Category: food equity

Roy Choi –Challenging Chefs Do Something Different and Make Food More Accessible

Roy Choi –Challenging Chefs Do Something Different and Make Food More Accessible

I recently heard about the MAD Symposium, an annual gathering of few hundred writers, chefs, scientists, historians and fermentation activists in Copenhagen which is dedicated to exploring and sharing new and forgotten food knowledge.   The third MAD, which took place on August 25-26th 2013, was dedicated to the topic of “guts.” With the theme, the organizers wanted to invoke a sense of courage and urgency in the speakers, enabling chefs and attendees to reflect on the stories and ideas that no one usually dares or gets an opportunity to tell, both literal and metaphorical. MAD was organized by chef René Redzepi and was co-curated by Momofuku chef and restaurateur David Chang and food magazine Lucky Peach.

At MAD, chefs from around the world gather and discuss the challenges and responsibilities that go beyond cooking.  Talks and discussions center on new questions to ask, and how to become more imaginative and inquisitive. One talk by Roy Choi, a chef who revolutionized food truck culture with his food trucks in L.A., was recently posted on MAD’s blog and has been getting lots of mentions on food and culture blogs.

Back in 2008, Choi and his partners, Mark Manguera and Caroline Shin-Manguera, launched a fleet of Korean-Mexican taco trucks, known as Kogi BBQ.   In his talk Choi talked about his restaurant practice, and challenged chefs to address the fact that they are mostly much only feeding privileged communities.

Choi started by talking about the 5 million people in California are hungry.  Where he lives, 65% of children live in poverty.  An additional 17% live in extreme poverty.  He went on to share stasistics about how in his neighborhood where he lives and works, low academic performance, unemployment, single parent homes are the norm, and up to 90% of residents have witnessed or been involved with violence.

He continued on to talk about food and about the unseen hunger crisis in Los Angeles.

“With so many paved roads, the nice weather, restaurants, farmer markets – it is hard to see that in many parts of the city food is supplied by liquor stores, and there are no chef-driven restaurants.  There are few supermarkets and little or no organics.  The stores that do exist have second rate or end of life produce. The restaurants that do exist are fast food.

In life, we all have an ability to make a choice.  Why can’t all these residents just drive over to the next town to get to Whole Foods and shop?  It is the fundamental belief that we all think we have these equal choices, and accessibility to have a great meal is a fallacy.  If all you see growing up is junk food processed meat, and fast food (and no vegetables and fruits), this becomes your normal food and way of eating.

Why am I saying this at a food conference with the best chefs in the world?  I believe that chefs can do anything.  We are not the richest people, but what we do and say, people follow.  We revel what makes up the super duper food world.  We are all connected of the food world, but what if there is a whole population of people right under your nose who can not eat?

We have the internet, and hyper awareness.  Things can be communicated quickly.  The food world has never been more active.  But has it changed?  Are we feeding the people who can’t afford it?  The audience has gotten younger.  We talk about food all the time more than ever.

Our prison systems have terrible food, and these are places to rehabilitate others. In 6th generations from now, the children are not even born yet will have the same division that exists.

Do we have the guts to do something different?    What if every chef also balanced that by making food more accessible? And not just feeding the hood, but also challenging fast food. Imagine every chef in every city was doing their restaurant but also creating a kiosk in a working-class neighborhood, working with the purveyors to bring the prices down—so, instead of fast food, there would be chef-driven fast food.”

Choi worked to create a cafe at Jefferson High School in L.A., selling fruit cups and fresh drinks.  Today the project has become a cafe, and he sees it as a start to making change in his neighborhood.   You can watch his talk on the MAD blog here.

 

Links and Image Sources:

Roy Choi MAD Talk

Roy Choi –Kogi BBQ

Roy Choi’s Upcoming Book – L.A. Son: My Life, My City, My Food

 

 

 

Market Makeover – An Online toolkit for Making Healthy Changes in Corner Stores

Market Makeover – An Online toolkit for Making Healthy Changes in Corner Stores

Places that do not have much healthy food available, often called food deserts, are all over the US, in urban and rural areas.  Sometimes they exist in places that ironically used to grow food, and are usually in low-income communities.   In these locations, there is food to eat, but it’s not usually healthy food.  Often there are few supermarkets, and there is a lot of land in between them.  In these areas, junk food and fast food become the most available food.  Individuals who live in food  deserts often are overfed but undernourished, prone to overweight, obesity, diabetes and chronic illnesses.

In various cities in the U.S., various groups are partnering with corner stores to work to get the stores to carry healthier food choices.  A group from L.A., called Market Makeover, who has worked to do makeovers at over three stores,  has create a website with resources  to help any  group try to plan, partner, and work to create a  “market makeover” in any city.

The project was created as part of  the South L.A. Healthy Eating Active Community Initiative (HEAC), local high school students, and Public Matters.  The groups worked together to transform 3 stores and out of the experience they have compiled a combination of helpful realworld information and creative, innovative strategies.  The resoruces are available  in multiple presentation formats including downloadable pdfs, videos, and other information.

One main message of the group is that there is not one single quick fix to get fresh food into neighborhoods that don’t have it.  In the planning area on the site, there are resources that include a community resource mapping, a food assessment worksheet, food fact sheets, and marketing materials.   In the During Area, there are materials to support developing strategies for different retail stores, information about transitioning a store, and also insights and advice from groups that have worked on doing a Market Makeover.

The site also has YUMTV, a video channel that has videos that use humor to present issues about food and health, and food challenges called, “So You Think You Can Cook?” All the videos, materials, and information can be seen on the Market Makeover website.
Image Source:
marketmakeovers.org
Links:

marketmakeovers.org

Grow Your Food Stamps – Food Stamps and Gardens

Grow Your Food Stamps – Food Stamps and Gardens

The federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), or food stamps can be used to buy seeds and plants, not just foods.  Over 46 million Americans use food stamps (almost 15 percent of the U.S.)  This information is not always publicized, and most SNAP recipients are not aware of this alternative use for their electronic benefit transfer (EBT).   This information also isn’t often known or mentioned in food-justice and urban-framing circles.  This option for using SNAP funds was added as an amendment to the Food Stamps Act in 1973 by Sen. James Allen (D-Ala.).

Daniel Bowman Simon, a garden advocate and graduate student, didn’t know of the provision until 2008, when someone mentioned it to him during at a farmers market.  He talked to others, and got support for starting a project to help inform people on food stamps about the potential support to grow food.

Simon started the nonprofit called SNAP Gardens to spread the word about this by producing posters in several languages advising SNAP recipients that they can use their benefits for seeds. Since starting the project, requests for the posters from farmers markets in 25 states have come in.  The posters are also designed to be displayed in local SNAP offices, community centers, or public housing locations.

An online resource called SNAP-Ed Connection offers training and education materials for SNAP providers who want to give would-be gardeners more guidance and support.

With the help of a $1,000 microgrant from the non-profit organization Awesome Food, SNAP Gardens will start working with The Dinner Garden (a group that sends out free starter packs of seeds by request) to set up a telephone hotline with gardening information.

Part of the grant will also pay to include a flyer about using EBT for seeds with every packet The Dinner Garden sends out, with the assumption that many of those requesting free seeds might also be eligible for SNAP.

Image Source:
SNAP Gardens

Links:

SNAP Gardens

SNAP Gardens Posters

Awesome Food

The Dinner Garden

On the Rise – Corner Stores Stocking Healthy Foods

On the Rise – Corner Stores Stocking Healthy Foods

In communities that lack supermarkets, families often depend on corner stores for food purchases. The choices at these stores are often limited to packaged food and little if any fresh produce. Corner stores are also frequent destinations for kids, many of whom stop daily on the way to and from school for snacks. A recent study reported that student purchases are usually more than 350 calories on each visit to the corner store — and 29 percent of them shop at corner stores twice a day, five days a week, consuming almost a pound worth of additional calories each week.

The Food Trust, an organization in Philadelphia, developed the Healthy Corner Store Initiative to increase the availability of healthy foods in corner stores and to educate young people about healthy snacking through nutrition education in schools.

Food Trust supports storeowners in starting to stock healthy foods.  To be in the program, a store has to have at least 2 minimum healthy foods for sale (which could be yogurt, apples, small salads, etc.)  Food Trust will provide a refrigerator and give advice on how to stock and promote the items, and other information.  After participating in the program, some storeowners have reported as much as a 40% increase in sales after putting healthy snacks in the store.

The idea of using corner stores in campaigns to improve diets has spread from a few cities over the last decade — among them, Philadelphia, New York, Baltimore, Hartford and Oakland, Calif.   Today there are over a hundred or more organizations that similarly to The Food Trust are working to get healthy and fresh food in corner stores.

The Healthy Corner Stores Network is a network that brings together community members, local government staff, nonprofits, funders, and others across the country to share best practices and to develop solutions.  Network activities include bimonthly webinars, in-person meeting at national conferences, this website, and a listserve.  The network includes more than 500 participants all over the country.

A banana or apple on every corner?  Might be happening soon, one corner at a time.

Image Source:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/hcsn/5751767433/

Links:

Healthy Corner Store Network

The Food Trust

Getting to Grocery : Tools for Attracting Healthy Food Retail to Underserved Neighborhoods

Snacking in Children: The Role of Urban Corner Stores from Pediatrics Magazine