7.07.2008

Saying No to Processed and Packaged Foods

It’s time for a challenge. The goal this week (beginning as of this morning) is to limit my intake of highly processed and packaged foods as much as possible. I’m not going to say “completely avoid” because I have to leave myself an iota of wiggle room. (If I say I’m avoiding packaged foods, would I be without milk, bread, or pasta for a week? I don’t think I have the time to raise a cow in the backyard and make homemade bread and pasta in the next seven days, although I may try two out of the three in the near future). So, the goal is to limit my intake as much as possible.

Why? Because in doing so, I can instead focus on eating more healthful (and, hopefully, seasonal and local) foods. And, in the process, I will be sending less packaging to the garbage or recycling bin. It’s a win-win for this girl.

This challenge won’t be without it’s difficulties, to be sure. One of them is the fellow I live with, who essentially lives on homemade egg McMuffins (at least they’re homemade), sandwiches, Doritos, and Diet Coke.

It’s not an uncommon situation for my generation. When you’re raised to expect a cupboard full of snacks (read: highly processed foods) as so many of us were, it’s hard to get past that to think that a big bowl of fruit or a handful of crunchy carrots can be just as tasty.

It’s not that Conservative Boy’s parents raised him only on Ding-Dongs and Funyuns. It’s just that somehow the love for vegetables and fruits and well-balanced meals that his parents have, the appreciation for produce eaten close to where it was grown, has been lost on him. He can’t stand most vegetables and gets annoyed when I spend an hour—an hour!—making dinner, because to him vegetables are gross and cooking for that long a waste of time, when you can cook up a brat or slap together a sandwich in no time.

And so I struggle to clear out the cupboard full of snack food, to lure Conservative Boy to the dark side with beautiful asparagus (he won’t touch it) and the promise of tasty cherry tomatoes from the plant growing in a pot in our front yard (he just grumbles that I spend too much time with my plants). And in the meantime, my efforts to get him to fall in love with food like I am exhaust me and so I reach in the cupboard for a granola bar or a Chips Ahoy cookie and—gasp!—even ask him to bring me home a box of macaroni and cheese to make for lunch because the homemade stuff is so much work.

Am I failing? Or is it just that I’m facing the reality of the society in which I was raised—in which food is supposed to be quick and easy, ready when you want it, to be consumed hurriedly while standing up at the kitchen counter or driving or watching TV rather than sitting down and savoring it.

This is not a criticism of C.B. and his eating habits so much as it is an acknowledgement that this is the mentality we all must learn to overcome if we are truly going to embrace the concept of eating seasonal, local, natural foods the way they ought to be eaten. I’m not going to force C.B. to stop eating meat or Chips Ahoy. I probably won’t completely give them up myself. But it’s time we face the facts—all those chemicals, all that high-fructose corn syrup, all of the manufactured items that go into most of the food we eat is making us incredibly unhealthy, fat, and sick. Yes, really. All of those food items that hardly have an ounce of real food in them aren’t good for the environment and are even worse for the people who are consuming them. And even when we do eat fruits and vegetables from the supermarket, they aren’t anything like the produce grown locally and picked from the field or garden within hours of when we eat it. All those food miles the produce travels in trucks, all that time the produce sits in stores, renders it flavorless compared to the fresh stuff. Really.

I wish I could “go off the food grid” so to speak and grow a massive garden, know exactly where every food item I put in my mouth comes from, bake my own bread and can my own tomatoes, all the actions Barbara Kingsolver and her family undertook in Animal, Vegetable, Miracle that made me swoon. But at the same time I’m faced with reality, the reality that I don’t have the space or the time or the knowledge (yet!) to grow all that food myself, and that beyond the little farmer’s market in town at the moment, my local options are limited. (Although I did find out about a local source for eggs and milk this weekend. Now if someone can give me a lead on the best places to find locally raised meat I’ll be set.)

I don’t think it’s necessary to become a hardcore locavore (as those who dedicate themselves to eating only sustainable, locally produced food—typically grown or raised within 100 miles of where they live—are called). But I think there’s something to be said for taking the advice of Michael Pollan and avoiding food that our grandparents or grandparents’ parents wouldn’t even recognize as food.

So, now I wonder: When it comes to food, what matters to you?

4 comments:

Kristin said...

I'm with you...I'm trying to eat less processed and more local foods.

AND I live with a man much like CB, from the sounds of it. It took me a LONG time to ween him of the daily Oreos and fast food. He just didn't understand for a long time, and was very resistant to let go of those things. For most of our relationship, we have been on opposite ends of the eating spectrum. But, finally, something clicked. (Maybe his 4th decade coming to a close???) :) He's now a vegetarian whose last food vice is a daily soda.

I think the most difficult hurdle to eating well is the people around you. My mom doesn't undersand why I don't keep hotdogs and Coke in the house for the kids (!!). My mother-in-law feels so bad for my husband and kids that when she comes she brings boxes and boxes of cookies. It's really silly, and makes me feel like a food nazi!

However, on the bright side, I am raising two healthy kids who will usually choose an apple as a snack, who understand that eating good foods is the best way to grow and be strong, and who understand that soda and candy are special treats and not part of daily life.

So, really, it seems to be a long, slow re-education of ourselves and the people around us.

Okay, this is a long enough comment, and I haven't even answered the question...!

Thanks for the inspiring post.

Cara Hall said...

Jules - did you catch Barbara Kingsolver on NPR the other day? Actually she kind of annoyed me because she sort of refused to address the guilt we feel when we don't commit 100 percent and how hard it truly is for most people to live the way she does (come on, people like us have major guilt issues!).

But, eating less processed is a process, so to speak. I still eat occasional Oreos and pretty much live on Amy's dinners for lunch. But at least those are organic! And when I run through the list of things I don't eat at all anymore like white bread, Miracle Whip, most chips, lunch meat, margarine, non-natural peanut butter, etc. etc. I can see that I eat much differently than I used to, and that feels really good. Lots of work left to do, but we are gardening and farmers market-ing when we can.

Julie said...

Kristin: It's exciting to read your comments, particularly about your husband being so similar to C.B. The fact that he's coming around and that you are able to raise kids who appreciate good foods makes me optimistic. I might change C.B.'s ways yet!

I would agree that other people and their lack of knowledge on why we might choose to change our eating habits do present a challenge. And you're right: It's about slowly re-educating ourselves and the people around us.

I really appreciate your insights and thanks for reading!

Julie said...

Cara: I totally missed hearing Barbara Kingsolver on NPR (my NPR listening has been a bit sporadic lately). That's really too bad she skirted that issue as it's one of my biggest beefs with the book ... yeah, it's great that they went to such lengths for a year and it's incredibly inspiring, but as much as they try to say otherwise at the end of the book, it is a bit of an elitist approach. The majority of the people in this country don't have space to grow their own food or the time or knowledge to do it. And not everyone is aware yet of options for farmer's markets and other sources of local food. Plus, even those of us who are a bit more tuned into that stuff still don't always have the time or energy to eat all local, all the time. And when we don't, as you said, we feel darn guilty. I think it's a very real issue that should be addressed. Maybe we should write a book on that!

You guys are great about eating less processed items though, which is terrific. It really is baby steps, isn't it? But when you look back, those little changes add up.