For dinner, I actually assembled my own meal. Bread, ham, cheese, grilled on a non-stick frying pan so I would not have to use extra butter or oils to cook it. The bread is made by “D’Italiano,” marble cheese by Kraft and the Ham was cut by my local Save-On Foods store. Ingredients in the bread included enriched wheat flour, water, yeast, sugar/glucose, fructose, potato flour, salt, vegetable oil (soybean and/or canola), wheat gluten, defatted soya flour, calcium propionate, sodium stearoyl-2-lactylate, and monoglycerides. From Manning’s article, I know that it costs about “seventy calories to make one calorie of pork,” which is a lot more than “about ten calories of fossil-fuel energy used for every calorie of food energy it produces” (13). This made me wonder again if I should truly start eating local, organic, non-processed producer foods, this would help contribute to reducing energy usage for foods. Then again, those foods are less convenient and a lot more expensive! Once again, I ate at home so no packaging waste was required for the preparation and consumption of my dinner. The bread and cheese came in a plastic bag which would have used energy to make. The ham was sliced from Save- On Foods and put in a paper bag. In high school, there was a fad about the environmental friendliness of brown paper bags, I wonder how truthful that fad is. From this blog, I have learnt that everything requires oil and energy to make. Gone are the days where humans would depend on planting seeds into the soil and use irrigation systems to grow our food or catching wild game. Now everything is industrialized and very inefficient. Inefficient usage of land, different chemical fertilizers from phosphate to nitrogen, heavy processing of the raw foods, and very little local or organic consumption. This is because our demands for food that are big in quantity and lasts long outweigh our concern for our planet and her resources. There is a lack of education and power in our people to make things more efficient and less oil reliant.
Manning, Richard. Harper’s Magazine 308.1845 (Feb 2004): 37-45.