You are what you eat
I find myself thinking about food a great deal lately. I started eating vegan about a year ago in an effort to be more intentional with the food that I was eating. My sister gave me Omnivore's Dilemma for Christmas and now I fear corn (Michael Pollan writes about the over-abundance of maize in our packaged foods. Santa (aka my mom) gave me a pressure cooker and now all I dream about is cooking beans instead of can opening them.
I want more. More of less.
While on 43 Things I found this entry:
I'm backing off snobby, complicated cooking. Some of it takes too long, is too costly, or is just not as great as the recipe sounds.
Lots of fishes can be poached to perfection. So can eggs. The trick is to keep on the edge of boiling pot not boiling. And so many good sauces are now available commercially.
I'm done messing around with organic sugars and flavored sea salts and odd spices that cost 30 dollars a smidgeon. Simplifying and eating well should go together rather than be opposing forces.
I understand what this person is saying. We get excited about climate change, we want to make change, so we go on an organic shopping spree. Good effort, but just a bit more of the same, no? My town, Portland, OR, is chock full of "foodies". There is really good food here. I like the care with which food is prepared, but it is just so over the top. I find it to be interesting that even though many in my city no longer have to truly worry about the basics - food, shelter, water, and clothing - we still obsess over them all with fancy restaurants and culinary schools, LEED Certified millions of dollars buildings, purified water in sleek bottles, and designer cordoroys made of organic cotton. I'm not sure we're really liberated from these basics if they take up so much of our time. But I guess life is in the details, huh?
Even if not conscienciously, I really do have such high and unrealistic expectations of the luxuries that life should entail. I wonder how long it would take me to unlearn that sort of outlook on life. Even in my progressive, environmentally-minded community I do not seem to be able to find a truly simplified life. We're all still United Statesians - buying, working, distracting too much. Just el otro lado de la tortilla, or two sides of the same coin.
So, my question for anyone out there is - How do you feel about the organic consumer culture? And what is the Decapitator trying to say?!