Tuesday 23 April 2013

Seeds Tedx talk info


Seeds are sex. Seeds are food. Seeds are meat, clothes and fuel. Seeds are the promise of future life. And seeds are becoming a monopoly. According to the journalist Simran Sethi, that’s a cause for great concern.
“The food and agriculture organization of the United Nations says that 75 percent of crop varieties have disappeared since 1900,” she warns in her TEDxManhattan talk, “Seeds: TheBuried Beginnings of Food.” Sethi further elaborates just how little of the world’s seeds we’re taking advantage of, noting that 95 percent of the world’s calories come from just 30 species—a very narrow segment of the some 80,000 edible plant varieties.
And with genetic diversity narrowing, genetic patenting turning seeds into “non-renewable resources” for farmers, and just three corporations controlling over half of the global seed market, the legacy of 10,000 years of domesticated agriculture is at risk.
So yes, as Sethi sees it, now you need to worry about seeds too. But worrying about seeds proves just to be a different shade of worrying about food—buying from small farmers who don’t grow transgene plant varieties is worrying about seeds; eating heirloom tomatoes is worrying about seeds; growing your own food is worrying about seeds.
The very literal questions she asks—“What seeds are we planting? And how do we nourish the seeds that we want to grow?”—can so easily turn metaphoric, less practical questions about what’s for dinner into a meditation on the idea of seeds being the story and symbol of our humanity. Which is part of the fun of worrying about seeds.

Tuesday 16 April 2013

Meat - from all angles

I have been hunting for an illustration that shows all the parts of an animal and how they are used, in order to show the by-products of meat consumption. This could be a layered illustration of one of the most consumed meats, such as lamb, extrapolating and explaining body parts. from the outside in, and could include:

fur/wool
skin
fat
flesh (meat/tissue)
bloodvessels
organs (offal and other names)
blood

use of materials from stock animals which are eaten might include:

medical (transplant etc)
domestic (tallow for candles/fat for lubrication/skin for gloves, vellum, shoes, clothing etc)
culinary (meat, offal - eaten as it is or used for casings as in sausages or haggis)
commercial (bones for glue, bonemeal, animal feed etc)

cultural preferences/requirements/customs in using animals, including squeamish stuff like eating eyeballs and testicles and so on



cuts of meat illustrated - beef and lamb




Thursday 7 March 2013

grain research


http://www.guardian.co.uk/global-development/2012/oct/14/un-global-food-crisis-warning
World grain reserves are so dangerously low that severe weather in the United States or other food-exporting countries could trigger a major hunger crisis next year, the United Nations has warned.
Failing harvests in the US, Ukraine and other countries this year have eroded reserves to their lowest level since 1974. The US, which has experienced record heatwaves and droughts in 2012, now holds in reserve a historically low 6.5% of the maize that it expects to consume in the next year, says the UN.
"We've not been producing as much as we are consuming. That is why stocks are being run down. Supplies are now very tight across the world and reserves are at a very low level, leaving no room for unexpected events next year," said Abdolreza Abbassian, a senior economist with the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO). With food consumption exceeding the amount grown for six of the past 11 years, countries have run down reserves from an average of 107 days of consumption 10 years ago to under 74 days recently.
Prices of main food crops such as wheat and maize are now close to those that sparked riots in 25 countries in 2008. FAO figures released this week suggest that 870 million people are malnourished and the food crisis is growing in the Middle East and Africa. Wheat production this year is expected to be 5.2% below 2011, with yields of most other crops, except rice, also falling, says the UN.
The figures come as one of the world's leading environmentalists issued a warning that the global food supply system could collapse at any point, leaving hundreds of millions more people hungry, sparking widespread riots and bringing down governments. In a shocking new assessment of the prospects of meeting food needs, Lester Brown, president of the Earth policy research centre in Washington, says that the climate is no longer reliable and the demands for food are growing so fast that a breakdown is inevitable, unless urgent action is taken.
"Food shortages undermined earlier civilisations. We are on the same path. Each country is now fending for itself. The world is living one year to the next," he writes in a new book.
According to Brown, we are seeing the start of a food supply breakdown with a dash by speculators to "grab" millions of square miles of cheap farmland, the doubling of international food prices in a decade, and the dramatic rundown of countries' food reserves.
This year, for the sixth time in 11 years, the world will consume more food than it produces, largely because of extreme weather in the US and other major food-exporting countries. Oxfam last week said that the price of key staples, including wheat and rice, may double in the next 20 years, threatening disastrous consequences for poor people who spend a large proportion of their income on food.
In 2012, according to the FAO, food prices are already at close to record levels, having risen 1.4% in September following an increase of 6% in July.
"We are entering a new era of rising food prices and spreading hunger. Food supplies are tightening everywhere and land is becoming the most sought-after commodity as the world shifts from an age of food abundance to one of scarcity," says Brown. "The geopolitics of food is fast overshadowing the geopolitics of oil."
His warnings come as the UN and world governments reported that extreme heat and drought in the US and other major food-exporting countries had hit harvests badly and sent prices spiralling.
"The situation we are in is not temporary. These things will happen all the time. Climate is in a state of flux and there is no normal any more.
"We are beginning a new chapter. We will see food unrest in many more places.
"Armed aggression is no longer the principal threat to our future. The overriding threats to this century are climate change, population growth, spreading water shortages and rising food prices," Brown says.

websites we've found


The internet being the amazing sourcebook it is, a list of websites explored might prove useful. This will be a developing post, so insert date website was found. It can be broken down into categories in due course. These may all be opportunities to publicise the food on your plate.

http://www.theworldrecipebook.com/
8th March 2013

Recipes, articles, forum
http://www.un.org/en/sustainablefuture/food.shtml 


Rio 2012 conference, United Nations website