Battleground Earth

Green Foods

Tue May 20 13:52:00 EDT 2008

Broccoli, shamrock cookies, peas, lime sherbet... oh wait, this article isn't about those types of green foods... it's about finding environmentally-friendly "green" foods and preparing "green" meals like the delicious ones shown on Supper Club!

The "greenest" foods of all are the ones found closest to your home and that require as little preparation as possible. In California, for example, an orange plucked from a neighborhood tree and eaten raw, whose rind is composted, is ten times greener than a Florida orange that was purchased from a grocery store five miles away, juiced using an electric juicer, and whose rind is trashed in a garbage can. While there are many factors to consider when trying to buy and consume green meals, the short-and-sweet version is as follows.

  1. Buy as local as you can. The more "miles per calorie" you can reduce, the better your food is for the environment. Adapting a local food diet means sacrificing out of season fruits and vegetables, but being a locavore is often healthier than your current diet. Besides, isn't giving up fresh cherries in the winter worth lowering the carbon footprint of your food?
  2. Avoid meat. Perhaps the "greenest" choice you can make is to limit the amount of meat in your diet. While local meat is certainly a better choice, the carbon footprint of each burger or steak is still hundreds of times as large as that of vegetables and fruit. A vegetarian diet only requires 300 gallons of water a day while a meat eater's diet uses up a whopping 4,000 gallons a day. Individuals save more water by not eating a pound of beef than by not showering for an entire year.
  3. Prepare as energy-efficiently as possible. Eating your (non-meat) food as uncooked and unprocessed as possible preserves the food's nutrients and minerals while conserving energy. The raw food movement, which includes mostly nuts, seeds, fruits, and vegetables meticulously prepared using little to no heat or energy, is an example of gourmet energy-efficient food, but less extreme options include simply limiting the number of electricity-operated appliances you use while cooking (like using a handheld can opener instead of an electric one), recycling all packaging (like the can), and limiting the amount of heat used for the meal.
  4. Compost all leftovers. Hopefully, your green meal is so tasty that there won't be any leftovers, but inevitable waste like potato peels and onion skin should be composted instead of discarded. Finished compost can be used as fertilizer for your orange tree!
 
  • email
  • digg
  • share
  • print
helpful article? vote for it
{ }
close window

CLOSE X

 

comments on this article

view all post a comment

 
 
 

today on planet green

view all

Votes

recent
discussed

Did You Know?: Wasted Office Paper Wall
POSTED  5 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

Emeril's Sauteed Chard
POSTED  6 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

Emeril's Root Vegetable Rosti with Chive Crema
POSTED  7 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

G Word Chef Gregory Schaefer on Sea Urchin!
POSTED  7 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

Emeril's Salmon with Cherry Preserve Sauce
POSTED  8 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

Supper Club: Chef and Guest bios
POSTED  26 Jun 2008. 7 COMMENTS.

{0}

Keep Buying Electric Cars, We're Making a Difference!
POSTED  15 Aug 2008. 6 COMMENTS.

{4}

Welcome to the Planet Green Community!
POSTED  10 Jul 2008. 8 COMMENTS.

{19}

Emeril Episode: Jen Duhamel and Recipes
POSTED  17 Jul 2008. 7 COMMENTS.

{24}

Raising Green Kids: 5 Arguments Against Artificial Grass
POSTED  16 Aug 2008. 4 COMMENTS.

{3}

 

show schedule

Friday, August 29 / 06:00AM

Planet Green

Episode 3: Bamboo Dresses, Stunning Succulents, & Saving Forests

A green dinner party hosted by Tom Bergeron in an eco-friendly house in Venice, CA. Guests: author Heather Thomas, Succulent LA owner Ryann Davis, TreePeople founder Andy Lipkis, comedian Bob Einstein, and Chef Ben Ford cooking Sturgeon Confit

Friday, August 29 / 09:00AM

Planet Green

Episode 3: Bamboo Dresses, Stunning Succulents, & Saving Forests

A green dinner party hosted by Tom Bergeron in an eco-friendly house in Venice, CA. Guests: author Heather Thomas, Succulent LA owner Ryann Davis, TreePeople founder Andy Lipkis, comedian Bob Einstein, and Chef Ben Ford cooking Sturgeon Confit

Friday, August 29 / 02:00PM

Planet Green

Episode 3: Bamboo Dresses, Stunning Succulents, & Saving Forests

A green dinner party hosted by Tom Bergeron in an eco-friendly house in Venice, CA. Guests: author Heather Thomas, Succulent LA owner Ryann Davis, TreePeople founder Andy Lipkis, comedian Bob Einstein, and Chef Ben Ford cooking Sturgeon Confit