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Wickedfood Cooking School, SUNNINGHILL

Information & bookings (011) 234-3252 sunninghill@wickedfood.co.za

Hi all

In this weeks newsletter we look at food Miles and whether or not they matter. I have included an article from the New York Times and although the article is focused on the United States, the message is true no matter where you live. Its a thought provoking article which asks the question 'Should companies pay for the environmental cost of food travel' or should we just not think about it and hope it fades away? We also look at the website www.gisa.co.za which is South Africa's local 'Green' search engine. This powerful search engine is your one-stop-shop for everything green.

Find us on Facebook and Twitter – just search for Wickedfood and you will find us. We update the blog on a daily basis and publish it through Facebook and Twitter.

Wickedfood Cooking School News

Our February and March individual cooking class programmes are up on the internet. Click the link for the appropriate month – February or March

Please contact us should you wish to make a booking:

Green ideas for your Home?

Food Miles: Do They Matter?

Some Say Companies Should Pay for the Environmental Cost of Food Travel; Others Say Eating Less Red Meat and Dairy Is More Important

There has been a renewed focus on sourcing food locally in recent years. And with good reason: By shopping at a farmers' market, for example, you're cutting down on the distance traveled by your food, and therefore cutting down on emissions released; you're eating what's fresh and in season; and you're supporting local farmers and your local economy.

An article in the New York Times illustrates how accustomed we have become to having whatever foods we want whenever we want them — whether they or in season or not. And most consumers don't realise the journey their food has taken.
The article states, “Cod caught off Norway is shipped to China to be turned into filets, then shipped back to Norway for sale. Argentine lemons fill supermarket shelves on the Citrus Coast of Spain, as local lemons rot on the ground. Half of Europe’s peas are grown and packaged in Kenya.”
The frequent flier miles racked up by food have been garnering more attention as people worldwide learn more about greenhouse gases. Carbon dioxide is released during transportation, and this has some wondering if it's worth having that kiwi — New Zealand's national fruit — shipped from Italy during winter in NZ.

The article says that u

nder long-standing trade agreements, fuel for international freight carried by sea and air is not taxed. Some experts, according to the article, are suggesting its time to impose a tax to pay for that pollution.
However, recent research suggests that it's not the miles traveled that matter, it's the manner in which food is produced.
An Oxford economist in the Times article says that though it's estimated that as little as 3 percent of emissions from the food sector come from transportation, that number was growing rapidly. Also, transporting food long distances requires layers of packaging and sometimes energy-consuming refrigeration.

An article in the academic journal Environmental Science and Technology suggests food production is most certainly a greater contributor to global warming, and small changes — such as eating less red meat and dairy — can lower the average U.S. household's food-related climate footprint more effectively than buying local food, according to research conducted by Christopher Weber of Carnegie Mellon University.
The average U.S. household generates about 8.1 metric tons of greenhouse gases annually as a result of food consumption. The researchers found that only 11% that was due to transportation, compared to the 83% that was due to agricultural and industrial practices.
In the article Weber says that switching to a totally local diet is equivalent to driving about 1000 miles less per year.
But a relatively small dietary shift can accomplish about the same greenhouse gas reduction as eating locally, he added. According to the article, replacing red meat and dairy with chicken, fish, or eggs for one day per week reduces emissions equal to 760 miles per year of driving. And switching to vegetables one day per week cuts the equivalent of driving 1160 miles per year.

Awesome website of the week:

South Africa's Green search Engine

http://www.gisa.co.za/

Everything 'Green' can be found via this powerful search engine within South Africa. The searches range from green contractors to green products through to green consultants.

Food Joke:

Vinegar:
A friend got some vinegar in his ear, now he suffers from pickled hearing.

The Wickedfood Team


Wickedfood Cooking School runs  classes throughout the year at its purpose-built Johannesburg cooking studio. Cooking lessons are run in the mornings and evenings 7 days a week (subject to a minimum of 12 people). The venue is also popular for corporate events and private functions – team building cooking classes, birthdays, kitchen teas, and dinner parties with a difference.

Our cooking courses are hands-on, where every person gets to participate in the preparation of the dishes. They are also a lot of fun where you not only learn new skills, but get to meet people with similar interests. For corporate groups and team building cooking classes, these events are a novel way of creating staff interaction or entertaining clients.

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