|
Sustanable Food: Eat Well Guide
The following information was taken from the web site: http://www.eatwellguide.org. At the end of each of the points below is a link to the specific page on their web site that gives you more information on that subject. Thank you for taking the time to read about this important subject.
There are many, many reasons to eat healthy, sustainable food, but only you can decide for yourself why it is important. Below we’ve provided you with a few reasons, along with links to more detailed information.
1. Health benefits. More and more health benefits are being found with sustainable meat. According to New York Times bestselling author Jo Robinson, grass-fed beef has two to six times more omega-3's than factory farmed, grain-fed meat. Omega-3 is a "good" fat that helps our cardiovascular system, our brain function and may help prevent cancer.
The concept of sustainability also involves eating local, which means buying food from a farm as close to you as possible. This cuts down on the length of time between when the food is harvested or processed and when you eat it. After being harvested, food begins to lose nutrients, so the less time between the farm and your dinner plate, the more nutritious the food is for you.
http://www.sustainabletable.org/issues/health/
2. Health Risks. Food raised unsustainably jeopardizes public health and the safety of our food supply. Industrial agriculture damages human health by promoting the development of antibiotic resistant bacteria, allowing the proliferation of food borne pathogens, releasing toxic pesticides, incubating infectious diseases, and contaminating surrounding communities with harmful pollutants.
3. Tastes Better. Most people claim that sustainably-raised food simply tastes better. Industrial-raised turkeys are injected with saline solution and vegetable oils to try to improve "mouth feel". Years ago, a cook only had to put a turkey in the oven; today, the bird must be marinated, deep fried or brined to try to counteract the lack of flavor and dryness inherent in the meat.
http://www.sustainabletable.org/kitchen/
4. Animals. Sustainably-raised animals are treated humanely and are permitted to carry out natural behaviors such as rooting in the dirt and pecking the ground. Factory-farmed animals are crammed together in unsanitary conditions, where they suffer horribly and are often sick. Most never see sunlight and their feet never touch the ground. These unhealthy animals are then processed and their meat sold to you.
http://www.sustainabletable.org/issues/animalwelfare/
5. Environment. On unsustainable factory farms, thousands of animals excrete tons of waste every week. Millions of gallons of this untreated waste are often held in open-air lagoons and pollute the surrounding air, land and water. According to the Environmental Protection Agency, in the 1990's hog, chicken and cattle waste polluted 35,000 miles of rivers in 22 states and contaminated groundwater in 17 states.
http://www.sustainabletable.org/issues/environment/
6. Workers. Workers on factory farms operate in very dangerous conditions. Some have been overcome by gases from manure lagoons and have died. They are often paid minimum wage and have no rights or say in their job. Employees on sustainable farms are paid a fair wage and are treated with respect.
7. Rural Communities. Sustainable farms are an integral part of the community, where money made on the farm is filtered back into local businesses. Studies have shown that factory farms can tear apart rural communities.
8. Fossil Fuels and Energy Use. Raising animals on factory farms takes a large amount of oil – to grow and harvest the crops that feed the animals, to fueling the ventilation systems and electricity in the barns in which they're held, to the transportation costs to move the animals the long distances they travel. This increases our dependence on foreign oil and foreign countries. Oil is also a non-renewable resource – meaning it cannot replenish itself. Some researchers have estimated that the planet will be out of oil within 50 years. http://www.sustainabletable.org/issues/energy/
9. Saving Family Farms. Since 1950, over 2 million farms that raised hogs have disappeared. If this continues, we might lose all our farms, except for a few industrial facilities that will dictate what we eat. By eating sustainably, you're supporting a true American tradition that's part of our cultural heritage – the small, independent family farmer. http://www.sustainabletable.org/issues/familyfarms/
These are just a few reasons to eat sustainable food. Remember, every dollar you spend sends a message to business -- the more you spend on sustainable food, the more sustainable food will be produced. So the choice is yours. |