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Avocado Anxiety

and Other Stories About Where Your Food Comes From

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
WINNER OF THE GUILD OF FOOD WRITERS INVESTIGATIVE FOOD WORK AWARD 2024
JAMES BEARD FOUNDATION BOOK AWARDS NOMINEE 2024
SHORTLISTED FOR SCOTLAND'S NATIONAL BOOK AWARDS 2023
A TIMES ENVIRONMENT BOOK OF THE YEAR 2023
'This is fantastic' THE TIMES
'Deeply relatable' SPECTATOR
'Rigorous, incisive, warm and brave' LUCY JONES
'Essential reading for anyone that eats' JAKE FIENNES
'Universally urgent. Everyone should read it.' CAROLINE EDEN

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The food stories behind your favourite fruits and vegetables.

Have you ever wondered who picked your Fairtrade banana or how far your green beans travelled to reach your plate?
We are all part of a complex food system. Trying to make sense of it, environmental journalist Louise Gray tracks the stories of our five-a-day, from farm to fruit bowl, and discovers the impact that growing fruits and vegetables has on the planet. Visiting farms, interviewing scientists and trying to grow her own, she asks important questions to dig up the dirt on familiar items in our shopping baskets. Are plant proteins as good for us as meat proteins? Why can we buy so-called 'seasonal' fruits like strawberries all year round? And is the symbol of clean eating, the avocado, fuelling the climate crisis?
As pressure grows to share our healthy, environmentally friendly lives on social media, Avocado Anxiety is also a personal story of motherhood and the realisation that nothing is ever perfect.
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    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2023
      An exploration of the backgrounds of our favorite fruits and vegetables and examination of ways to minimize the carbon impact of what we eat. Gray is a journalist based in Scotland who specializes in food and environmental issues, and she is not afraid to get her hands dirty. Her acclaimed 2016 book, The Ethical Carnivore, recounted her year of eating meat and fish that she had killed herself. In her latest, she writes about her journey across Britain visiting farms and suppliers to track down the origins of the produce in her local supermarket--and to assess the environmental effects. "The fact is that eating most things nowadays makes us anxious," she notes. "Never before have we had so much food to eat, watched so many cookery programs or read so many cookery books. Yet, for many people, food is not a source of joy but a source of worry." Thankfully, the author finds plenty of positive stories, including farmers who are changing their growing practices for soil restoration, the resurgence in foraging for wild foods, and experimentation with new varieties. Gray also engagingly investigates the history of potatoes, bananas, tomatoes and, of course, avocados. She acknowledges the difficulty in working out the environmental footprint of foods, especially the carbon costs of transport, and she is wary of the emphasis that some environmental activists put on buying only locally grown food, which can hurt struggling producers in developing countries. It all makes for a complex equation requiring tolerance and trade-offs. Gray advises that readers stay informed, make the best decisions you can, keep an open mind, and don't attack other people for their choices. She concludes each chapter with an illustrative, unusual recipe; the honey roast tomatoes on toast sounds particularly tasty. With comprehensive research and intelligent, fair-minded writing, this is an informative, optimistic read.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      March 1, 2023
      Choosing a carrot, a tomato, or a pint of berries can produce so much angst! Information overload leads to confusion regarding how best to eat for our health and enjoyment as well as for Earth's longevity. UK-based environmental journalist Gray (The Ethical Carnivore, 2016) explores the planetary cost of our most basic food consumption, her research proving that no one choice is as simple as it seems. Eating locally isn't always for the best; tomatoes imported to the UK from the Netherlands take less CO2 to produce than those grown in the UK's hothouses in the off-season. Organic farming might be better for the land, but on a wider scale, it's not efficient at feeding the masses. This easy-to-read, if not easy-to-digest, collection offers plenty to educate both conscientious foodie readers and the merely curious. Like a just-ripe avocado beckoning to shoppers from the grocery shelf, this eye-catching title begs to be picked up. Illuminating the shades of gray in our evolving food system, it will encourage informed thoughts and choices to help make the system sustainable.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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