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    How to Green your Meals

    green mealsThe dailies? You know - milk, bread, eggs - the dailies. These are the things that you find yourself running out each week (or each day) to purchase. Now, you spend a lot of money on these purchases because of their purchasing frequency, so its important that something worth so much money is chosen carefully.

    Our top 10 tips for greening your meals

    1. The Big O

    When you eat organic, don’t just picture the healthy food you are putting in your body, picture the healthy ecosystems which produced that food, the workers who are safer from chemicals, the land, water, and air that is being protected, and the wildlife that is being allowed to thrive. Organic vegetables, fruits, grains, juice, dairy, eggs, and meat (and don’t forget the organic wine and beer), are grown and processed in ways that support healthy people and a healthy planet. (While you may not be able to find or afford organic options for everything you need, certain fruits and vegetables are more pesticidy than others.)

    2. Fair fare

    Fair trade certified food ensures a proper wage and working conditions for those who harvest and handle it. But fair trade is green for the environment as well. TransFair, the only fair trade certifier in the US, has strong environmental standards built into its certification process that protect watersheds and virgin forests, help prevent erosion, promote natural soil fertility and water conservation, and prohibit GMOs and many synthetic chemicals. TransFair claims that their environmental standards are the most stringent in the industry, second only to USDA organic certification.

    3. Go local

    Buying seasonal, local food is a boon for the environment for a lot of reasons. Since most food travels many miles to reach your table (1,500 miles, on average), locally sourced food cuts back on the climate-change impacts of transportation. Local food also generally uses less packaging, is fresher and tastier, and comes in more varieties. It also supports small local growers and lets them get more for their produce by not having to spend so much on packing, processing, refrigeration, marketing, and shipping. The best way to track down local food is at farmers markets or through community supported agriculture (CSA), which often offer home delivery.

    4. Don’t follow the pack

    Instead of buying foods that come in extensive packaging (most of which is petroleum-based plastics) look for unpackaged or minimally packaged foods, experiment with bringing your own containers and buying in bulk, or pick brands that use bio-based plastic packing. And of course try and recycle or reuse any packaging you end up with.

    5. Compost the leftovers

    Greening your meals isn’t just about the food that winds up on the plate—it’s the entire process, the whole lifecycle shebang. Composting leftovers will ease the burden on the landfill, give you great soil, and keep your kitchen waste basket from smelling. Apartment dwellers and yardless wonders can do it too! And yes, a composting toilet can be part of the miraculous cycle as well. (see our guide for how to compost)

    6. Grow your own

    In the garden, in the greenhouse, in the window box, or something fancier. Even urbanites can get quite a bit of good eats from not much space.

    7. To and from

    Just as buying locally grown food cuts on “miles per calorie,” buying from local sellers cuts back on emissions, fuel consumption, and unnecessary traffic.

    8. Just enough

    Put some extra planning into the amount of food you cook will cut back on waste. If it’s something that will spoil quickly, try to avoid making more than you or your family can eat. If you’ve got extra, make a friend happy with a home cooked surprise. If it’s a bigger affair, give the leftovers to those who may need it more.

    9. Raw

    Many people swear by the benefits of eating raw. Whatever the health advantages may be, preparing raw food consumes less energy and because raw food is usually fresh by definition, it is more likely to be locally grown.

    10. Ease up on the meat

    Meat is the most resource-intensive food on the table and eating less of it can be the single most green move a person makes. Producing meat requires huge amounts of water, grain, land, and other inputs including hormones and antibiotics, and leads to pollution of soil, air, and water. A pound of beef requires around 12,000 gallons of water to produce, compared to 60 gallons for a pound of potatoes. If you’re a meat eater, for starters, try cutting out a serving of meat each week. Going vegetarian or vegan is a profoundly meaningful environmental choice, and it’s done wonders for Chris Martin and Prince.

    02.03.2007. 00:59

    Debs on 02.03.2007. 01:10

    Purchase extra fruits during the summer and practice drying and canning them. Then they will be available year-round, even when they’re not in season.

    Andrea on 02.03.2007. 01:24

    Eating less meat is always good for the environment as well.

    Sabine Lydia Müller on 13.03.2007. 17:18

    To produce 1 kg (2.2 lbs) of CHEESE you need 8 l (2,11 gal.) of milk. Within the range of dairy products, cheesemaking emits the most climate-damaging gases. Even MORE than producing MEAT!!!

    * Source: FOCUS Magazin, Nr. 9, 26. Februar 2007

    Andrea on 14.03.2007. 03:24

    That is very interesting Sabine, I didn't know that.

    eeaotly on 08.04.2007. 09:56

    Unfortunately, in my own country - Romania - it's hard to convince people to grow theyr own food. They prefer to shop it from the grocery. They pretend they don't have time. Part of thm are right. But part of them are simply lazzy. I know people who jump into the car to drive for shoping just a bunch of parsley!

    And about eating organic... Oh! Even country side people prefer to use chemical fertilisers. In fact, country side farmers are the bigest users of chemicals. People living in cities have no choise but to shop from peasants. So they have no choise but to eat un-organic.

    One nasty thing is that some peasants know chemicals are unhealthy and they don't use them on they food,but they use it for commercial food. So they eat organic but they sell un-organic. This un-ethical atitude comes from pasants' fears they will not be able to sell and from town people lack of nutritional education.

    The ugliest part is governmeant itself sustains this stupid situation by giving incentives to farmers and helpingthem to use chemical fertilizers.

    On teh other hand, there is no real legislative andintitutional way to control and to restrict GMOs. So tehy are simply spreading out in the ecosistem without people's knowledge.

    ThatLassy on 24.11.2007. 15:27

    It's quite a lot to ask people to turn into a raw vegan who eats mostly local organic foods or fair trade organic with the least amount of packaging, say this and they go, oh no that’s too much, but it can be done. Take small steps and it won't only do the environment good but you as well, you'll feel so much better, healthier, its a lot to give up if your a big meat eater though, but I think you could all survive on one meat meal a week? Perhaps a Friday night? Makes the weekend seem even better. If everyone done just a little bit it would have a big impact.
    I’m not a raw vegan, but most of it is. I am only human. And I love caffa cakes to much…. ~

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