The Omnivore's Dilemma
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Today, buffeted by one food fad after another, America is suffering from what can only be described as a national eating disorder. Will it be fast food tonight, or something organic? Or perhaps something we grew ourselves? The question of what to have for dinner has confronted us since man discovered
… More »Today, buffeted by one food fad after another, America is suffering from what can only be described as a national eating disorder. Will it be fast food tonight, or something organic? Or perhaps something we grew ourselves? The question of what to have for dinner has confronted us since man discovered fire. But as Michael Pollan explains in this revolutionary book, how we answer it now, at the dawn of the twenty-first century may determine our survival as a species.--From publisher description.
« LessOur national eating disorder -- I. Industrial: corn. The plant: corn's conquest -- The farm -- The grain elevator -- The feedlot: making meat -- The processing plant : making complex foods -- The consumer: a republic of fat -- The meal: fast food -- II. Pastoral: grass. All flesh is grass -- Big organic -- Grass: 13 ways of looking at a pasture -- The animals: practicing complexity -- Slaughter: ;in a glass abattoir -- The market: Greetings from the non-barcode people -- The meal: grass-fed -- III. Personal: the forest. The forager -- The omnivore's dilemma -- The ethics of eating animals -- Hunting: the meat -- Gathering: the fungi -- The perfect meal
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America's Food Crisis: THE OMNIVORE'S DILEMMA
Tom Colicchio, Jennifer Pelka, Dan Barber, Katie Lee, Crazy Legs Conti and the author himself, Michael Pollan, weigh in on the significance of The Omnivore's Dilemma, how it has changed the way people eat, and how it may continue to do so in the future.
Michael Pollan on The Omnivore's Dilemma
Pollan speaks at Williams College.
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Add a CommentThis book gives great insight into the food system in the US. It is so easy to read and it never seems like the author is preaching to you about what you should or should not eat - just giving you the facts and his opinion.
The facts in this book frighten me, but I think it's a good fear. I've certainly become far more conscious about what I eat and where it comes from. I appreciate that Pollan says he isn't perfect, either, but this is the way our food system is. It makes it feel less like preaching and more like an honest layout.
Excellent, easy-to-read book on the state of the North American food system, the disengagement of most from how food winds up on our plates, and encouragement on how it is possible to eat healthfully and ethically! I really enjoyed this book, and found the dissection of the industrial and organic food systems quite interesting. Also, as a vegetarian, I found the discussion of moral conflicts on eating animals, whether farmed or wild very relevant. Highly recommend this book.
Great insight into the food industry from the beginning to the end of the food chain. It's amazing that the author Micheal Pollan personally experienced every moment of the book. He provided great history (sometimes overly elaborate), but interesting nonetheless. Shocking revelations about the meat industry and the business of organics.
Let's get one thing straight right from the get-go --- this is not a work of fiction --- it is true --- factual --- although there are some who might think that Omnivore reads like shrill fiction. Pollan has written a number of books --- not all of them have been as "crusading" as this one. The omnivore, the animal that can eat anything, is us. Our dilema is what to eat --- there are so many choices. Ironically for omnivores who have such a wide range of choices, we in North America have chosen to focus much of our food intake on corn. The focus isn't obvious --- how much niblets, pop-corn and Mazola can we eat? It's the corn-based sweeteners (read your Coca Cola label and you'll see what Pollan means); the feed lots; the fuel-from-corn the ethanol plants that are churning out corn-based ethanol to pump into our gas tanks; and the industrialized food chain with its fast food, pop-tarts and instantly nuked dinner-snacks that have snuck up on us. And that's causing porblems: the mistreatment of farm animals; the need to mega-dose livestock with antibiotics; monoculture farming with its dependence on pesticides and herbicides. By contrast, Pollen woops --- I'm sure his name couldn't possibly be a pun) visits a farm that still uses the farming practices all farmers once used. This farm is small; it uses no chemical pesticides, anti-biotics; milk-production enhancers, no petro-chemically produced fertilizers; it is (gasp) organic but also sustainable. On top of that, according to the testimony of those who buy its chickens and eggs, it produces a product that rivals the chicken and the eggs produced by the mega farms for taste and quality. If you read this book and take it seriously you're going to find yourself re-examining your food and where it comes from. And you, my dear omnivore, will be faced with your own dilemma: to keep on eating your corn-fed beef hamburgers washed down with your corn-sweetener soft-drink or whether to mend your ways and eat like a true omnivore --- and not send halfway around the world for your grapes --- how sustainable is that? Well worth reading --- consciousness-raising --- in places even a page turner.
Definitely recommend this book to anyone and everyone! This book has made me see food in an entirely different light. I learned a lot and changed my diet quite a bit after reading this book. If you're looking for a good non-fiction read, this is it. Brilliantly written :)
Fascinating read. A very interesting and different perspective on food. He's a little hard on vegetarians though.
this book follows the life cycle of food, particularly that of corn. it explains how farmers are exploited and then goes on to show how their exploitation serves to corrupt our meat industry practices, as well as affecting many other food markets. this book will definitely educate you about the omnipresence of corn in the average american's diet and what you can do about it.
I will never look at my food the same way.
This book made me examine my eating habits and taught me to think about what I eat, what foods I choose to buy, and where I buy them from. It made a strong impact on me. I love Michael Pollan's writing style - well researched, open-minded, and humorous at times. Anyone who enjoyed the movie Food,Inc. ought to read this.