not pictured: the invisible dick of the market
Not long ago, quinoa was just an obscure Peruvian grain you could only buy in wholefood shops. We struggled to pronounce it (it's keen-wa, not qui-no-a), yet it was feted by food lovers as a novel addition to the familiar ranks of couscous and rice. Dieticians clucked over quinoa approvingly because it ticked the low-fat box and fitted in with government healthy eating advice to "base your meals on starchy foods".
Adventurous eaters liked its slightly bitter taste and the little white curls that formed around the grains. Vegans embraced quinoa as a credibly nutritious substitute for meat. Unusual among grains, quinoa has a high protein content (between 14%-18%), and it contains all those pesky, yet essential, amino acids needed for good health that can prove so elusive to vegetarians who prefer not to pop food supplements.
Sales took off. Quinoa was, in marketing speak, the "miracle grain of the Andes", a healthy, right-on, ethical addition to the meat avoider's larder (no dead animals, just a crop that doesn't feel pain). Consequently, the price shot up – it has tripled since 2006 – with more rarified black, red and "royal" types commanding particularly handsome premiums.
But there is an unpalatable truth to face for those of us with a bag of quinoa in the larder. The appetite of countries such as ours for this grain has pushed up prices to such an extent that poorer people in Peru and Bolivia, for whom it was once a nourishing staple food, can no longer afford to eat it. Imported junk food is cheaper. In Lima, quinoa now costs more than chicken. Outside the cities, and fuelled by overseas demand, the pressure is on to turn land that once produced a portfolio of diverse crops into quinoa monoculture.
In fact, the quinoa trade is yet another troubling example of a damaging north-south exchange, with well-intentioned health and ethics-led consumers here unwittingly driving poverty there. It's beginning to look like a cautionary tale of how a focus on exporting premium foods can damage the producer country's food security. Feeding our apparently insatiable 365-day-a-year hunger for this luxury vegetable, Peru has also cornered the world market in asparagus. Result? In the arid Ica region where Peruvian asparagus production is concentrated, this thirsty export vegetable has depleted the water resources on which local people depend. NGOs report that asparagus labourers toil in sub-standard conditions and cannot afford to feed their children while fat cat exporters and foreign supermarkets cream off the profits. That's the pedigree of all those bunches of pricy spears on supermarket shelves.
Soya, a foodstuff beloved of the vegan lobby as an alternative to dairy products, is another problematic import, one that drives environmental destruction . Embarrassingly, for those who portray it as a progressive alternative to planet-destroying meat, soya production is now one of the two main causes of deforestation in South America, along with cattle ranching, where vast expanses of forest and grassland have been felled to make way for huge plantations.
Three years ago, the pioneering Fife Diet, Europe's biggest local food-eating project, sowed an experimental crop of quinoa. It failed, and the experiment has not been repeated. But the attempt at least recognised the need to strengthen our own food security by lessening our reliance on imported foods, and looking first and foremost to what can be grown, or reared, on our doorstep.
In this respect, omnivores have it easy. Britain excels in producing meat and dairy foods for them to enjoy. However, a rummage through the shopping baskets of vegetarians and vegans swiftly clocks up the food miles, a consequence of their higher dependency on products imported from faraway places. From tofu and tamari to carob and chickpeas, the axis of the vegetarian shopping list is heavily skewed to global.
There are promising initiatives: one enterprising Norfolk company, for instance, has just started marketing UK-grown fava beans (the sort used to make falafel) as a protein-rich alternative to meat. But in the case of quinoa, there's a ghastly irony when the Andean peasant's staple grain becomes too expensive at home because it has acquired hero product status among affluent foreigners preoccupied with personal health, animal welfare and reducing their carbon "foodprint". Viewed through a lens of food security, our current enthusiasm for quinoa looks increasingly misplaced.
Something to think about the next time you pass by the McDonald's on your way to Whole Foods. How many more Bolivians need to suffer so you can avoid eating 99-cent loaded beefy nacho grillers like GOD intended?
THIS!!!
Goethestein posted:quinoa is pretty good, but its overpriced, apparently as a result of greedy peruvians
it looks and tastes like tiny condoms
the vegans are doing peruvians a favor here
Goethestein posted:quinoa is pretty good, but its overpriced, apparently as a result of greedy peruvians
imo it does not taste that good at all but it is versatile and nutritionally fantastic
EmanuelaOrlandi posted:laserjew
I came here, to post this.
tpaine posted:EmanuelaOrlandi posted:
laserjew
aughhhhhhhhhh
tpaine posted:EmanuelaBrolandi posted:laserjew
because they were asked
littlegreenpills posted:dear impper + ken + anyone else who cares to weigh in. who has the best aesthetics out of 1. kamikaze pilots 2. people who self immolate to protest injustice 3. people with life threatening anorexia
self-immolaters definitely
the kamikaze pilots are aesthetically lame because it's their machines exploding and not them, like "wow a moving metal thing exploding in war, what a statement"
and number 3 definitely not. there can be nothing uglier than some bourgeois attention-seeker (too old to be into one direction, too young to be into street markets) culturally appropriating a Somali aesthetic that has taken decades to build.
2. anorexia reminds me of aids and the faggot holocaust so that's a plus.
3. self-immolation ... ehh anyone proven these guys didn't just do it by mistake?
EmanuelaOrlandi posted:i am going to ifap the shit out of u faggots
this authoritarianism is outta control, we gotta take the power back!
littlegreenpills posted:dear impper + ken + anyone else who cares to weigh in. who has the best aesthetics out of 1. kamikaze pilots 2. people who self immolate to protest injustice 3. people with life threatening anorexia
kamikaze pilots clearly. only kamikaze pilots really act on Duty. they form a twisted union of man and machine in the moment of their deaths, pointing the way to a sunlit future where everything is also on fire. self-immolators are cool but for different reasons, they don't have the Teleological Suspension Of The Ethical. anorexics are gay