About Eating Locally
Feb 16th, 2008 by Jason
Update: This event will soon be available on demand at the AADL Streaming Video Collection
I was very glad I went to From the Farm to Your Fork. The panelists represented a fascinating array of backgrounds, the farmer, the chef, the dietitian, the scientist. Their talks were thought provoking and inspiring.
During the Q&A, it became apparent that I was not alone in wanting to be convinced that small-scale, local farms are better for our health, communities, and environment, with effects from local to global and for people of every demographic. Although the audience was literally a Pollan-waving bunch, (you’ll see) there were undoubtedly a lot of university types. (I mean, it’s Ann Arbor, throw a rock hit a post-doc. At one point I wanted to test that hypothesis, but I couldn’t get it through IRB) I think a lot of people who are sympathetic to this cause crave evidence, research, data. Thoughts?
From the Farm to Your Fork – Why Local Food Can Make Us Healthier, Happier and More Secure
Monday February 18, 2008:
7:00 pm to 8:30 pm –
Downtown Library: Multi-Purpose Room
The Ann Arbor District Library is bringing together an incredible panel to discuss eating local.
- Alex Young, Chef at Zingerman’s Roadhouse and 2007 James Beard Foundation Nominee for Best Chef : Great Lakes. (No, that’s not him in the picture. That’s the windy city’s molecular gastronomic golden boy, Grant Achatz. Here, here’s Kitchen Chick’s great piece on Chef Alex Young.
- Professor Catherine Badgley. A biologist, she teaches Food, Land and Society at the University of Michigan and lists agriculture and biodiversity among her chief research interests. I can’t wait to see her, she sounds totally awesome.
- Annie Elder & Paul Bantle, local farmers who run a biodynamic farm, which, i think means that the farm is ethical enough to win the approval of Al Gore, Captain Planet and St. Francis of Assisi.
- Ruth Blackburn, a nutritionist who has been working to educate people about food, health and community as a nutrition specialist for the University of Michigan. Here’s an article she wrote for Cooperative Grocer on the importance of co-op staff knowing nutrition.
Good stuff. Annie mentioned that the same type of event will be taking place at the Baldwin Public Library within the next month. But the real question… will there be some samples to munch after the talks?