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5 Steps to Sustainable Eating
Posted by Alisa Smith and James MacKinnon on September 6, 2009 - 11:22pm.
100 mile

Your kitchen is one place where changing to a more sustainable lifestyle won’t feel like a sacrifice—you might just find you’re enjoying your food more than ever. We did. Here are five easy guidelines.

1. Eat Local
A typical piece of produce travels at least 1,500 miles from farm to plate. Cut down your "food miles" by buying local food. Shop farmers' markets, read the labels in supermarkets, or take the family out to the farms! More resources: localharvest.org; 100milediet.org

2. Eat Seasonal
Food that’s in season doesn’t need to be flown in from around the world or grown in gas- or coal-burning hothouses. It’s also at its peak of taste and nutrition. Buying bulk in season keeps down the cost of local and organic foods. Here’s our seasonal food chart: 100milediet.org/bc-seasonality-chart. What’s yours?

3. Eat Organic
You know that organic farming reduces pesticide and chemical fertilizer use. Studies also show that organic farming can radically reduce the energy used - and the greenhouse gases produced - to raise what we eat. Taken together, organic crops can cut the environmental costs of agriculture in half.

4. Eat Your Vegetables
It takes less energy and land to produce vegetable foods than animal products. At the same time, humane animal care requires more space for animals to range freely. If we want sustainability and better living conditions for the animals we eat, we're going to need to consume less dairy, eggs, and meat.

5. Eat Low on the Ocean Food Chain
The world's fisheries are in crisis. Help them recover by eating fewer big, long-lived fish (tuna, salmon, snapper) and choosing small fish and shellfish (clams, oysters, sardines). For a list of sustainable fish stocks in the United States, visit mbayaq.org/cr/seafoodwatch.asp. In Canada, go to seachoice.org.

 

J.B. MacKinnon and Alisa Smith are the authors of the new book Plenty: One Man, One Woman, and a Year of Local Eating (Harmony Books).



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<em>Vicki_R</em>'s picture
posting
by Vicki_R on August 15, 2007 - 10:21am
What a great post for some good tips to keep in mind.  I was at my local supermarket yesterday and they have posted all the local veggies just in this week.  What a great way to promote local farmers.  It was the first time I ever noticed the sign.  I think other supermarkets should do the same.
<em>niciamason</em>'s picture
Nice Post
by niciamason on September 15, 2009 - 8:22am

Nice information,i am very health consious and i seaching that kind of health news and finally i found your post.......thanks for sharing.

 

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<em>hampers</em>'s picture
eating...
by hampers on September 17, 2009 - 4:53am

"...Eat Organic..." Loved this guidelines.  Eating toxic-free, preservative-free and yes, grown organically is a superb way to reaching that healthy body and life. From an advocate of toxic-free fabulous food hampers.

http://www.bradfordsbakers.com


<em>amitchak</em>'s picture
Sustainable Eating
by amitchak on October 29, 2009 - 12:32am

Many of us are unsure of how much we should be eating and many of us don't really know what a "normal" portion is. We have to know the proper amount or type of food which are perfect for our body.In my opinion above mentioned free diet plan should be followed by everybody.


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