Status Updates From The Best American Food Writ...
The Best American Food Writing 2019 (The Best American Series) by
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Jill
is on page 79 of 290
Lord forgive me, but it's time to go back to tha old me...
— Nov 12, 2025 09:58AM
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Eunhae Han
is on page 102 of 290
If you want to be a good inspector: The application requirements, he said, were simple: thirty college credits in a biological or physical science. The hard part was the training. Inspectors must attend months of classes, covering everything from how to write violations to the science of food safety.
— Feb 26, 2025 04:44PM
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Eunhae Han
is on page 102 of 290
Tackling nutritional inequality will require more than putting supermarkets in low-income neighborhoods. These interventions won't change what food means to the poor families I met.
But lifting them out of poverty could. If low-income parents had the resources to consistently meet their kids' desires, maybe a bag of Doritos would be just a bag of Doritos rather than a uniquely potent symbol of parental love and care.
— Feb 26, 2025 04:35PM
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But lifting them out of poverty could. If low-income parents had the resources to consistently meet their kids' desires, maybe a bag of Doritos would be just a bag of Doritos rather than a uniquely potent symbol of parental love and care.
Eunhae Han
is on page 102 of 290
Both wealthy and poor parents used food to care for their chil-dren. But the different meanings they attached to food shaped how they pursued this goal.
Poor parents honored their kids' junk food requests to nourish them emotionally, not to harm their health. Similarly, wealthy parents who denied their kids processed foods did so to teach them healthful lifelong habits, not to deprive them.
— Feb 26, 2025 04:34PM
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Poor parents honored their kids' junk food requests to nourish them emotionally, not to harm their health. Similarly, wealthy parents who denied their kids processed foods did so to teach them healthful lifelong habits, not to deprive them.
Eunhae Han
is on page 100 of 290
Why Do Poor Americans Eat So Unhealthfully? Because Junk Food Is the Only Indulgence They Can Afford
FROM The Los Angeles Times
— Feb 26, 2025 04:31PM
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FROM The Los Angeles Times
Eunhae Han
is starting
I asked them to consider diversifying multiple panels instead of putting all the people of color on a single panel, thereby turning our races and ethnicities, rather than our work, into a topic of conversation.
— Feb 25, 2025 07:39PM
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