Tracy Rhodes's Reviews > The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals

The Omnivore's Dilemma by Michael Pollan
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it was amazing
bookshelves: nonfiction

I'll never look at corn the same way again.

This book provokes a lot of thought about the origins of our food and the biological, political, social and economic implications of those origins. I liked that Pollan approached the topic journalistically, with admirably little in the way of political agenda. To structure his book, he uses the format of following the path of four finished meals from origin to plate - one McDonald's meal, one comprised of supermarket organic products, one from a "beyond-organic" self-sustaining farm in Virgina, and one he forages almost entirely on his own.

Pollan goes into food science labs and discovers how ubiquitous the use of corn has become in modern diets, and how corn-derived food systems are synthesized and refined into ever more variations to increase our usage and meet industrial demands for market growth. The McDonald's meal he and his family share, for example, ends up being comprised of over 70% corn or corn-fed product (from beef and milk cows fed corn silage and loaded with antibiotics when it sickens them, to corn starches used in buns and chicken nugget fillers, to the high-fructose corn syrup used to sweeten soda and milkshakes). Pollan makes a strong case for how corn and its refined offspring have contributed to the ever-expending girths of Americans in recent decades.

Next he looks at the organic market, examining the compromises that many organic producers have had to make to support the demands of national chains like Whole Foods, and what "organic" does and does not necessarily mean. He contrasts corporate organic production with a week he spends working on a farm in Virginia run by a maverick Christian/libertarian farmer who carefully manages a "beyond organic" operation of interdependent, high-yielding crops and livestock on his land. The story of how this farmer guides his farm in a sustainable, symbiotic cycle is absolutely amazing.

Lastly, Pollan goes off the grid completely in growing and foraging the means for an entire omnivorous meal - not only growing vegetables/herbs and learning how to scout for edible mushrooms, but actually learning how to hunt and shoot a wild pig in N. California (something my own husband recently did, much to our culinary benefit). The vast majority of people who eat meat will never even lay eyes on the living body of an animal they eat, let alone take responsibility for its demise; so I find a lot of honesty in Pollan's having taken that step in his exploration of the food chain.

Overall, this book rocked my world in terms of understanding our modern food chain and its impact on all of us both individually and as a society. As a result, I've been doing a lot of thinking about how I can improve both my diet and my contribution to local/organic food sources. I'm determined to find more ways to eat locally and organically, and I feel lucky to live in one of the best places to do so.
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Reading Progress

Started Reading
May 1, 2007 – Finished Reading
May 9, 2007 – Shelved
May 30, 2007 – Shelved as: nonfiction

Comments Showing 1-2 of 2 (2 new)

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message 1: by SC (last edited Aug 25, 2016 11:40AM) (new) - added it

SC great review


message 2: by Oddmix (last edited Aug 25, 2016 12:02PM) (new)

Oddmix This was a fantastic review. I am definitely goiing to read this book!

I attended a presentation made by Joel Salatin of Polyface farm(the VA farmer, I believe) and we have applied many of his ideas to our own small farm. I have actually not purchased any raw meat (I have bought hotdogs and ham) in nearly a year, depending instead on hunted venison and our own goats, rabbits and chickens. We produce our own dairy from goats (though we do eat more cheese than I can make). We also raise some of our own eggs, fruit, and some vegetables.

Being at least partially self sustaining is VERY rewarding and not nearly as hard as it first looks. And my children - ages 4 through 10 - are completely honest with themselves about where their food comes from since they are intimately involved with every step of the process.

Thanks again for a great review, I can't wait to read it.


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