Saturday, November 8, 2008

Slowing food down...

What is Slow Food? Have you ever taken a look at our blogroll and thought, "What is that link to 'Slow Food USA' all about? I've never heard of slow food. Did our esteemed contributors make an error?"

Actually, the slow food movement is real and its making its way onto the national food scene. We think it's important to realize what this movement is all about and what it can (and cannot) do to solve the problems we are seeing in food policy in America. In this post, I spoke about the politics of food and how the next president can solve them. This is what Slow Food USA is all about: bringing about better food policies.

But let's rewind. What is "slow food?" Well according to the Slow Food USA site, "Slow Food is an idea, a way of living and a way of eating. It is a global, grassroots movement with thousands of members around the world that links the pleasure of food with a commitment to community and the environment." Well that didn't help very much did it? Okay, maybe it did a little.
First, skip all that stuff about a way of living and grassroots. Most movements proscribe to these notions. Now, linking the 'pleasure of food' and a 'commitment to community and the environment' is a little different. The idea here is that with fast food has created a disconnect between people and food. Before the advent of grocery stores, we grew our own food and dirtied our own hands doing so. Before restaurants become an everyday habit, we used to make our own food, too. We'd know every ingredient in a dish because we had put it there, and likely grew that ingredient ourselves.
While the slow food movement does't aim to shut down grocery stores and fast food chains, they want people to remember the "people, traditions, plants, animals, fertile soils and waters that produce our food," as their About Us page says. In order to return people to these traditions, the group also aims to "inspire a transformation in food policy, production practices and market forces so that they ensure equity, sustainability and pleasure in the food we eat." So, the slow food movement is to essentially educate people on our real connections to food (beyond that obvious 'we need it to survive' angle) as well as help instigate change in the way food is treated in our government policy by engaging our policy makers.
Hmmm...well that sounds familiar, at least partly (see our about us post and this post to remind you what this blog aims to do).

To learn more, read this interesting glimpse at the movement, printed in the New York Times, called "A Slow Food Festival Reaches out to the Uncommitted."