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Green Group Book Club 2011
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August 2011: Omnivore's Dilemma
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Kirsten
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Jul 26, 2011 07:21PM

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I'm new to GoodReads and to this group, so hello to everyone! I got my copy of The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals ready and I'll soon start reading it.
Right now I'm reading Terra: Our 100-Million-Year-Old Ecosystem--and the Threats That Now Put It at Risk but I will finish it soon.
Right now I'm reading Terra: Our 100-Million-Year-Old Ecosystem--and the Threats That Now Put It at Risk but I will finish it soon.

I have already read The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals, which is actually good. Will give me time to catch up with all the other books!


Yes! Join us! I haven't started reading the book yet so didn't feel like you are behind...


anyway, i thought it was interesting how excited he was about bread. after reading Pandora's Seed, i haven't quite looked at grains/wheat the same way again.
I'm a vegetarian, soon to be vegan but I was curious about this book so I gave it a try. I liked the chapter about corn and also the way Joel Salatin ran his farm. I learned a few things about the industrial side of the organic method and I loved the "beyond organic" one.
Anything related to meat and animals raised in mega-farms was a sad reminder of how things work; for me there is no going back to meat eating.
Anything related to meat and animals raised in mega-farms was a sad reminder of how things work; for me there is no going back to meat eating.

(And don't worry alexandru, I would never try to convince you that it's okay for you to eat meat and dairy...!)
Anyway, eating in general has become very political and even if a person eats very little meat or none at all, one must still take into consideration where the food is coming from, and one of the biggest issues for me is how farmhands are treated and paid. I have no idea if this issue will show up or not in this book (I have only read the corn chapter so far), but I do think it's relevant to the conversation. No?

I eat meat, but a lot of the meat I eat is game. Game I have hunted and prepared myself, so I know exactly where it is from. I eat some beef and poultry, but I get a lot of it from relatives' farms, and most of them only keep a few animals and mostly raise crops.

I eat meat, but a lot of the meat I eat is game. Game I have hunted and prepared myself, so I know exac..."
So far it's not coming up in the book so i won't worry about it too much for this discussion. :D
i'm still deep in the corn part of the book and although i get really irritated with Pollan's writing at times (especially in the first two chapters), i am learning and thinking a lot. This book is definitely revealing about messed up our food supply has become. i'm also reading As Always, Julia: The Letters of Julia Child and Avis DeVoto, which is very interesting because these letter were written in the 1950s and 1960s. during part of that time Julia Child was in France and i think it's very interesting when Julia and Avis discuss changes in farming and what's available in France versus the U.S., etc. Somehow it ties in really nicely with the issues that Pollan is describing, and how they developed over the past century.

I'll check that book out, looks really cool.
Sorry I've been AWOL, just had surgery...kind of trying to slowly return to life.


I haven't, Leanne, but I probably should do that.
I'm well into the section about Polyface Farm, now, and I'm really enjoying it. I'm a little disturbed about some USDA policies, but can't say I'm surprised. Just feeling really disappointed right now, and frustrated that things got so out of whack in just about one generation. This weekend I picked up Fresh: A
Perishable History and I'm looking forward to reading it.

yeah, it's crazy! and upsetting. but i am relieved that my tortilla chips are not made with that nasty #2 corn.
i am almost finished with the book and i'm curious to know Kirsten's thoughts about his hunting experiences.

I agree that it adds a whole other layer to your food when you kill what you eat. Seeing your dinner face to face and then ending its life gives you respect for your food, and for the animal. I only hunt to eat, I would never kill anything just to kill it. Same with fishing, if I'm not going to eat it, it goes right back in the lake as quickly as possible.
I think the part he does miss about hunting is the ritual that becomes a part of the hunting process when you do so often. That adds something even more in my opinion. It becomes a social/cultural thing.



that's how i ended up looking at it. especially since as i read that chapter i felt annoyed because very few people could/would get their food this way on a regular basis, so what point is he really getting at? but then he got to his point, which is to maybe have a type of "thanksgiving" more regularly in the future. i can get behind that.

yes!



because corporate interests want to make a big profit! and somehow this is the way to do it. i call this "wackonomics."



Also, mass production methods keep costs down as well. I think. And if the foods used are low quality - which I'm sure they must be.
I really liked the book myself. I especially appreciated his story about calf to slaughter. I read a column (Rolling Stone a few years ago) he wrote about this topic prior to the book. I think there was a little more detail. This is the chapter that put me off ground meat and grain fed beef.



i made my first loaf of bread last night! i am really excited about that. and tonight i'm making bagels, i hope.


For Christmas I got Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day: The Discovery That Revolutionizes Home Baking and I'm just now getting the courage to try it! It takes more than five minutes, though, lol. And a bit of pre-planning. But this book really does make it simple for neophytes like me who have always had difficulty baking (oh, you mean I really have to follow the directions?!)




I couldn't find either of my stones (I guess I haven't unpacked them) but I have a cookie sheet that is essentially the same idea, so I used that.


It was not a failure, but I think I can do better. :D
I have used a pizza stone to make foccaccia, which was tasty. I have to say the pizza peel makes a big difference in terms of ease of baking!
I would love a juicer for OJ...
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Books mentioned in this topic
Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day: The Discovery That Revolutionizes Home Baking (other topics)Fresh: A Perishable History (other topics)
As Always, Julia: The Letters of Julia Child and Avis DeVoto (other topics)
Compassionate Carnivore: Or, How to Keep Animals Happy, Save Old Macdonald's Farm, Reduce Your Hoofprint, and Still Eat Meat (other topics)
The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals (other topics)
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