desdemona
08-25-2007, 12:48 AM
Anyone giving this any thought or actually doing it?
I am reading the book Plenty. This is the 100 mile diet. This is a Vancouver couple that decide to eat foods within a 100 radius for a year. They kind of cheat in the midst of winter by trying 100 mile diets in other parts of the world (Mexico, Southern US, etc.). I was hoping they would really deal with the winter from their stores of hand canned and frozen goods. Perhaps they'd go game hunting. :-} They live in the boonies and don't seem to have actual jobs that they go to. So I found the whole thing maddening.
I really wanted to like the whole idea and get more interested in it and I got kind of turned off by it due to their extreme stance. (Just maybe gives you an idea what people might think to turning off the a/c while driving. I don't know if this helps the cause any.) Anyway, they don't drink coffee anyway (Can I identify with these mythical people?? :-)) and one drinks hot chocolate and tea which they give up, no problem. (Can I identify with these mythical people??-)) They can't really eat any grains, including bread as no wheat or any other grain is grown in their area. And the only oil/fat is butter. Any spice is certainly out (all have been traded for centuries if not millenniums). And salt. (They eventually learn to make their own from seawater.) As well as citrus. They travel miles and miles in search of this and that, some of which sounds tasty enough, while other things and combos seem kind of peculiar. If everyone made these kinds of trips each day, week, month, I'm not sure we'd be better off in fuel economy!? (That is if they could or could afford to do it, which is dubious.)
So there's my review, I guess.
OTOH, I've started to think about it. I can't say I have done much. But lets say there is a choice between a New Zealand tomato and an Arizona one, I take the Arizona one and a home grown over the two. But I buy organic milk from Wild Oats rather than NM commercial dairy, as it lasts longer and tastes fresher. And if I can get local I will. We have farmers' markets and so on, but they mostly have limited hours. I get food that is Fair trade (like coffee, chocolate, vanilla, etc.). I'll buy Florida or Louisiana's sea food vs Vietnamese. But we are land locked. I'm guessing you could find a river somewhere to fish in, but I'm not going to do it.
Anyway, I wish I had gotten more enthused.
The website (www.100milediet.org) was a bit less extremist but not so helpful. There was no open public forum, but there was a map showing "your range". Mine does include viable farm land (in some months!), I could even get NM wine (sounds strange), though I don't drink wine. I could probably eat tons of pinon nuts, if they weren't so dang expensive.
Although it says you can simply declare your loved foods (like coffee) local (come again? Though it doesn't say anything about Fair Trade) and other pieces of moderation. (Trying a meal a day, a week, etc.) The website still waxes ecstatic of the pleasures of vinegar, sauerkraut, and buttermilk over those pesky lemons and limes. Come again? There is a blog and a place to donate money.
Rather more helpful is:
http://www.localharvest.org/
It isn't a real local food discussion, but more of a source and search engine for local products. You can put in your zip code and come up with a list of local products. You can select from restaurants, markets, co-ops, etc. The search seems to be less than 100 miles but I don't plan driving for a couple hours for some farm anyway. The forum is limited.
I'd be interested in anybody else's comments. I'd also be interested in better websites.
--des
I am reading the book Plenty. This is the 100 mile diet. This is a Vancouver couple that decide to eat foods within a 100 radius for a year. They kind of cheat in the midst of winter by trying 100 mile diets in other parts of the world (Mexico, Southern US, etc.). I was hoping they would really deal with the winter from their stores of hand canned and frozen goods. Perhaps they'd go game hunting. :-} They live in the boonies and don't seem to have actual jobs that they go to. So I found the whole thing maddening.
I really wanted to like the whole idea and get more interested in it and I got kind of turned off by it due to their extreme stance. (Just maybe gives you an idea what people might think to turning off the a/c while driving. I don't know if this helps the cause any.) Anyway, they don't drink coffee anyway (Can I identify with these mythical people?? :-)) and one drinks hot chocolate and tea which they give up, no problem. (Can I identify with these mythical people??-)) They can't really eat any grains, including bread as no wheat or any other grain is grown in their area. And the only oil/fat is butter. Any spice is certainly out (all have been traded for centuries if not millenniums). And salt. (They eventually learn to make their own from seawater.) As well as citrus. They travel miles and miles in search of this and that, some of which sounds tasty enough, while other things and combos seem kind of peculiar. If everyone made these kinds of trips each day, week, month, I'm not sure we'd be better off in fuel economy!? (That is if they could or could afford to do it, which is dubious.)
So there's my review, I guess.
OTOH, I've started to think about it. I can't say I have done much. But lets say there is a choice between a New Zealand tomato and an Arizona one, I take the Arizona one and a home grown over the two. But I buy organic milk from Wild Oats rather than NM commercial dairy, as it lasts longer and tastes fresher. And if I can get local I will. We have farmers' markets and so on, but they mostly have limited hours. I get food that is Fair trade (like coffee, chocolate, vanilla, etc.). I'll buy Florida or Louisiana's sea food vs Vietnamese. But we are land locked. I'm guessing you could find a river somewhere to fish in, but I'm not going to do it.
Anyway, I wish I had gotten more enthused.
The website (www.100milediet.org) was a bit less extremist but not so helpful. There was no open public forum, but there was a map showing "your range". Mine does include viable farm land (in some months!), I could even get NM wine (sounds strange), though I don't drink wine. I could probably eat tons of pinon nuts, if they weren't so dang expensive.
Although it says you can simply declare your loved foods (like coffee) local (come again? Though it doesn't say anything about Fair Trade) and other pieces of moderation. (Trying a meal a day, a week, etc.) The website still waxes ecstatic of the pleasures of vinegar, sauerkraut, and buttermilk over those pesky lemons and limes. Come again? There is a blog and a place to donate money.
Rather more helpful is:
http://www.localharvest.org/
It isn't a real local food discussion, but more of a source and search engine for local products. You can put in your zip code and come up with a list of local products. You can select from restaurants, markets, co-ops, etc. The search seems to be less than 100 miles but I don't plan driving for a couple hours for some farm anyway. The forum is limited.
I'd be interested in anybody else's comments. I'd also be interested in better websites.
--des
