Difference between revisions of "FEB 16"

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(Created page with "==9: FEB 16== ===Assigned=== :*Robert Sapolsky, C 13, "Morality" pp. 483-493 :*Haidt, Chapter 4, "Vote for Me (Here's Why)" (23) ===Haidt, Chapter 4, "Vote for Me (Here's W...")
 
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==9: FEB 16==
+
==10. FEB 16==
  
===Assigned===
+
===Assigned Work===
  
:*Robert Sapolsky, C 13, "Morality" pp. 483-493
+
:*Pollan, Michael. Part 2: The Western Diet (pp. 101-136) (35)
:*Haidt, Chapter 4, "Vote for Me (Here's Why)" (23)
+
:*Alfino, Taxonomy of Successes and Failures of the US Industrial Food System (in shared folder)
  
===Haidt, Chapter 4, "Vote for Me (Here's Why)"===
+
===In-class===
  
:*Ring of Gyges - Glaucon got it right. 
+
:*Resisting Industrial Foods
:*Key principle for ethical society: "make sure that everyone's reputation is on the line all the time" (even the babies in the room are keeping track!)
 
:*Functionalism in psychology applied to morality - What does morality do? (vs. ...)
 
:*Tetlock: accountability research
 
::*Exploratory vs. Confirmatory thought
 
::*Conditions promoting exploratory thought (def: evenhanded consideration of alt POVs)
 
:::*1) knowing ahead of time that you'll be called to account; [so, transparency!]
 
:::*2) not knowing what the audience thinks;
 
:::*3) believing that the audience is well informed and interested in truth or accuracy.
 
  
:*Section 1: Obsessed with polls
+
===Pollan, Part II of ''In Defense of Food''===
:*Leary's research on self-esteem importance-  "sociometer" -- non-conscious level mostly.
 
  
:*Section 2: Confirmation bias and exploratory thought
+
:*Part II : Western Diet and diseases of civilization
:*Confirmation bias (def: tendency to seek and interp. evidence to confirm our view)
 
::*Wasson again -- number series
 
::*Deann Kuhn -- 80: We are horrible at theorizing (requiring exploratory thought)....
 
::*David Perkins research on reason giving - IQ only predicts ability to generate "my-side" arguments.  Interesting criticism of education here!
 
  
:*Section 3: We're really good at finding rationalizations for things.
+
:*'''Chapter 1: The Aborigine in all of us'''
:*more examples of people behaving as Glaucon would have predicted.  Members of parliament, :*Plausible deniability - Ariely, matrix-cheating research - ''Predictably Irrational''
 
  
:*Section 4: Can I believe it? vs. Must I believe it?
+
::*Summer 1982 - W. Australia aborigines study -- "metabolic syndrome" -- defined, theorized as signature disease of western diet. [https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/metabolic-syndrome/symptoms-causes/syc-20351916 A visual for metabolic syndrome.]
:*When we want to believe something we ask the first question, when we don't want to believe something, we ask the second question.
+
:*"Motivated reasoning" - 84ff. 
+
::*O'Dea's results p. 87.  Note that she didn't look for a silver bullet, a single factor.  Just the diet change.
  
:*Section 5: Application to political beliefs: Partisan Brains
+
::*Major premiseCompare us to many traditional diet populations and the difference in diseases profile is starkIt might be the "whole diet pattern" rather than a single imbalance.  (The imbalances are symptoms.) [Lots of evidence that as cultures move toward industrial food brands and more female labor market participation, they start to acquire more dietary disease.]
::*Does self interest or group affiliation predict policy preferences?  Not so much self-interest. We are groupish. (Interesting implications for democracies governed by political parties.)
 
::*Drew Westen's fMRI research on strongly partisan individuals. We feel threat to dissonant information (like hypocrisy or lying) about our preferred leader, but no threat, or even pleasure, at the problems for the opponent.  the partisan brainDifference in brain activation did not seem to be rational/cog (dlPFC).  bit of dopamine after threat passes. (Important point: cog/emo dissonance is painful! -except for good philosophers.)
 
::*Research suggests that ethicists are not more ethical than others. (89  Schwitzgebel)
 
::*Mercier and Sperber.  [https://www.dan.sperber.fr/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/MercierSperberWhydohumansreason.pdf Why Do Humans Reason?]
 
::*Good thinking as an emergent property. individual neurons vs. networks.  analogy to social intelligence.  
 
::*Statement, 90, on H's view of political life in light of this way of theorizing. read and discuss.  introduce term "social epistemology"
 
  
===Small Group discussion===
+
:*'''Chapter 2: The Elephant in the Room'''
  
::*We all have examples from social life of people who are more or less interested in exploratory thought and holding themselves accountable to external information and "their side" arguments.   
+
::*Group of early 20th c intellectuals/doctors (bot 90) noticed absence of chronic disease in populations they traveled to.   
::*Share examples of the verbal and non-verbal behaviors of people who are not very good at exploratory thought and inviting diversity of viewpoint in social settings (other people, of course). Then, try to consider or recall the behaviors of people who do the opposite.
+
::*British doc Dens Burkitt:  "Western Diseases" -- diseases attributable to western diet and lifestyle.
::*Make a list: What are some verbal or non-verbal behaviors that you can use to indicate to others' that you are open to having your views examined?  What have you noticed about the practices of people who are good at generating viewpoint diversity in social settings?
+
::*Pollan chooses the story of Weston Price from this group.
  
===Sapolsky. Behave. C 13, 483-493===
+
::*Two objections to hyp that Western diet is to blame:  disease/race theory (but evidence from mixed ethnicity/race cultures like US suggests not), demographic theory (we live longer, so we get more disease). In both cases, the evidence refutes the claim.
  
Rough topics:
+
::*Weston Price -- b. 1870.  diseases of teeth are effects of Western diet.  1939 major work after global travels looking at teeth.  Lots and lots of teeth.  kind of an amateur scientists, but collected important data (and seen right by later dental research). hard to find control groups.  Price found big differences in Vit A and D. (Note comment about Masai -- . Multiple successful diets for omnivores.)  p 98:  note comparison of groups with wild animal flesh and agriculturalists.   
:*Origins of Social/Moral Intuitions in Babies and Monkeys and Chimps
+
::*First to make comparisons of grass fed / winter forage fed animals to find vitamin differences. Example today from grass fed cows. [https://www.pureeiredairy.com/blank-t1jyw Pure Eire Dairy]  Better 06/03 ratios.
::*More infant morality:
+
::*Decline of nutrition in current vegetables and fruits: [https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/soil-depletion-and-nutrition-loss/]
:::*weigh commission more than ommision - infants track commission better than ommission, as in adults.
 
:::*prosociality - helper puppet studies,
 
:::*punishment - sweets go to helper puppets
 
:::*tracks secondary punishment - secondary friends study - Babies prefer secondary puppets who were nice to nice puppets and punished bad puppets.
 
::*Capuchin monkey study (deWaal) - "monkey fairness". (demonstrated also with macaques monkeys, crows, ravens, and dogs), details on 485google "crows solving puzzles" or "elephants solving puzzles"  animals are much more intelligent than we have historically understood.
 
::*Chimp version of Ultimatum Game - in the deWaal version, chimps tend toward equity unless the proposer can give the token directly to the grape dispensers. 486
 
::*"other regarding preferences" (Does the animal show awareness of other's preferences?) in monkeys, but not in chimps! Keep this in mind the next time you are thinking about whether to cooperate with a chimp.
 
::*some evidence of "solidarity" in one inequity study the advantaged monkey (the one who gets grapes) stops working as well.
 
::*Interesting comment: '''human morality transcends species boundary'''. starts before us.
 
  
:*Exemptions for testifying against relatives and vmPFC patients who will trade relatives in Trolley situations.   
+
::*Albert Howard 99 -- "father" of organic farming movement; early 20th century; similar time period, making argument against synthetic nitrogen (more later).  both pioneers in what would later be seen as an ecological approach to food production.   
::*vmPFC damaged patient will sacrifice a relative to save four non-relatives. 
+
::*Important: Among first to see a connection between dietary diseases of the food system as part of an "ecological dysfunction". (This is a theme that will occupy a lot of our attention in our discussion and reading about the history of agriculture.)
::*Interesting note about criminal law exemptions.
 
  
:*Neuroscience of the Trolley Problem and "Intuition discounting"
+
:*'''Chapter 3: The Industrialization of Eating'''
::*dlPFC in level condition and vmPFC in bridge condition.
 
::*Greene's hypothesis: not so much because it is "up close and personal" as we speculated, but in lever condition the killing of the one is a side-effect.  In bridge condition, its ''because'' of the killing. Different kinds of intentionality.  Ok for most people if you push someone out of the way on your way to the lever.  Not intentional killing.
 
::*Loop condition -- you know you have to kill the person on the side track, should be like bridge condition, but test subjects match lever condition, roughly.
 
::*Hypothesis: '''Intuitions are local; heavily discounted for time and space.''' (Think of other examples of this.)  Stories in which your reaction to something changes when you learn where it happens.
 
::*Related point about proximity - leave money around vs. cokes.  Cokes disappear. One step from money and the rationalization is easier. (Also in Ariely research)  Singer's pool scenario vs. sending money for absolute poverty relief.
 
::*priming study on cheating involving bankers.  492 - shows "intuition discounting" when primed to think about work identity. more cheating the more primed about "role" - "It's not me"...
 
  
:*"But this circumstance is different..."
+
::*Thesis: Calling for a more ecological way of thinking about food. Think of food as mutual adaptation of plants and animals to humans. Propagation/place in ecology of food chain.
:*Under stress subjects make more egoistic, rationalizing judgments regarding emoitonal moral dilemmas.
+
::*Example of fruit: ripeness, transportation, high nutrient state.   Corn vs. corn syrup.  (Note point about possible future humans who could use HFCS.) Also true of milk in history of agriculture. Pollan doesn't quite give the details on milkNot like a light switching on.  [Textbook example of gene-culture co-evolutionSelective advantage for those who keep lactase expression going past breast feeding.  You can always leave it to natural selection to favor those who can get on with the new diet.]
:*[this is not mentioned in the text, but it is what he is talking about: the Fundamental Attribution Error - neuro-evidence for the Fundamental Attribution Error [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fundamental_attribution_error]
 
::*we judge ourselves by internal motives and others by external actionsOur failings/successes elicit shame/pride others elicit anger or indignation and emulation (envy?).  The FAE suggests that we explain our own failures more generously than the failures of othersWe offer ourselves excuses (inner lawyer) but are biased toward inferring bad intent from others.
 
  
===Point on Method===
+
:*Types of Changes that Mark the Western Industrial Diet
  
:*A way of framing the research we are reviewing (and some we are not):  Three Frames:
+
::*'''1. From Whole Foods to Refined'''
::*1. Differences and Structures in our individual psychology for expression moral behaviors.(Evolved psychology.)
 
::*2. Differences that emerge from the interactions of individuals in a society or culture.  (Evolved social behaviors.)
 
::*3. Differences between cultures, including, for example the remarkable emergence of WEIRD culture.  (Joe Henrich, The Weirdest People on Earth) -- mention relevance for happiness.  (Culturally evolved cognition and behaviors.)
 
  
:*Now that we are piling on the more research results, we should make sure our research strategy in the course makes sense:  So far:
+
:::*prestige of refined products: prior to roller technology, white rice and flour would be labor added, story of grain rollers 107, Refined flour is the first industrial fast foodFresh flour lasts days. 108: specific details germ/endosperm, but also local mills, water power.  Fortified bread.  B vitamins added back in to reduce pellagra and beriberi.  
::*1. The evolution of social behavior takes us deep into the nature of morality, but it is incomplete for various reasons(big reasony brains make free moves (like "rights"!) much of the evo machinery needs to be "deployed" to work, no answers from evolution to today's problems.  
+
:::*1996: added folic acid.
::*2. Reason and intuition (rider and elephant) characterize our individual moral experience.  We are still filling in our picture of reasoning in morals.  
+
:::*Jacobs and Steffen study: epidemiological study showing effects of whole grains, but also that groups not eating whole grains, but getting equivalent nutrients did not enjoy benefitsalludes to possible '''holism''' in effects.  Sugar intake since 1870's.  [http://www.sugar-and-sweetener-guide.com/consumption-of-sugar.html Sugar data] 
::*3. There are important asymmetries in our moral experience: Paradox of Moral Experience, and, today, the Fundamental Attribution Error(These, and other research results in this unit, hold profound "practical lessons" for improving moral deliberation and avoiding moral polarization (in which groups not only disagree, but see each other as morally inferior).)
 
  
:*Moral reasoning as a means of finding truth vs. furthering social agendas. '''Paradox of Moral Experience:''' We experience our morality the first way, but when we look objectively at groups, it's more like the second way.
+
::*'''2. From Complexity to Simplicity'''
 +
 
 +
:::*The flip side of food degradation is soil degradation.  Nitrogen fertilizers.  simplification through chemical processing.  Control.  Documented nutrient decline in foods (also article above).  Note on the Haber-Bosch process for synthetic NPK. 
 +
:::*Simplification of plant species in industrial foods.  Again, appearance of greater variety in industrial food store, but products actually represent a small variety plants and animals.  116 for details.  Decline in nutrition levels in foods since mid-20th century.
 +
:::*details on loss of food crop diversity. [https://civileats.com/2015/10/05/u-s-farms-becoming-less-diverse-over-time/].  [https://www.agprofessional.com/article/study-us-farm-data-shows-loss-crop-diversity-past-34-years Industrial publication] on loss of crop diversity.  (Examples from intact food production cultures like Italy.)
 +
:::*Corn and soy are very efficient plants for producing carbs, but now supply sig % of calories in Am diet (about 800).
 +
 
 +
:::*Conclusion: there may be a false economy in industrial food production.  Varietals, soil, diversity of food have values that are lost in assessing costs at the retail level. 
 +
 
 +
::*'''3. Quality to Quantity'''
 +
 
 +
:::*Industrial food system has favored cheap macro-nutrients over cheap whole foods.  (whole foods in Italian significantly cheaper.)
 +
 
 +
:::*Decline in nutrient content (118-119: review), "nutritional inflation," interest in "phytochemicals" -- seem related to anti-oxidant and anti-inflammatory effects. 
 +
 
 +
:::*False food value lesson from "'''nutritional inflation'''" :  You get a larger variety of X fruit or veg with less nutrition, but it's cheaper.  Problem is that you have a limited volume of food intake, so you lose value in the end and possibly compromise nutrition. Simplification of species diversity and monoculture of ag. corn and soy are very efficient producers of carb calories.  but then we draw less food diversity by focusing on these two.
 +
 
 +
:::*Decline in food nutrient content from food grown in impoverished soil.  Some details on how soils matter: Growing time affects mineral and vitamin levels ('''bio-accumulation'''). [Note on negative examples of bio-accumulation: mercury in fish.] Some evidence that organic plants have chemicals related to immune responses. 
 +
 
 +
:::*"Overfed and Undernurished" - Industrial ag succeeded in growing more calories per acre, but at a cost. 
 +
 
 +
:::*Cites Bruce Ames, serious researcher interest in micronutrition and cancer.  Interesting theory (unproven) that "satiety" mechanisms are tied to nutrition such that a malnurished body always feels hungry. [Note that we have more theory about this now - Microbiome research.]
 +
 
 +
::*'''4. Leaves to Seeds'''
 +
 
 +
:::*Shift from leaves to seeds decreases anti-oxidants and phytonutrients in our diet. 
 +
 
 +
:::*Mentions Susan Allport's ''The Queen of Fats''
 +
 
 +
:::*More seeds tilt in the fat profile of the food product toward O6.  Less healthy fat.  O3 fats spoil faster, so tend to be removed from industrial food.  Nutritional advice to move toward seed oils didn't originally distinguish O3 from O6. 
 +
 
 +
:::*Lipidphobia led us to shift to seed oils (give up butter --which has some 03 fats and move to corn -- which is high in 06 fats) and that led to a change in ratio of O6/O3 from 3:1 to 10:1.  note the connection p. 129 between fat profile and sense of "food security" -- interesting digression here.  Could we have a deep fear of hunger that still leads us to choose overeating, especially of caloric foods? 
 +
 
 +
:::*O3 decline also related to mental health.  130
 +
 
 +
::*'''5. From Food Culture to Food Science'''
 +
 
 +
:::*Shift from reliance on national / ethnic food cultures to science.  Lots of wisdom and nutrition understanding in traditional cuisines.
 +
 
 +
===Resisting Industrial Foods===
 +
 
 +
:*You can reverse each of the trends Pollan identifies in his discussion of industrial food and the Western Diet that it supplies.
 +
 
 +
:*'''From Refined to Whole foods / Simple to Complex'''
 +
::*Apple confections to apples, [https://www.myfooddiary.com/foods/1435292/starbucks-bran-muffin Starbucks muffins] to a home made muffin (digression on [https://recipes.sparkpeople.com/recipe-detail.asp?recipe=1213856 Bob's Red Mill muffins],
 +
::*Orange juice to oranges to fruit salads (note on ascorbic and citric acid).
 +
::*Mac and cheese to pasta primavera, pasta e ceci.
 +
::*Cook with brown rice when possible.  Treat flour as a fresh food.
 +
 
 +
:*'''Quantity to Qualtity:  "Pay more eat less".''' 
 +
::*Comparisons of taste (and nutrition) between industrial and non-industrial foods.  Taste (in a basic food) as guide to soil quality. (Often associated with organic, but conceptually quite distinct.)
 +
::*Nutrients lost in poor soil. Synthetic fertilizers don't address soil quality.
 +
::*Industrial foods often large, but water logged.  (50cent egg lessons here.) "nutrition deflation" - For the same volume of big industrial produce you are getting less nutrition. 
 +
 
 +
:*'''From Processed Seeds to whole Seeds and more Leaves.''' 
 +
::*Omega 6 and 3 issue.  Fiber and microbiota. How do you get more plants in your diet? "Trade up" dishes that are carb/fat based to dishes that incorporate leaves and vegetable fiber.
 +
:::*Mac and cheese to pasta primavera, pasta e ceci.
 +
:::*Industrial products with corn syrup and corn based chemistry to, well, corn!
 +
 
 +
:*'''Engage in local food culture, which is often more diverse and fresher.'''
 +
::*Markets
 +
::*Community Supported Agriculture (CSA).  Locally "Linc Foods".
 +
::*Nutrients lost in the supply chain transit time.
 +
 
 +
:*'''Connect with traditional ethnic cuisines.'''
 +
::*Ethnic cuisines have a long history of creating nutritious and tasty diets (not just dishes) under conditions of food scarcity. Italians refer to "cucina povera".  High and low (humble) cuisine. Pre-urban cuisines had greater use of higher quality oils (digress on Italian oil buying habits), access to fresh herbs (expensive in urban food culture, but part of "cucina povera").  In terms of practicality, traditional cuisines often create diversity of dishes from common patterns of herbs, spices, and cooking methods.  Compare to stocking and supplying an international/global cuisine kitchen.  Food waste. A foodie could have a very austere yet satisfying and practical kitchen modelling cooking on a traditional "cucina povera".

Revision as of 21:20, 16 February 2022

10. FEB 16

Assigned Work

  • Pollan, Michael. Part 2: The Western Diet (pp. 101-136) (35)
  • Alfino, Taxonomy of Successes and Failures of the US Industrial Food System (in shared folder)

In-class

  • Resisting Industrial Foods

Pollan, Part II of In Defense of Food

  • Part II : Western Diet and diseases of civilization
  • Chapter 1: The Aborigine in all of us
  • Summer 1982 - W. Australia aborigines study -- "metabolic syndrome" -- defined, theorized as signature disease of western diet. A visual for metabolic syndrome.
  • O'Dea's results p. 87. Note that she didn't look for a silver bullet, a single factor. Just the diet change.
  • Major premise: Compare us to many traditional diet populations and the difference in diseases profile is stark. It might be the "whole diet pattern" rather than a single imbalance. (The imbalances are symptoms.) [Lots of evidence that as cultures move toward industrial food brands and more female labor market participation, they start to acquire more dietary disease.]
  • Chapter 2: The Elephant in the Room
  • Group of early 20th c intellectuals/doctors (bot 90) noticed absence of chronic disease in populations they traveled to.
  • British doc Dens Burkitt: "Western Diseases" -- diseases attributable to western diet and lifestyle.
  • Pollan chooses the story of Weston Price from this group.
  • Two objections to hyp that Western diet is to blame: disease/race theory (but evidence from mixed ethnicity/race cultures like US suggests not), demographic theory (we live longer, so we get more disease). In both cases, the evidence refutes the claim.
  • Weston Price -- b. 1870. diseases of teeth are effects of Western diet. 1939 major work after global travels looking at teeth. Lots and lots of teeth. kind of an amateur scientists, but collected important data (and seen right by later dental research). hard to find control groups. Price found big differences in Vit A and D. (Note comment about Masai -- . Multiple successful diets for omnivores.) p 98: note comparison of groups with wild animal flesh and agriculturalists.
  • First to make comparisons of grass fed / winter forage fed animals to find vitamin differences. Example today from grass fed cows. Pure Eire Dairy Better 06/03 ratios.
  • Decline of nutrition in current vegetables and fruits: [1]
  • Albert Howard 99 -- "father" of organic farming movement; early 20th century; similar time period, making argument against synthetic nitrogen (more later). both pioneers in what would later be seen as an ecological approach to food production.
  • Important: Among first to see a connection between dietary diseases of the food system as part of an "ecological dysfunction". (This is a theme that will occupy a lot of our attention in our discussion and reading about the history of agriculture.)
  • Chapter 3: The Industrialization of Eating
  • Thesis: Calling for a more ecological way of thinking about food. Think of food as mutual adaptation of plants and animals to humans. Propagation/place in ecology of food chain.
  • Example of fruit: ripeness, transportation, high nutrient state. Corn vs. corn syrup. (Note point about possible future humans who could use HFCS.) Also true of milk in history of agriculture. Pollan doesn't quite give the details on milk. Not like a light switching on. [Textbook example of gene-culture co-evolution. Selective advantage for those who keep lactase expression going past breast feeding. You can always leave it to natural selection to favor those who can get on with the new diet.]
  • Types of Changes that Mark the Western Industrial Diet
  • 1. From Whole Foods to Refined
  • prestige of refined products: prior to roller technology, white rice and flour would be labor added, story of grain rollers 107, Refined flour is the first industrial fast food. Fresh flour lasts days. 108: specific details germ/endosperm, but also local mills, water power. Fortified bread. B vitamins added back in to reduce pellagra and beriberi.
  • 1996: added folic acid.
  • Jacobs and Steffen study: epidemiological study showing effects of whole grains, but also that groups not eating whole grains, but getting equivalent nutrients did not enjoy benefits. alludes to possible holism in effects. Sugar intake since 1870's. Sugar data
  • 2. From Complexity to Simplicity
  • The flip side of food degradation is soil degradation. Nitrogen fertilizers. simplification through chemical processing. Control. Documented nutrient decline in foods (also article above). Note on the Haber-Bosch process for synthetic NPK.
  • Simplification of plant species in industrial foods. Again, appearance of greater variety in industrial food store, but products actually represent a small variety plants and animals. 116 for details. Decline in nutrition levels in foods since mid-20th century.
  • details on loss of food crop diversity. [2]. Industrial publication on loss of crop diversity. (Examples from intact food production cultures like Italy.)
  • Corn and soy are very efficient plants for producing carbs, but now supply sig % of calories in Am diet (about 800).
  • Conclusion: there may be a false economy in industrial food production. Varietals, soil, diversity of food have values that are lost in assessing costs at the retail level.
  • 3. Quality to Quantity
  • Industrial food system has favored cheap macro-nutrients over cheap whole foods. (whole foods in Italian significantly cheaper.)
  • Decline in nutrient content (118-119: review), "nutritional inflation," interest in "phytochemicals" -- seem related to anti-oxidant and anti-inflammatory effects.
  • False food value lesson from "nutritional inflation" : You get a larger variety of X fruit or veg with less nutrition, but it's cheaper. Problem is that you have a limited volume of food intake, so you lose value in the end and possibly compromise nutrition. Simplification of species diversity and monoculture of ag. corn and soy are very efficient producers of carb calories. but then we draw less food diversity by focusing on these two.
  • Decline in food nutrient content from food grown in impoverished soil. Some details on how soils matter: Growing time affects mineral and vitamin levels (bio-accumulation). [Note on negative examples of bio-accumulation: mercury in fish.] Some evidence that organic plants have chemicals related to immune responses.
  • "Overfed and Undernurished" - Industrial ag succeeded in growing more calories per acre, but at a cost.
  • Cites Bruce Ames, serious researcher interest in micronutrition and cancer. Interesting theory (unproven) that "satiety" mechanisms are tied to nutrition such that a malnurished body always feels hungry. [Note that we have more theory about this now - Microbiome research.]
  • 4. Leaves to Seeds
  • Shift from leaves to seeds decreases anti-oxidants and phytonutrients in our diet.
  • Mentions Susan Allport's The Queen of Fats
  • More seeds tilt in the fat profile of the food product toward O6. Less healthy fat. O3 fats spoil faster, so tend to be removed from industrial food. Nutritional advice to move toward seed oils didn't originally distinguish O3 from O6.
  • Lipidphobia led us to shift to seed oils (give up butter --which has some 03 fats and move to corn -- which is high in 06 fats) and that led to a change in ratio of O6/O3 from 3:1 to 10:1. note the connection p. 129 between fat profile and sense of "food security" -- interesting digression here. Could we have a deep fear of hunger that still leads us to choose overeating, especially of caloric foods?
  • O3 decline also related to mental health. 130
  • 5. From Food Culture to Food Science
  • Shift from reliance on national / ethnic food cultures to science. Lots of wisdom and nutrition understanding in traditional cuisines.

Resisting Industrial Foods

  • You can reverse each of the trends Pollan identifies in his discussion of industrial food and the Western Diet that it supplies.
  • From Refined to Whole foods / Simple to Complex
  • Apple confections to apples, Starbucks muffins to a home made muffin (digression on Bob's Red Mill muffins,
  • Orange juice to oranges to fruit salads (note on ascorbic and citric acid).
  • Mac and cheese to pasta primavera, pasta e ceci.
  • Cook with brown rice when possible. Treat flour as a fresh food.
  • Quantity to Qualtity: "Pay more eat less".
  • Comparisons of taste (and nutrition) between industrial and non-industrial foods. Taste (in a basic food) as guide to soil quality. (Often associated with organic, but conceptually quite distinct.)
  • Nutrients lost in poor soil. Synthetic fertilizers don't address soil quality.
  • Industrial foods often large, but water logged. (50cent egg lessons here.) "nutrition deflation" - For the same volume of big industrial produce you are getting less nutrition.
  • From Processed Seeds to whole Seeds and more Leaves.
  • Omega 6 and 3 issue. Fiber and microbiota. How do you get more plants in your diet? "Trade up" dishes that are carb/fat based to dishes that incorporate leaves and vegetable fiber.
  • Mac and cheese to pasta primavera, pasta e ceci.
  • Industrial products with corn syrup and corn based chemistry to, well, corn!
  • Engage in local food culture, which is often more diverse and fresher.
  • Markets
  • Community Supported Agriculture (CSA). Locally "Linc Foods".
  • Nutrients lost in the supply chain transit time.
  • Connect with traditional ethnic cuisines.
  • Ethnic cuisines have a long history of creating nutritious and tasty diets (not just dishes) under conditions of food scarcity. Italians refer to "cucina povera". High and low (humble) cuisine. Pre-urban cuisines had greater use of higher quality oils (digress on Italian oil buying habits), access to fresh herbs (expensive in urban food culture, but part of "cucina povera"). In terms of practicality, traditional cuisines often create diversity of dishes from common patterns of herbs, spices, and cooking methods. Compare to stocking and supplying an international/global cuisine kitchen. Food waste. A foodie could have a very austere yet satisfying and practical kitchen modelling cooking on a traditional "cucina povera".