. Finally, the onions and butter have a companion.
After the cooking was done, the applesauce cooling and the glue scrubbed off the children, I decided to wield veto power over the nightly "Wild Kratts " cartoons, commandeered the remote and
watched Chris Taylor's documentary "Food Fight " about the history of our nation's food supply and the role government, agribusiness and local farmers have had on it. The documentary highlights the rising popularity of organic farmers markets in providing produce directly to restaurateurs and gourmet chefs, and specifically, the success of California-based Chez Panisse restaurant and its founder, Alice Waters.
Some key points of the documentary:
1. The commercial food industry's goal is to turn a profit- not to meet our nutritional needs.
2.The value of food as defined by the food industry is how well it ships, not how well it tastes.
3. Farm bill subsidies favor a select few agribusiness giants; leaving little opportunity for small farmers.
4. Farmers markets have succeeded on their own merits without government lobbying or funding.
I highly recommend this documentary, which is available instantly on Netflix. The music, the history, the commentary and the food make it an easy, enjoyable film.
I believe our library has this to check out. I think I will grab it today!
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