ChewsWise Blog

ChewsWise Blog

Junk Food: A Recession Diet?

My friend, the DC restaurant critic Tim Carman, has an interesting theory about why junk food sales are up and it has nothing to do with trading down.

Goes like this. When people get laid off and feel like crap, they eat crap. Which is why McDonald's sales are rising while Starbucks' are falling. Why not Starbucks? Because people don't need a caffeine jolt when they're worried about their job and finances. They want comfort food. Greasy food. Interesting theory. But for my comfort food, I'll take spaghetti carbonara. And no, it ain't junk. (Image from flickr)

Obama Iron Chef Contest

Talk about a meal change in the White House. Bush didn't care for anything "green" or "wet" but the Obamas eat a lot of fresh food, the NY Daily News reports.

"They try to limit the sweets and they include a lot of fruits,vegetables and lean meats in their meals," an Obama pal said. "Of course that isn't always possible when he has been campaigning."

Here's the three chefs in the running for White House chef: Art Smith, who prepared Obama's meal at Oprah's fund-raiser for the candidate; Rick Bayless, owner of Chicago Mexican restaurants Topolobampo and Frontera Grill; and Daniel Young, who cooked for Obama at the Democratic Convention, the paper says.

So who's in the running for White House Gardener?

Organic Pasture Rule, Part II

There was an early sense of relief at the USDA's newly proposed organic pasture rule, but the devil, as they say, is in the details. I've been hearing questions about the rule and its mandates that fall outside the much-debated 120-day, 30% forage minimum. I haven't digested the criticism or concern yet, so if you have, post a comment. I hope to write on this further as the issues gel.
- Samuel Fromartz

McKibben on Obama and Climate Change

Environment 360 has a provocative piece by Bill McKibben on Obama, politics, and climate change. Definitely worth a read. Here's the quick take aways:

What it all boils down to is: The bills are coming due. And not just, or even mainly, the bills from a failed Bush presidency, but the bills from 200 years of burning fossil fuel. Twenty years agowhen we started worrying about global warming, we thought we'd have a generation to pay those bills off. But we were wrong — the planet was more finely balanced than we'd realized. The melting Arctic is the call from the repo man.

Any hope of succeeding will require Obama to grasp, deep in his guts, the fact that climate, energy, food, and the economy are now hopelessly intertwined, and that trying to solve any one of these problems without taking on the others simply makes all of them worse....

....The political reality goes like this: George W. Bush was so terrible on this issue that the bar has been set incredibly low — Obama will get all the political points he needs with fairly minimal effort. Doing what actually needs to be done will be politically…unpopular isn't even the word. It might well wreck his political future, because it would involve — directly or indirectly — raising the cost of continuing to live as we do right now.

RFK Jr at EPA?

(Note: fixed headline... thanks for pointing out Barbara...)

Politico is reporting that "President-elect Barack Obama is strongly considering Robert F. KennedyJr. to head the Environmental Protection Agency, a Cabinet post, Democratic officials told Politico."

Even David Roberts over at Grist.org was taken aback because of Kennedy's activist history, but, hey, maybe that's what the EPA needs. Last time I heard JFK Jr a couple of years back he was suing factory farm pork producers in North Carolina, just one in the long list of actions he's taken.
- Samuel Fromartz

Thoughts on the President-Elect

I am extremely hopeful about the new presidency of Barack Obama. Hopeful, because the nation is fighting two wars that need resolution. Hopeful, because the economy needs stewardship to lead us out of a morass of debt and financial opportunism that reigned for a decade. And hopeful, because Obama has the promise of bringing together a nation.

Now this blog is about food, but what is food without culture, without polity, without a decent house and extended family around the table? Obama’s campaign more than anything was about how we relate to each other as a nation in order to make the promise of this nation work.

To be sure, Obama has challenges, major challenges, and like most candidates, we don’t necessarily know what he’s going to do to address them. Nor do we really know in our corner of the world whether sustainable agriculture, organic agriculture, farmers markets, healthy food, and food justice will now get the attention they deserve. But again, I am hopeful, because Obama is at least aware of these issues; he has read Michael Pollan, and presumably is aware of the folly of programs like ethanol subsides, as this industry implodes, despite his past support of them.

Government will likely take a bigger role -- it already has in the financial crisis-management of a Republican incumbent -- but it could also get smarter, far smarter. It could better harness markets so that they work towards social good, create incentives for clean energy and green jobs and green agriculture, and deal head on with the most fundamental issue facing the human race: climate change. In a more immediate sense, he could take leadership in a way that's been notably missing and begin to untangle the housing mess at the root of the worst crisis since the Great Depression.

The answer to all these problems isn’t just more government, as the Democrats have learned, but a government that sets the playing field, writes the rules and umpires the game as markets do their work. In the past administration, government was hands off in the most irresponsible fashion -- something that even Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan admitted -- or hands-on in an unbalanced, even unfair way. What we need now is not a government that picks winners and losers and works for big lobbies, but rather sets the parameters for environmental goals and then unleashes markets to reach them. What Al Gore is calling sustainable capitalism. This is vital, because as he notes, nature does not do bailouts.

Will this happen? I don't know. But given Obama’s remarks, and perhaps more importantly, his bearing, I am more hopeful than I’ve been in any recent election. Let change begin.

- Samuel Fromartz

Now for your viewing pleasure, the Pointer Sisters, "Yes We Can Can"

Humane Animal Proposition Wins in California

Proposition 2, the modest humane measure that would give animals the right to stand up and move around, passed in California by a wide margin of 63 to 37%

What this shows is that when humane animal issues are put in front of voters, and the veil removed from factory farm practices, they will begin to support the animals.

Though opponents said it would put egg farmers out of business in California, that criticism ignored a shift that was already underway by major buyers such as Safeway, Burger King, and other food service operations. Chalk this up as a milestone in the animal welfare movement.
- Samuel Fromartz

Organic Pasture Rule Gets Media Ink

Bloomberg's Cindy Skrzycki had a good explanatory column on the organic pasture rule in the Washington Post, noting my "big win" comment she first read here. But she quoted others who questioned the USDA's motives, like Ronnie Cummins over at the Organic Consumers Association. The USDA has lost credibility in the past on decisions in the organic sector, so it will be interesting to see if this attempt to close the grazing loophole will restore its stature at all.

I also wonder if presidential politics played a role at all in the timing of the decision -- that is, in trying to get the rule through before a new administration comes in. The Bush administration is actually quite busy weakening regulations across the board so this might be that rare, under-the-radar instance of an actual tightening, reflecting a broad industry and consumer consensus. Still, they might have wanted to get it done before the new guys arrived and started meddling again ... just a guess.
- Samuel Fromartz

Organics on NPR's Marketplace

NPR's marketplace had a quick segment on organics in light of Whole Foods earnings report due out on Wednesday.

I'm quoted noting that organic consumers who believe strongly in organics will stick with it, but they will seek out value. They key for Whole Foods is how well they execute in value categories and shift their image. (They are succeeding beyond expectations in organic milk, their private label supplier tells me). My overall point was perhaps missed: organic consumers in this climate are shopping value, wherever it is, which is why Whole Foods is emphasizing the segment with products and even tips from its shoppers.

- Samuel Fromartz

Recession Hits: "Not Even Fruit Loops to Give Out"

By Samuel Fromartz

Given the recent financial crisis, deepening recession, and looming food crisis for the poor, I thought it a good time to contact Mark Winne, author of the excellent and readable book Closing the Food Gap, published earlier this year.

Winne worked on getting food for low-income communities in Hartford,  Conn., at a time when the middle class -- and supermarkets -- were exiting the city in droves. He sought to do this with food from local farms and fledgling community gardens (where the community was at times ambivalent about the endeavor, as he recounts in his book). Now this was long before local food was all the rage. In fact, we're talking about the late 1970s and 1980s .

Even back then, he saw the potential conflict in trying to protect the livelihood of farmers and also provide access to healthy and affordable food -- a conflict that lives with us, with even more intensity today.

With the news rising about food scarcity for the poor, I emailed him a few questions to muse on our current situation.

Fromartz: Economists are predicting the deepest recession since 1980-81, possibly the worst recession of the post-World War II era.  Was this the tsunami you always feared when working on food access issues in the inner city?

Winne: Yes, this could be the Big One that we've always feared. We indeed have all the makings of a perfect storm -- rising energy and food prices, caving financial markets, and high unemployment. There will be many victims, but unfortunately not the ones who got us into this mess, namely the tasseled loafer crowd.

What I dread the most is the impact that a massive economic downtown will have on the poor and the near poor. Taken together, those two categories constitute almost a third of all Americans. Just when we were starting to put together the political will and economic resources to turn things around in low-wealth communities, states are slashing their budgets, the federal government is using all their/our money to bail out the banks, and the lines at food banks are growing longer. Right now the Food Stamp Program has more people enrolled than at any time in its 40 year history, and food banks don't even have Fruit Loops to give out.

Fromartz: Wal-Mart recently reported that it noticed a spike in sales of baby formula around payday, which means these shoppers can only afford bare necessities when they get paid. In your experience, is this unusual?

Winne: When times get tough, as they are now, you will see unusual forms of consumer behavior. What's happening at Wal-Mart is nothing more than the kind of coping strategies that lower income families have always been forced to resort to: stretching the paycheck as far as they can, putting off paying the rent or the credit card bill in order to eat, or sending their children out to play with their friends late in the afternoon in hopes that their friends' family will invite them for supper. The U.S. Department of Agriculture has euphemistically labeled these strategies "food insecurity", which means nothing more than people adapting to harsh circumstances to survive. Right now, according to USDA, that's 35 million Americans, a number that is likely to go up when they release their latest findings very soon.

Fromartz: You've written about the lack of access to healthy, fresh food in the inner city. Have you encountered an example of any company really willing to tackle this issue or will the solutions come from elsewhere?

Winne: One of the best examples of a public/private partnership designed to bring food stores back into underserved communities is the Fresh Food Financing Initiative created by the State of Pennsylvania and advocated for by the Philadelphia Food Trust. Since the program was created in 2005, it has financed the development of over 20 new supermarkets, resulting in one million square feet of new food retail space and 2,500 new jobs. What I find particularly interesting about these new stores is that they are all independent food stores operators. Not a single major chain supermarket has stepped up to the plate.

This suggests to me that the answers are going to come from a combination of good solid advocacy and research by non-profit organizations, the public sector closing the financing gap with taxpayer funds, and indigenous businesses -- those that already exist in the communities and know the terrain. In saying that, I think it is unfortunate that major corporations that walked away from inner-city America over the past 30 years don't have the decency or the character to reinvest once again in those communities.

Fromartz: Michael Pollan and others have argued that cheap food (the subsidized corn-soy-meat driven food system) doesn't reflect its true cost, in terms of environmental damage or health-related expenses. If food did reflect its true cost would the poor be better off or worse off?

Winne: Like everybody else, I love Michael Pollan. We're both former Connecticut boys which means we have nutmeg running in our veins. But Michael gives short shrift to what his vision for a responsible food system would do to America's poor. Without a doubt, his ideas, if put into practice, would send the food insecurity rates into the stratosphere, unless there was a plan ready to be launched simultaneously that would enable low-income families to buy the same high quality, all-costs-accounted-for food that affluent foodies buy. So far, he hasn't shared that plan with anyone that I know.

Fromartz: What is your ideal vision for an urban food system?

Winne: Community gardens and farmers' markets in every neighborhood; food integrated into every aspect of the school life; supermarkets readily accessible to all major population centers and adequately serviced by public transportaton; and food policy councils that actively and effectively engage citizens and policy makers in monitoring and improving the performance of the community's food systems.

Fromartz: In a new administration, what is the No. 1 policy initiative the president can take to raise food access for low-income people?

Winne: One of the very little victories that came out the 2008 Farm Bill was the requirement that USDA conduct a "food desert" study, meaning that they assess the barriers and recommend solutions to making healthy and affordable food available in all communities.

The results of that study should be sitting on the new President's desk on January 20, 2009, and within his first 100 days he should send to Congress a bill to create a "Re-Store America" program that will do some of what the Pennsylvania FFFI program has done, but add to it funding for farmers' markets, community and urban gardens, infrastructure that will aid in the development of local and sustainable food systems, and initiatives that will promote food competency in our nation's schools.