Welcome to the MOSL Book Challenge


Showing posts with label agriculture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label agriculture. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 13, 2021

The Story of More: How We Got to Climate Change and Where We Go From Here by Hope Jahren

I read this book because someone recommended it, saying "I had no idea the government collects so much data!" *me, nodding fiercely*

Am I a nerd? Yes. Yes I am. 

I felt like I was taking a crash course on climate science, world history, and consumerism.

This book made me cry, it is not a happy read, but it's a good one. 

I almost want to go back to vegeterianism.

(Ignore me while I turn down the thermostat)

208 pages

Thursday, June 8, 2017

100 Million Years of Food by Stephen Le

The subtitle of this book is 'what our ancestors ate and why it matters today.' Le explores how humans became omnivores, how we developed our tastes for some foods and think others are off limits.  He takes us on a worldwide explorations of cultures and developments, ending with some conclusions that are pretty mainstream, like 'get enough exercise', and others that are off beat, like 'eat less meat and dairy when young, and more when elderly'.  This is well researched, and an interesting read, although he does ramble at times.  294 pages.

Sunday, November 30, 2014

The Third Plate: Field Notes on the future of food, by Dan Barber

Barber, a chef and owner of a farm to table restaurant, explores the questions of what it means to be a chef and how to move from the current state of high-yield, low taste production farming to a truly 'sustainable' agriculture that nourishes the body and is in harmony with the earth.  Those are some pretty big questions, and I enjoyed Barber's view that we needed to do more than just have small organic farming experiments to make true systemic change in the way food is produced.  While Barber describes some interesting developments and experiments in both farming and fish production, these efforts are so very small scale it's hard to conceive that these trends will make changes in the current  production farm practices in any big way anytime soon.  Barber does make some convincing points about production agriculture's emphasis on uniformity and yield both requiring more fertilizer and herbicides as well as having a detrimental effect on flavor. Barber also gives several examples of how well-known chefs have influenced what people want to each, and hence what farms produce. Toward the end of the book he briefly describes his 'third plate', which makes use of all of the products of the farm from underused grains like oats and millet to making use of the whole animal in cooking, not just the most select cuts. He makes me feel downright noble for making stews in the crock pot using cheap cuts of meat.  I'll need to figure out how to use more barley and other grains in my cooking.  496 pages.