Ingredients: farmers, chefs create farm to table flavors

In Ingredients, farmers and chefs unite to bring more flavorful, nutritious foods to restaurants and consumers. Local, sustainable farming is the key in this documentary written and directed by Robert Bates.

Ingredients is now available from Netflix, and at the film’s website.

Seasonal eating pleasures

Living in France at age 19 inspired chef Alice Waters of Berkeley’s Chez Panisse. People shopped at open air food markets. They stood in line at the bakery for fresh-baked bread. Mussels were eaten “right out of the water.”

“I had this whole sense of aliveness around eating,” she says. “It was a way I wanted to live.” Back in America, Waters sent food buyers to visit farms and develop relationships with farmers. She began ordering directly from farms that agreed to practice sustainable farming.

“As chefs we’re the catalyst,” says chef Greg Higgins of Portland’s Higgins. “We find the good ingredients, we showcase them to people, and hopefully get them excited and searching those ingredients out at the market.”

Growing good food

There’s a big difference between growing food and growing a commodity, says Bob Jones Jr. of The Chef’s Garden. “We farm the soil, not the plant,” he explains. Healthy soil ecosystems yield better color, flavor, shelf life and nutritional values, he says.

John Neumeister of Cattail Creek Lamb, who supplies Chez Panisse, uses low density ranching and a diversity of livestock to ward off disease.

Farm to table flavors

Sheldon Marcuvitz of Your Kitchen Garden supplies Nostrana in Portland, Oregon. “The restaurants that we work with best either write their menu every day or have a lot of specials,” Marcuvitz says.

“We only want to pick what’s perfect that week” to keep customers happy, he adds. He introduces new vegetables to restaurants, including the Mediterranean succulent agretti.

Cathy Whims, Nostrana’s chef and owner, believes that “if our farmers and ranchers are making a good living they’re going to stay here.” With oil shortages, “why do we need something that’s coming across country?”

Strengthening local economies

Food imports have increased four-fold in the past decade, with the FDA unable to inspect most of these, the film argues.

“Globalization has been sold to us as a given,” says Carol Boutard of Ayer’s Creek Farm. “You need to control what you eat. You need to demand and reassert that control and be part of the process of what you eat,” she urges.

When farms supply restaurants and farmers’ markets directly, they need not use food brokers or sell to international commodity markets. Local people profit.

A new generation of farmers is attracted to local farming. Government policy could support local farmers, many of whom cannot afford health insurance, college tuitions or retirement.

Hidden costs of cheap food

The demand for cheap food drives farmers and ranchers to reduce costs. They mass produce food and use cheap labor. Even major organic farmers grow monocrops and use organic pesticides, says Marcuvitz.

Organic food shipped from thousands of miles away is a week or more old, he adds.

Local farming pioneer

“People didn’t know what their demands were doing to the world, and they still don’t,” says Joan Dye Gussow, professor emeritus at Columbia University.

Gussow learned that Haiti was exporting hogs to the U.S. 20 years ago. “The poorest country in the hemisphere has no business raising hogs for the United States,” she said.

“We were just pulling food from all over heedless of the conditions of how it was grown and who grew it and what their situation was,” she continues. “So I had this idea that we really had to relocalize the food supply.”

Gussow began to grow her own food. “I haven’t bought a vegetable probably in 10 years,” he boasts.

Pay the doctor or pay the farmer

“You can pay the doctor or pay the farmer,” says Higgins. “There’s no culture in the world that spends less on food per capita or more on medicine than the United States. To me it’s a painfully obvious truth.”

A lack of fresh food and overabundance of processed foods puts kids’ health at risk, says chef Cory Schreiber, program manager for Oregon’s Farm to School program. Each year 17,000 new processed foods are manufactured. Processed foods contribute to childhood diabetes, studies have found.

Farmland decreasing

Beginning in 2000, the world experienced a net loss in farm land, according to Will Newman of the Oregon Sustainable Agriculture Land Trust. Farm acreage has dropped every year since as world population grows.

Local farming can’t feed the masses yet, says the film. To achieve that, farms must be located near cities. Oregon’s Urban Growth Boundary law is considered one of the nation’s most progressive land use laws. Local farms supply the Portland metropolitan area as cities grow up rather than out.

Too many ingredients?

Ingredients raises many issues which it cannot fully explore in one hour. Mentioned are petrochemical use in food production and packaging; sustainably produced wine in Oregon; seed production; biodynamic farming methods; and getting kids to eat more vegetables through farm to school initiatives. (2.5 out of 5 stars)

If you like Ingredients, you might enjoy:  Food Matters; Hungry for Change.

 

Ingredients  /   2009  /  NR  /  1 hour, 7 min

Cast Overview:  Bebe Neuwirth (narrator), Alice Waters, Greg Higgins, Carol and Anthony Boutard, Lee Jones, Bob Jones Sr., Bob Jones Jr., John Neumeister, Sheldon Marcuvitz, Cathy Whims, Peter Hoffman, Will Newman, Laura Masterson, Pascal Sauton

Director: Robert Bates

Genres:  Documentary, Local Farming, Sustainability

 

Food Matters: go vegetarian and raw to get healthy, empowered

Vegetarian and raw foods promote healthier, empowered people, according to Food Matters. James Colquhoun and Laurentine ten Bosch direct this documentary that challenges “a pill for every ill.”

Good nutrition is relatively cheap, simple, safe and effective, the film says. Plant-based nutrition and vitamins, along with modern medicine and health-savvy government policy, can help. Food Matters is now available on DVD or via Netflix.

An epidemic of “What would happen if everybody ate lots and lots of fresh, organic food that’s minimally processed?” asks Andrew Saul, the therapeutic nutritional specialist. “I think we’d have an epidemic of health!”

Better health would lead to less reliance on pharmaceutical drugs and expensive surgery. “One of the few free choices a person has is what they will or will not eat,” says Saul.

The film’s website features juice, superfood and raw recipes, along with updates on nutrition.

Nutritional science meets clinical medicine

“Optimum nutrition is the medicine of tomorrow,” said Linus Pauling, who won two Nobel Prizes. Nutritional pioneer Max Gerson “showed that vitamins and especially large quantities of fresh vegetable juices and organic foods would help to reverse cancer. Gerson had about a 50% cure rate with terminally ill patients. That’s extremely high,” Saul adds.

The Gerson Therapy “activates the body’s extraordinary ability to heal itself through an organic, vegetarian diet, raw juices, coffee enemas and natural supplements,” according to the Gerson Institute’s website. Graphic before-and-after images of Gerson Therapy patients are shown.

True healing

“The health system is a disease-care system,” says Ian Brighthope, M.D., who pioneered Australia’s first post-graduate medical course in nutrition. U.S. medical schools offer students little or no training in nutrition.

Charlotte Gerson recalls her father’s words: “It’s the doctor’s duty to activate and re-activate the body’s own healing mechanism. Then the patient’s healed. It doesn’t matter what you call the disease.”

“You nourish the body and then the body fixes it,” according to Saul. “Vitamins enable the body to heal itself.”

Good nutrition defined

Superfoods have an “extraordinary quality” of vitamins, minerals, co-factors, enzymes and chemicals that can prolong life, says raw food authority David Wolfe.

What are some of these foods? Raw honey. Wheatgrass. Spirulina. Echinacea. Cacao. Coconut. Noni. Bee pollen. Kombu. Kelp. The list goes on.

New ways, new basics

With cancer, heart disease, stroke and dementia rates rising, says investigative journalist Phillip Day, “clearly the old ways aren’t working and we need a fresh paradigm and we need to go back to basics.”

Medicine has made tremendous advances in critical care, infant mortality and the like, Day adds, yet it fails to prevent disease.

Transforming food habits

“Good health makes a lot of sense, but it doesn’t make a lot of dollars,” Saul quips. Widespread good health would require transforming our economy.

“The drug industry is a half trillion dollar a year world-wide conglomerate,” he explains. “Almost $3 billion just in North America. This is really, really big business.”

Health-hungry consumers rule

“If we change our food choices, we change agriculture,” Wolfe says. Transforming corn-wheat-soy diets into superfood, organic and raw food diets would create demand for the new foods.

“When we choose organic, raw, plant-based foods we take our power back and we decide that we are going to have quality,” Wolfe says.

A diet of just 51% raw foods, Wolfe says, would prevent leucocytosis, an immune system response to cooked foods.

Losing nutrition

Conventional fertilizers don’t replace the 52 minerals in healthy soil, Gerson points out. “When the soil is deficient, the plants are also deficient and weakened. They lose their defenses,” leading to pesticide use.

“If we eat just commercial vegetarian food, we get deficient, toxic food,” Gerson concludes.

When food is shipped thousands of miles regardless of season, it loses nutrients. The nutritional value of week-old supermarket produce drops to 40% “if you’re lucky,” says holistic dentist Victor Zeines.

The cancer business  

The American Medical Association admits that less than 30% survive using chemotherapy – surgery – radiation. “More than 70% of them die. That is just not acceptable,” says Dan Rogers, M.D.

“Let’s face it, if cancer disappeared tomorrow, millions of people would have to retrain,” says Day. “This is a $200 billion a year industry.”

Health centers licensed by the Gerson Institute are located in Mexico and Hungary. It is illegal in most countries to treat cancer patients with nutritional therapy. “The legal treatments in these countries are surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy,” Food Matters tells us.

Healthcare debate

“There’s a lot of debate over how we should finance and change, provide healthcare to everyone in the United States,” Saul says. “Is the solution to simply give them access to a system that doesn’t work very well? Or would it be a good idea to teach them how to be healthy?”

“I think they need education, not medication,” he concludes.

Taking responsibility

Take responsibility for your own health, Saul urges. “Why not be healthy and happy? You change your life, you do some exercise, you eat right, you feel better.”

Pay attention to how you feel after eating, Wolfe recommends. “I feel very strongly that the best doctor in the world, the best nutritionist in the world, is you.” (5 out of 5 stars)

If you like Food Matters, you might enjoy:  May I Be Frank; Dirt! The Movie; The Beautiful Truth; Hungry for Change.

 

Food Matters  /   2008  /  NR  /  1 hour, 20 min

Cast Overview:  Andrew Saul, Ian Brighthope, Charlotte Gerson, David Wolfe, Phillip Day, Victor Zeines, Dan Rogers

Directors: James Colquhoun and Laurentine ten Bosch

Genres:  Documentary, Health, Nutrition