Ten Top Food News Stories of 2011: Part One
It’s that ubiquitous list time. For every person who thinks foraging, food trucks, urban farming, and those French pastries known as macarons were the “it” thing of 2011, there’s someone — like, ahem, this writer — who counters that was so 2010 (or, some may quibble, even older).
No matter. At the end of the year we all feel compelled to take stock and make sense of it all, though, granted, it’s a pretty subjective exercise scouring the edible landscape of the past 12 months.
In this two-part post, we look at some of the national trends and topics in food that caught our collective attention in 2011 and serve up some local flavor on the side.
Feel free to weigh in with your own highlights in food from the past year. In no particular order:
1. So Long Food Pyramid, Hello My Plate: The USDA’s famous (some may wager infamous) Food Pyramid, morphed into a dinner plate. Intended to help Americans visualize the correct balance of fruits, grains, vegetables, meat and dairy, My Plate did away with counting servings, which was central to the old image–bye bye to the “five a day” reference for veggies. The new icon was largely seen as an improvement over the old, though it’s not, natch, without its detractors. The politics behind the plate (think government policies that support Big Ag’s corn and soybean business) are at odds with the icon’s message to eaters to consume more greens, argue critics.Local angle: Oakland-based Michelle Simon, author of Appetite for Profit, had plenty of problems with the plate, as outlined on Grist.
On the crop swap front, California’s bounty makes it a perfect place for this cash-free concept to take root. And, risk-free prediction: In a continuing economic downturn, look for more resource sharing in food and farming in 2012.
Local angle: Oakland jumped on board the food swap train pretty swiftly; while Berkeley led the way on crop swaps.
Local angle: Are organic strawberries as advertised? This signature California fruit may actually be treated with pesticides (including methyl iodide a dangerous pesticide that garnered attention in 2011 too), despite the organic sticker. Before they begin bearing fruit, virtually all strawberry plants — whether they go on to produce conventional berries or organic ones — are treated with fumigants and other synthetic pesticides, The Bay Citizen reported.
Local angle: The Headlands Center for the Arts held a bug-based dinner and Lush Gelato in the East Bay featured chocolate-covered grasshoppers on its menu. Monica Martinez of Don Bugito also served up crispy wax moth larvae tacos and toffee-crisped mealworm ice cream at the San Francisco Street Food Festival.

Berkeley Food Pantry offers emergency food supplies to local residents. Photo: Courtesy Berkeley Food Pantry
Local angle: Food banks, including the Berkeley Food Pantry, faced unprecedented need for their services and struggled to meet them because of federal government funding snafus.
More 2011 food stories coming soon in part two.
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Category: Bay Area Bites Food + Drink, DIY, foraging, urban homesteading, economy and food costs, food banks, hunger, volunteer, food trends and technology, politics, activism, food safety











