Links of the day

  • “…if a food containing corn or soybeans is not labeled Certified Organic or GM-free, you should assume it is GM.” [Marion Nestle]
  • I like this: 5 Powerful Reasons to Eat More Slowly [Dr. Mercola] I still forget to eat mindfully and consciously even though the concept was repeatedly raised in the food ethics course that I recently participated in.
  • 10 signs Your Next (restaurant) meal will suck. [Macheesmo] What are signs to you?
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Wednesday's links: Something for everyone

  • Staying sober a challenge in the alchol-heavy hospitality industry. [New York Times] I found the personal stories in this article very interesting.
  • Treehugger proposes a weekday vegetarian diet [Treehugger]
  • Ever wonder why lemon makes milk curdle? It involves protein, negative charge and bondage (er, bonding). [The Kitchn]
  • Creating satisfying food is central to home cooks and chefs — as well as to companies that have produced foods that have helped lead to the obesity epidemic. Mark Bittman on Making Food Satisfying. [New York Times]
  • In his article Bittman links the article “How the Food Makers Captured Our Brains“. It’s fascinating. Quote: “[Kessler] offers descriptions of how restaurants and food makers manipulate ingredients to reach the aptly named ‘bliss point.’”
  • According to this newsletter, the average child gets 5+ servings of pesticides in their food and water each day and the pesticide Atrazine is so toxic it is banned in Europe, but it is used so widely in the U.S., that it is found in 71% of the U.S. drinking water. (Thanks to my mother for forwarding me the newsletter. I went to the online archive so that I could share it with you.)
  • One woman’s changing relationship with food and what she’s learned in the process of doing so while getting healthier. [In The Raw] There’s some great tips in there. The theme of conscious eating comes up (in my life) again and again I forget to exercise it, in part because I eat while doing other things. She touches on multitasking while eating.
  • Torontist on Toronto’s a la Carte food cart program. Not all good news.
  • Meghan weighs in on milk and advises you not to drink conventional milk. [Making Love in the Kitchen] Milk bad. I know this and yet I can’t seem to give up cheese even though avoiding cheese would fit the reason I rarely eat meat.
  • Food industry propaganda: New Organic Logo Will Provide More Opportunities For Organic Producers. [Canadian Food Inspection Agency] “Canada’s Organic Products Regulations (OPR)…set out rigourous standards for the certification of products as organic by accredited certification bodies. Products that meet the production requirements and contain at least 95 per cent organic content may be labelled as “organic” and feature the new Biologique Canada Organic Logo.

No links for tomorrow likely because I’ll be away from a computer all day. However, I do need to write a post about Food Share’s open house from last weekend. I’d forgotten.

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Links for Wednesday & Thursday

  • Mark Bittman on the changing nature of fish buying and cooking. [New York Times]
  • Gender in the restaurant kitchen – myths and preconceived notions [Serious Eats]
  • This stuff feels like bullshit for the sake of marketing to me, and I believe in food as medicine and healing with nutrition: “Chocolates, jams and juices sporting beauty claims were showcased by market researchers Mintel at the In-Cosmetics show in Munich.” [Nutraingredients.com] The German girl interviewed is adorable. “I’d recommend it to my friends who are addicted to sugar but not my male friends.”
  • Another reason to eat blueberries: Blueberries may help boost insulin sensitivity and fight inflammation [Karen Hawthorne, The Appetizer, National Post]

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