Showing posts with label food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food. Show all posts

New Age living: Eating like a nomad

For two years now, I've been avoiding red meat and poultry like a pescetarian. I tell others I'm a pescetarian and am commended for being a vegetarian, when really, I'm not. Really, I abhor red met and poultry. I'd like to say I did it initially for humane or ecological reasons, but it was simply the easiest way to declare a preference. Ecologically, pescetarianism just isn't cutting it. Consuming farmed salmon and invasive tilapia once or twice a week is no better than slaughtering overweight chickens and sequestered pigs.

Nor is it any healthier than meat, I've concluded; it's just healthy a little differently from meat. If at all, that is, considering current farming practices and indirect contaminants. While meat is a primary concern for anyone wishing to reduce their carbon footprint or waistline, the sheer quantity of food North Americans consume is disturbing. (I'm not pro-ana, this is a fact.)


I don't drink milk or take butter, but those slices or overshadowed by my fish and coffee, cocoa, nuts intake. What's concerning is how much dairy we consume without knowing it. Dairy tends to wind up in unexpected places, making it difficult to grocery shop with a milk allergy. Further complicating the matter, a milk allergy can involve one or a combination of many proteins in milk. And different combinations of these proteins are active within different products. Have fun trying to figure out which you're allergic to. There's even dairy products in vaccines, for crying out loud. I knew I avoided flu shots for a reason.

Domestic cows are not native to North America. Nor is wheat, for that matter. Years ago, Americans screwed up and nearly eradicated our native bovine species, the American bison.


Nor are bananas or coffee beans, yet these four food items have become staples in our diet. The modern gatherer can reap loads of diverse crops in a grocery store. A varied diet is good for you--it is a sign of prosperity, exclaims grocers across the continent, through a colourful presentation of exotic fruits and vegetables. Yet I can't help but wonder if herein lies the cause of obesity and universal wastefulness. As it seems, I'm not the only one.

I think the health argument is false. Before globalization, and trade, and exploitation, societies thrived on subsistence hunting/fishing and simple agriculture/livestock rearing. I think we shouldn't shy away from corn. Maize, a native plant to the Americas, is not a bad alternative for wheat, a habitual food from Eurasia. While undesirable in its present state, warped and colluded with other chemicals, corn has a lot to offer. As we have seen already, it is versatile. When done correctly, it is not difficult to grow. This is expected. Humans tend to grow a lot of things in silly places.

It can be argued that Canada requires food imports due to its cold climate, but there were people here before us, too! They consumed a fair variety of foods, which I have dubbed "the nomad diet". It is nutritiously sufficient, and not overly diverse. Here's a list of native plants and animals to North America; easily grown in private gardens for a self-sustainable diet.

Grains, seeds, and beans: maize, quinoa, sunflowers, common beans
Vegetables: potatoes, squashes (incl. pumpkins), mushrooms
Fruit: berries, pawpaws, grapes
Nuts: black walnuts, pecans
Animals: turkeys, ducks, fish, bison



There's not much selection, but it's nutritionally valid. For now, I'll just stick to not buying bananas, etc., though I can see myself living off corn, beans, and squash.

Two Weeks & Counting...


(though my favourite is track 10, "Sacrifice")

Classically, I've been getting rather blue these last 14 days. In the past, this had led to taxing reflections, self-destructive behaviour, and loss of decision-making skills. Mom suggested I look up museums I might want to check out. She suggests this every summer. To put it simply, between the ROM and the Ontario Science Centre, I've made at least 20 visits. I daresay I'm all ROM'ed out. So tomorrow I'm headed to the big T.O. again, but not to visit museums. Nor to church-hop, I'm afraid. I'm going to shop condos.

I don't know how to beat it, this blasted season known as summer. It's bliss for the first week, and then it's hotter than Inferno (which I've made a note to read at some point before school takes up again). Yesterday night after the thundershowers, there was visible steam rising from the ground. Disgusting, pathetic fallacy is. Therefore, to make myself feel slightly more content, I've compiled a list of my accomplishments since returning from Alberta.

  • written seven posts here, two posts there and still trying to make it a habit
  • swam about 15km... where are my abs?!
  • bought new boat shoes, and went a little accessory-overboard on a weekend shopping excursion. At least I'm coming to terms with my bulging closet.
  • viewed eight films: the latest Jane Eyre, Source Code and Moon by that Jones guy, plus additional Mansell masterpieces to be found in The Fountain, Affleck's The Town, Duplicity, The Prince And Me (starring Julia Stiles), and Mirror Mirror.
  • read philosophy (There are Two Errors in the the Title of this Book, Outliers), gothic lit (Northanger Abbey, The Picture of Dorian Gray), and a fair share of trashy summer novels.
  • biked over 150km; across town and back, and then again
  • spent a day in downtown Toronto, running errands.
  • ran 20km, which I realize is embarrassing.
  • downloaded 21 new tracks, but mostly reacquainting with old ones
  • baked lemon raspberry poppyseed muffins, two-bite brownies, and apple cinnamon bread
  • worked 53.5 hours, which totals to about $520 at student minimum, ka-ching.
  • vacuumed and scrubbed out my washroom. About time, lol.
  • inhaled a bag of chocolate chips
  • eaten about 3000 calories in fresh fruit; I'll never have to see the doctor again.

  • DIY: Glitter Bananas


    I have great difficulty not loving this man. But oops, they did it again (credits to George Salisbury). And if that's not inspirational enough, he walks on water, too. On a personal note, I've avoided bananas for 18 months-- banana chips and banana bread don't count. I've been told they contain potassium, so here's some food porn on post no. 300 to reduce your risk of stroke, control your blood pressure and improve your bone mineral density.



    DSCF9528
    Oh my god, this show.

    Anais Pouliot by Terry Richardson for Aldo 2012
    Samuel Hoggar at a Volta River Estates in Ghana by Nathalie Bertrams

    Still life with Louis Vuitton Bananas by Ting Ting Cheng