Posts Tagged: slow food
UC Berkeley offers edible education to students and public
Chef and sustainable food advocate Alice Waters has organized a class to be offered at UC Berkeley this fall called "Edible Education 101," according to Mother Jones food and ag blogger Tom Philpott.
The class will be co-taught by Nikki Henderson, executive director of People's Grocery in Oakland, and UC Berkeley journalism professor Michael Pollen, the author of several best-sellers about the U.S. food system.
Henderson told Philpott that the course is subtitled "The Rise and Future of the Food Movement" to acknowledge its outgrowth from advocacy by the white-table-cloth sustainable eating crowd and proponents of food justice for low income Americans.
"Kind of Oakland activists and Berkeley activists coming together," Henderson explained. "Because every successful movement in America, and elsewhere, has found ways to get disparate groups of people to actually work together, especially when they're not in direct conflict with one another."
Henderson told Philpott that the 14-week course will explore class and race and power dynamics in the context of food and agriculture. Each week food experts from a wide variety of perspectives will relate their thoughts and experiences about the American food system. One of the sessions will feature an open conversation with a Walmart executive and a representative from the the largest corporate bulk food distributor in the world. Other confirmed speakers include: Carlo Petrini, Peter Sellars, Marion Nestle, Frances Moore Lappé, Raj Patel, Ann Cooper, Eric Schlosser and Alice Waters.
The two-unit, upper division course will be open to 400 UC Berkeley students and 300 members of the general public. The class will be from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays in UC Berkeley's Wheeler Auditorium. Tickets for the general public will be available beginning Aug. 15. Find information and updates on Water's Chez Panisse website.
Sustainable eating and food justice will be combined in UC Berkeley course.
Slow food on a budget
Fast food is cheap, but an Associated Press story that moved on the wire yesterday offered help for eating "slower food" on a budget. AP reporter Michelle Locke Ho opened her story by making examples of two slow-food products: $20 handcrafted cheese and $100 free-range turkey. She talked to UC Davis food systems analyst Gail Feenstra about what appears to be a pricy trend.
"It's been sort of touted as being an upper-income thing, which is unfortunate because that is not the bottom line," Feenstra was quoted. "The slow food movement needs to be about everybody having access to good quality food."
The story was organized into five sections, each with suggestions for cutting the cost of "slow food."
-
Do the math and think big
-
Organize to localize
-
Be a bargain hunter, gatherer
-
Get green at the grocery
-
Timing is everything
For the "organize to localize" section, Locke Ho spoke to UC Cooperative Extension nutrition, family and consumer sciences advisor Cathi Lamp of Tulare County. Lamp said a lack of large grocery stores and farmers markets in rural areas can be overcome with community organization.
"In one community too small to support a full market, parents are helping run a vegetable stand once a week at an elementary school," Lamp was paraphrased.