Since few things are more basic than food, it is heartening to see 
adjectives, like local, slow, organic and free-range creep into 
mainstream vocabulary. They don’t always come with a full understanding 
of the issues behind them – I have yet to hear a celebrity chef discuss 
Ghawar or methane clathrates – but at least the media culture seems to 
be moving in the right direction. There is one meal, however, that 
rarely comes up, in which most people continue to eat highly processed 
and unsustainable food – breakfast. 
Here in Ireland, we eat more
 breakfast cereal per person than any other people in the world, and 95 
percent of us buy breakfast cereal each year. According to Kellogg’s web
 site, the Irish eat more than eight kilos of breakfast cereal per year,
 two kilos more than in the UK or the USA, making the cereal aisle one 
of the most visited in the supermarket.
Cereal is the 
supermarket’s third most popular product in dollars, just behind soda 
and milk and just above cigarettes. The few corporations that make 
almost all cereal brands spend more money on advertising than does any 
other industry except cars. 
Most of us grew up eating cereal 
every morning, possibly featuring one of the more than 1,000 cartoon 
characters designed solely to sell breakfast products. As adults, many 
of us continue to eat cereal, told that it is necessary to get vitamins 
or lose weight. 
In fact, breakfast cereals are rarely healthy and 
never necessary. Most children’s cereal have far more sugar than any 
child needs – Smacks, for example, are more than half sugar. Even the 
less saccharine adult cereals are exorbitantly expensive for the amount 
of nutrition they contain.
When you think about it, a breakfast 
cereal is a bizarre product -- there is nothing natural or normal about 
eating manufactured flakes and puffs created by giant machines in 
factories, shipped around the world and sealed in plastic for months. 
It’s
 probably not a coincidence that they were invented as the world was 
beginning to use fossil fuels in the 19th century. Fossil fuels allowed 
more food and a population explosion, fewer jobs on increasingly 
mechanised farms, and more jobs in increasingly polluted and overcrowded
 cities. Much of the new mass-produced food for urban workers was of low
 quality and questionable origin – according to author Otto Bettman, the
 New York Council of Hygiene reported in 1869 that the meat and poultry 
hung raw in stores “undergo spontaneous deterioration...becoming 
absolutely poisonous.” To use another example, city inspectors in 1902 
found the majority of milk sold in New York was unsafe to drink. 
Understandably,
 this combination of pollution, overcrowding, stress and near—poisonous 
food created many stomach problems, and the early industrial era also 
created a new moneyed middle class that could pay for cures. The first 
health food movement sprang up in response, with a mixture of 
common-sense advice, ridiculous junk science and competitive marketing 
familiar to most of us today. Health gurus touted the 19th-century 
equivalents of Echinacea or Goji berries, and one solution – made 
possible by the new industry and mass production – was breakfast cereal.
 
It wasn’t the only such solution – on this side of the 
Atlantic, it was cookies that were touted as indigestion cures, and they
 are still called “digestive biscuits” today. In America, though, health
 companies touted wheat flakes, and after decades of advertising they 
became normal and spread across the Western World. 
It should be 
fairly easy to see that cereal cannot continue to be a part of people’s 
lives much longer: as energy and money grow tight, we will not be able 
to continue transporting wheat around the world and sending it through 
energy-intensive factories to be crushed, soaked, pressed and heated. We
 will have to do more traditional things with grain -- grinding into 
flour, sprouting, boiling – that served people before the energy window.
 
Finding out whether cereal is actually “part of a nutritious 
breakfast” is actually a simple process: Take the nutrition and price of
 a box of cereal, and compare it to a vegetable like kale. 
Take 
as an example a common adult cereal I chose from the store. One serving 
of it is 31 grams for some reason, and contains 117 calories, but only 
15 percent of your recommended daily dose of Vitamin A and 35 percent of
 Vitamin C. At my local grocery store, it is 5.49 euros, or 34 cents per
 serving. 
A serving of kale is a lot more food – 130 grams – but
 has less than a third as many calories, at 36, and has 354 percent of 
your needed Vitamin A, 89 percent of Vitamin C, plus Calcium and iron, 
all for seven cents a serving. In other words, kale costs 79 percent 
less than breakfast cereal and 66 percent fewer calories, but has 2.5 
times more Vitamin C and 24 times more Vitamin A. 
Of course, 
that’s just one example: You can’t live on kale alone, nor would it be 
filling by itself, so scramble it with eggs and eat it with toast. Put 
it in bean soup. You use your imagination, and you get to practice 
cooking. If cooking is too much work first thing in the morning, you 
could make a nutritious meal the night before, and put it in the 
refrigerator along with your lunch. If you feel like being very 
organized, you could cook earlier in the week and make enough for 
breakfast and lunches all day. Finally, you could grow or raise all the 
ingredients yourself, in your garden, and get your food virtually free.
This
 seems a small thing, but all that cereal purchased means that it is 
part of the daily ritual for hundreds of millions of people, and we love
 our rituals – especially in the morning. Changing them creates stress, 
and the more changes we have to make at once, the more overwhelmed we 
will feel. We will be better off eliminating such unnecessary habits 
now, so that when major changes are forced upon us, our lives can 
continue as smoothly as possible.
Tuesday, 29 January 2013
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1 comment:
Cereal is certainly my big weakness, no question....tried to give it up several times and failed. Honestly, it would be easier for me to give up meat or milk! 50 years of conditioning will do that to a person I guess.
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