My Current Moral Debate

I am currently struggling with the problem of having amazing produce all around me all day long, offered at a great rate, BUT most of it is not from the area or even within the US.  I have tried to keep a relatively seasonal diet over the past year minus my daily banana.  This means I do not buy any other tropical fruits, berries, or tomatoes unless it is the summer, and I eat a lot of kale and squash in the winter.  Now I am not perfect and I do on occasion have some foods out of season, especially when I order a salad out and it is made of baby greens and contains tomatoes.  No one is perfect but just think about how amazing a summer tomato tastes warmed in the sun’s rays vs. a hot house tomato flown in from Mexico.  There is no comparison.  Not to mention the amount of fossil fuel used to fly the tomato to me and the conditions the pickers have to deal with.IMG_8163

Getting back to my issues…we carry the mother load of delicious all organic produce and it is very hard to say no to the strawberries, peppers, and raspberries.  I try and stay away from them as much as possible but some are just so hard to pass up.  We just need to get the local crops in ASAP and my garden needs to start producing!

What would you do?


Food For Thought

I have been trying to figure out what direction I want to take this little blog.  I am still off the running wagon, but I did go to the Doc today and we are going to try some orthotics and eventually work up to running.  Until then I will be biking (I am getting really good and creating my own spin class), swimming and strength training (I went to BodyPump last week and it kicked my butt).

Until I can run again I thought I would zero in on a food mission I have been working on.

farm

Buying Local/ Sustainable/ Organic/ Humane

I tried this today with my Whole Food haul and it was really hard!  I do go to the Farmer’s market every week, but that is ending next week and the labels in WF only say “USA”.  This makes it really hard figure out how far my food has traveled.

Here are some of my personal rules:

  1. There are exceptions one being bananas
  2. Fruit is going to be hard so this will most likely be seasonal – I have some apples left from the fall and peaches from the summer, but I will probably eat citrus (US only!) and some pears.
  3. No berries, grapes, tomatoes and summer squash in the winter –they just don’t taste as good
  4. Get my eggs and milk locally – this one is actually easy
  5. Switch to local cheese – we have some great cheese makers in MD
  6. Eat lots of mushrooms! – being so close to PA, we have tons of them within an hour drive
  7. No foreign products except maybe soy sauce and other Asian condiments
  8. Read labels
  9. Try to buy things without labels

The reason I am trying to buy only US products is because even though the FDA has its problems we have much more food protection that South American or African mega producers.

Sooooooo

  • Local #1
  • Domestic
  • Organic
  • Humane

So how did I do today?  Honestly, pretty bad in terms of local.

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  • Kombucha – CO, organic
  • Chicken – organic, humane
  • Mushrooms – local
  • Pitas – local
  • Satsuma – USA
  • Yams – organic, USA
  • Green beans – USA
  • Milk – local, organic
  • Yogurt – Organic
  • Chicken broth – organic
  • Parsnips – USA, organic
  • Quinoa – organic (bulk)
  • Spinach – organic – questionable company
  • Peas – organic
  • Chocolate chunks – nada
  • Mustard – ?
  • Bananas – fair trade

I stood in front of the meat case for about 20min reading the Welfare guide and noticing the chicken was the only thing labeled and it had a pretty low rate Sad smile .  Not the one I got, but the normal WF chicken got a 2 out of 5.  Slightly disturbing.

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If you are wondering where my protein is in the above pictures besides of the chicken, I have lots of beans, tempeh, salmon and lentils.

What do you think?  I think it will be hard, but I will try and post a similar list every week.

Time to pick up Nick from the bus!  He is late again…


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