The New York Times
May 11, 2008
Op-Ed Contributor
Change We Can Stomach
By DAN BARBER

TARRYTOWN, N.Y.

COOKING, like farming, for all its down-home community spirit, is
essentially a solitary craft. But lately it’s feeling more like a
lonely burden. Finding guilt-free food for our menus -- food
that’s clean, green and humane -- is about as easy as securing a
housing loan. And we’re suddenly paying more -- 75 percent more in
the last six years -- to stock our pantries. Around the world,
from Cairo to Port-au-Prince, increases in food prices have
governments facing riots born of shortages and hunger. It’s enough
to make you want to toss in the toque.

But here’s the good news: if you’re a chef, or an eater who cares
about where your food comes from (and there are a lot of you out
there), we can have a hand in making food for the future downright
delicious.

Farming has the potential to go through the greatest upheaval
since the Green Revolution, bringing harvests that are more
healthful, sustainable and, yes, even more flavorful. The change
is being pushed along by market forces that influence how our
farmers farm.

Until now, food production has been controlled by Big Agriculture,
with its macho fixation on "average tonnage" and "record
harvests." But there’s a cost to its breadbasket-to-the-world
bragging rights. Like those big Industrial Age factories that once
billowed black smoke, American agriculture is mired in a mind-set
that relies on capital, chemistry and machines. Food production is
dependent on oil, in the form of fertilizers and pesticides, in
the distances produce travels from farm to plate and in the energy
it takes to process it.

For decades, environmentalists and small farmers have claimed that
this is several kinds of madness. But industrial agriculture has
simply responded that if we’re feeding more people more cheaply
using less land, how terrible can our food system be?

Now that argument no longer holds true. With the price of oil at
more than $120 a barrel (up from less than $30 for most of the
last 50 years), small and midsize nonpolluting farms, the ones
growing the healthiest and best-tasting food, are gaining a
competitive advantage. They aren’t as reliant on oil, because they
use fewer large machines and less pesticide and fertilizer.

In fact, small farms are the most productive on earth. A four-acre
farm in the United States nets, on average, $1,400 per acre; a
1,364-acre farm nets $39 an acre. Big farms have long compensated
for the disequilibrium with sheer quantity. But their economies of
scale come from mass distribution, and with diesel fuel costing
more than $4 per gallon in many locations, it’s no longer
efficient to transport food 1,500 miles from where it’s grown.

The high cost of oil alone will not be enough to reform American
agriculture, however. As long as agricultural companies exploit
the poor and extract labor from them at slave wages, and as long
as they aren’t required to pay the price for the pollution they so
brazenly produce, their system will stay afloat. If financially
pinched Americans opt for the cheapest (and the least healthful)
foods rather than cook their own, the food industry will continue
to reach for the lowest common denominator.

But it is possible to nudge the revolution along -- for instance,
by changing how we measure the value of food. If we stop
calculating the cost per quantity and begin considering the cost
per nutrient value, the demand for higher-quality food would rise.

Organic fruits and vegetables contain 40 percent more nutrients
than their chemical-fed counterparts. And animals raised on
pasture provide us with meat and dairy products containing more
beta carotene and at least three times as much C.L.A. (conjugated
linoleic acid, shown in animal studies to reduce the risk of
cancer) than those raised on grain.

Where good nutrition goes, flavor tends to follow. Chefs are the
first to admit that an impossibly sweet, flavor-filled carrot has
nothing to do with our work. It has to do with growing the right
seed in healthy, nutrient-rich soil.

Increasingly we can see the wisdom of diversified farming
operations, where there are built-in relationships among plants
and animals. A dairy farm can provide manure for a neighboring
potato farm, for example, which can in turn offer potato scraps as
extra feed for the herd. When crops and livestock are judiciously
mixed, agriculture wisely mimics nature.

To encourage small, diversified farms is not to make a nostalgic
bid to revert to the agrarian ways of our ancestors. It is to look
toward the future, leapfrogging past the age of heavy machinery
and pollution, to farms that take advantage of the sun’s free
energy and use the waste of one species as food for another.

Chefs can help move our food system into the future by continuing
to demand the most flavorful food. Our support of the local food
movement is an important example of this approach, but it’s not
enough. As demand for fresh, local food rises, we cannot continue
to rely entirely on farmers’ markets. Asking every farmer to
plant, harvest, drive his pickup truck to a market and sell his
goods there is like asking me to cook, take reservations, serve
and wash the dishes.

We now need to support a system of well-coordinated regional farm
networks, each suited to the food it can best grow. Farmers
organized into marketing networks that can promote their common
brands (like the Organic Valley Family of Farms in the Midwest)
can ease the economic and ecological burden of food production and
transportation. They can also distribute their products to new
markets, including poor communities that have relied mainly on
food from convenience stores.

Similar networks could also operate in the countries that are now
experiencing food shortages. For years, the United States has
flooded the world with food exports, displacing small farmers and
disrupting domestic markets. As escalating food prices threaten an
additional 100 million people with hunger, a new concept of
humanitarian aid is required. Local farming efforts focused on
conserving natural resources and biodiversity are essential to
improving food security in developing countries, as a report just
published by the International Assessment of Agriculture Science
and Technology for Development has concluded. We must build on
these tenets, providing financial and technical assistance to
small farmers across the world.

But regional systems will work only if there is enough small-scale
farming going on to make them viable. With a less energy-intensive
food system in place, we will need more muscle power devoted to
food production, and more people on the farm. (The need is
especially urgent when you consider that the average age of
today’s American farmer is over 55.) In order to move gracefully
into a post-industrial agriculture economy, we also need to
rethink how we educate the people who will grow our
food. Land-grant universities and agricultural schools, dependent
on financing from agribusiness, focus on maximum extraction from
the land -- take more, sell more, waste more.

Leave our agricultural future to chefs and anyone who takes food
and cooking seriously. We never bought into the "bigger is better"
mantra, not because it left us too dependent on oil, but because
it never produced anything really good to eat. Truly great cooking
-- not faddish 1.5-pound rib-eye steaks with butter sauce, but
food that has evolved from the world’s thriving peasant cuisines
-- is based on the correspondence of good farming to a healthy
environment and good nutrition. It’s never been any other way, and
we should be grateful. The future belongs to the gourmet.

--

Dan Barber is the chef and co-owner of Blue Hill and Blue Hill at
Stone Barns.

_______________________________________________
For more information about sustainability in the Tompkins County area, please 
visit:  http://www.sustainabletompkins.org/ 

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