I was sent a food survey by the Zoe Covid19 app, they are researching links between diet and menopause symptoms. I should not have filled it, because I'm well past it![]()
Anyhow, the questionnaire formulation made me think.
The questions were about what foods have you eaten in the last 3 months, and the frequency of eating them, followed by a long list of fruits and vegetables, then your usual other foods.
Most fruit and veg on the list were out of season in the last 3 months here in the UK, not considering all the exotic produce that we can't grow.
My thoughts are:
If we, as a nation, decide to use more home grown, hence a more limited variety of foods, will this affect our health?
Has the Spanish imported 20p broccoli the same nutritional value that home grown, low carbon footprint, possibly organic(ish) broccoli has? Of course not, fresher keeps nutrients better, would we need to eat a bigger amount of said imported broccoli? Maybe not consider them as part of a healthy diet?
The Zoe app people work with the NHS: why are the questions not formulated in a way that I can say, well, I never had Strawberries in the last 3 months because the Scottish ones were not on the market yet.
Outside???First batch of sweet peppers going in today..
Agree. I am planning to offer some free homegrown veg to my community.With a lot of people, it's knowing what to *DO* with the veg that's the issue...
I am old, but not that old lolAs a historical aside, you only need to look at the WW2 diet on the home front to see what can be done.![]()
And for some of the most deprived in our population, it's not just the knowing what to do, it's the ability use that knowledge ... someone living in one room in a B&B with a couple of kids in bunk beds, won't be able to do much with most of the cheap good stuff around.With a lot of people, it's knowing what to *DO* with the veg that's the issue...
Cherries from communal trees, the kids thought they were poison, one adult said she would not eat them from "those" (?) trees.
I am old, but not that old lol
But I know what you mean![]()
And for some of the most deprived in our population, it's not just the knowing what to do, it's the ability use that knowledge ... someone living in one room in a B&B with a couple of kids in bunk beds, won't be able to do much with most of the cheap good stuff around.
Jack Monroe's cookery books - Tin Can Cook and the like - really have been a game changer for many people on tight budgets, whether they're in grim circumstances or not, but ... low-budget recipes are all well and good for people that can read them, and get to the supermarket on the right bus, and find the right aisle, and read the labels on the tins ...
I did some voluntary work for a charity and - well - many people can't do any of those things with any degree of confidence. It's easier - less stressful, less anxiety-provoking, less time-consuming - to get a takeaway or, at best, a frozen pizza, a packet of crisps and a packet of biscuits or a synthetic cake from the corner shop ...
Sad, but there it is.
Indeed.I know it's usually well meaning, but I get a bit tired of hearing that people on low budgets just need to buy root vegetables , and cheap cuts of meat and make slow cooked casseroles .
If only it was that simple..
Do you mean loss leader for the producer or for the supermarket?Add transport costs, deduct the actual cost of the broccoli, its a really quite low value load I should think. Loss leader perhaps because there can be precious little profit in it surely ?