Am I a Food Snob?
Jay Walljasper, Utne Reader
May 23, 2002

Let me start with a confession: Without Kraft Macaroni Dinner, Velveeta, and
Miracle Whip I couldn't have made it through college. I don't mean just that
I ate the stuff-I manufactured it. My tuition, rent, and living expenses
were paid with money saved from a summer job at the Kraft Foods factory in
Champaign, Illinois. In one sense, I owe my career and current middle-class
comfort to highly processed, preservative-filled, mass-produced, heavily
advertised industrial food.


So how did it happen that I now find myself snapping up organic radicchio,
heirloom tomatoes, and artisan cheese that costs more per pound than I used
to spend for a night on the town? Is it simply that my culinary appreciation
and ecological consciousness (not to mention wages) have risen since
college, or is something else going on? Have I joined ranks with yuppies who
think nothing of spending on a single meal of exquisitely prepared food and
fine wine what an inner-city family needs for a month of groceries?


Well, not exactly. I still can't tell a Merlot from a Medoc, and the stove
in our kitchen is so old that repairmen refuse to work on it. (Luckily,
three burners still light, although when we bake we have to prop a chair
against the oven door to keep it closed.) So, no wave of guilt overtakes me
in the checkout line when I pay a little more for milk without pesticides or
a loaf of delicious red-onion-and-rosemary sourdough bread.


I did pay attention, however, when a headline in my food co-op's newsletter
recently asked, "Why did you buy the fancy red leaf lettuce when you can buy
chopped bagged iceberg for half the cost?"


Mark Muller, the article's author, recounts how relatives question his
purchases of natural and organic food. "Have I lost touch with mainstream
America?" he asks. "Have I become an elitist -- a food snob?"


FOOD REMAINS ONE of the most significant badges of class in American life.
Wealthy, educated urbanites who would never permit themselves to poke fun at
welfare mothers or immigrants freely make cracks about spongy white bread
and Miracle Whip, which were staples in the cupboard when I was growing up.
While I am eternally grateful to have discovered baguettes and aioli (both
of which originated as peasant fare in France), I'm not surprised at the
trepidation (and occasional hostility) many working-class and rural
Americans feel toward new and unusual foods.


Muller explains that his own path to alleged food snobbery began with
microbrew beers, which taste so much better than big corporate brands
they're worth the extra cost. "I later made the jump into high-quality
food," he says. "I find the increased cost small compared to the health
benefits, the better taste, and the pleasure of shopping in small co-ops
rather than crowded grocery stores."


Still, he adds, family back in Iowa "worry that we are wasting our money. .
.There are also larger, unspoken concerns-that eating these expensive
organic foods is wasteful and counters our moral obligation to 'feed the
world.'"


Muller, a trained environmental engineer who works at the Institute for
Agriculture and Trade Policy, decided to investigate whether his taste for
natural foods in any way worsens hunger in developing nations or harms poor
families and hard-hit farmers here at home.


He notes that in North America food has been transformed into a commodity,
just like standard half-inch nails or AAA batteries. A pound of lean
hamburger in one place is supposed be like a pound of lean hamburger in
another, the only difference being perhaps price. But this fails to take
into account a whole host of environmental, health, and taste factors.


"Aficionados of cars, stereos, and televisions would not stand for someone
claiming that they are all the same," Muller notes. So why would we expect
that to be the case with hamburger or eggs or tomatoes?


"Yes, we are blessed with some of the least expensive food in the world, but
that comes with a cost," he adds. The cost includes pesticide poisoning,
destruction of topsoil, desecration of the countryside, and greenhouse gas
emissions from long-distance transportation.


Current agricultural policies, which deliver cheap food via staggering
taxpayer-funded subsidies to large industrial-scaled farm operations, are
driving family farmers and the stable rural cultures they once supported to
extinction. The public's growing interest in organic and locally grown foods
is actually one of the few bright spots on the horizon for small farmers and
small towns.


Little of this cheap food produced on megafarms finds its way to starving
people in the Southern Hemisphere. Muller discovered that the top three
recipients of U.S. agricultural exports are Japan, the European Union, and
Canada, and that none of the top 10 are nations considered undernourished.
"We produce food for people who are able to pay for it, and sometimes use
food as a strategic political tool, but do not produce food out of moral
obligation."


Since most of what winds up on U.S. supermarket shelves is heavily processed
and packaged, poor families see little savings on their food bill. Low
prices paid to Iowa farmers make very little dent in the cost of corn flakes
on the South Side of Chicago. "Processed foods are a lot more expensive than
organic whole foods," notes Jim Slama, president of the Chicago-based
environmental advocacy organization Sustain, noting that farmers' markets,
buying clubs, and community gardens can provide low-income people healthier
food at lower prices.


Eager to settle once and for all the matter of whether he was a food snob,
Mark Muller turned to the dictionary, which defines snob as "one who tends
to patronize, rebuff, or ignore people." Industrial agriculture seems to fit
that definition far more than organic growers and natural foods shoppers.
Industrial agriculture rebuffs family farmers and ignores obvious health and
environmental concerns. And it's nothing short of patronizing to try to pass
off tomatoes you can bounce off the floor and strawberries that taste like
globs of dried toothpaste as nutritious and tasty.


Jay Walljasper is editor-at-large of the Utne Reader.


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Be the change
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-- Mahatma Gandhi



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