12 Matching Annotations
  1. Last 7 days
    1. Ortega directs a UCLA project that converts corner stores into hubs of healthy fare in low-income neighborhoods of East Los Angeles. He and colleagues work with community leaders and local high school students to help create that demand for nutritious food.

      Working to bring better foods to these neighborhoods

    2. But more than that, he says, many people, particularly in low-income food deserts, just aren't used to buying or preparing healthy meals — they haven't had the opportunity, until now.

      It is sad that there are not a lot of opportunities for low-income families to get healthy food

    1. The answer has to do with much more than a new kind of food. For all its terrifying urgency, climate change is an invitation — to reinvent our economies, to rethink consumption, to redraw our relationships to nature and to one another. Cultivated meat was an excuse to shirk that hard, necessary work. The idea sounded futuristic, but its appeal was all about nostalgia, a way to pretend that things will go on as they always have, that nothing really needs to change. It was magical climate thinking, a delicious delusion.

      climate change is more than just a food issue. It’s a chance to change how we live and interact with nature. The idea of cultivated meat seems modern, but it really lets us avoid dealing with the hard changes we need to make. Instead of facing the problem, people cling to old ways and hope things won’t change.

    2. a few animal cells, nurtured with the right nutrients and hormones, finished with sophisticated processing techniques, and voilà: juicy burgers and seared tuna and marinated lamb chops without the side of existential worry.

      This is a very good hook, but just based off of this, I know this article is going to be talking about how everyday meats we eat are filled with a lot of things that are not good for us and have been modified

  2. Sep 2024
    1. It puzzled me how much she considered her own history to be immaterial, and if she never patently diminished herself, she was able to finesse a kind of self-removal by speaking of my father whenever she could. She zealously recounted his excellence as a student in medical school and reminded me, each night before I started my homework, of how hard he drove himself in his work to make a life for us. She said that because of his Asian face and imperfect English, he was “working two times the American doctors.” I knew that she was building him up, buttressing him with both genuine admiration and her own brand of anxious braggadocio, and that her overarching concern was that I might fail to see him as she wished me to—in the most dawning light, his pose steadfast and solitary.

      She wanted him to praise his dad just as much as he praised his mom. His mom was a very caring person and often belittled her achievement for others

    2. This made us all feel good, especially me, for I couldn’t remember the last time she had felt any hunger or had eaten something I cooked. We began to eat. My mother picked up a piece of salmon toast and took a tiny corner in her mouth. She rolled it around for a moment and then pushed it out with the tip of her tongue, letting it fall back onto her plate. She swallowed hard, as if to quell a gag, then glanced up to see if we had noticed. Of course we all had. She attempted a bean cake, some cheese, and then a slice of fruit, but nothing was any use.

      This started off with excitement but kinda ended in disappointment because she was so excited to eat but due to her health she wasn't able to enjoy it

    1. Essays attempt to understand. They’re digressive, composed efforts to answer our great questions, make sense of our stories, the misfortunes and longings that other people experience, too; our larger histories, our collective human reaching toward meaning. It isn’t enough just to tell our own experience. Vivian Gornick, master essayist, writes “A subject beyond the self must be intersected with.”

      Essays allow you to write down all your ideas and emotions. You share your experience with the world and become part of history

    2. This is the life of the writer. We experience a tragedy on two levels: the first is the one that feels, that grieves, that aches in every room where he isn’t; that plans the ceremony for the children, that speaks to the vet on the phone about the bill for the dead dog. The second level is the writer who is gathering evidence, who understands this story will grow more stark with time—who knows it’s too painful to write about yet but will nonetheless hold onto it in fragments, for down the road it will become part of the experience of sensemaking.

      When you have a writer's mindset and something happens you go through the motions. you go through the motions of feeling like a regular person experiencing grief or happiness depending on the situation, in this case, grief. But then there is also a part of you that has to put the emotions on paper to create something bigger.

    1. Even then, I was intensely curious about Gazan food and the stories it told: of villages erased from the map, of places I’d only heard about, of people I’d never met. Recipes were a sort of  treasure map to a largely invisible, or invisibilized, world of Palestinian history going back well before the 1948 Nakba, the year Palestinians refer to as their “catastrophe,” or mass expulsion and dispossession. After finishing college in North Carolina, I followed that map to Gaza, where I lived, worked, and raised my firstborn.

      Food can tell stories and bring a person back to their roots where they feel the most comfort and peace.

    2. I felt that sense of community whenever I was in Gaza, but not so much in Saudi Arabia, where I spent most of my childhood in the 1980s. My parents were medical professionals, too busy securing their children’s education and futures to labor over traditional dishes. The first Palestinian intifada, or uprising, was raging back home, and beyond making sure we had degrees (the stateless Palestinian’s safety net), their priority was ensuring we didn’t forget our history (“so history won’t forget us,” they said). Food got lost in the shuffle.

      Gaza felt more like home because of the food. Her family cared more about degrees and making sure their education was okay, things like food that brought a person so much comfort got forgotten

    1. caviar was a peasant staple, less expensive than fish itself, and a sanctioned fasting food on holy days:

      Cavier is so expensive today and is seen as one of the richest foods to eat and it is crazy how back then, people use to eat this on the regular and this was considered food for the poor

    2. But it was precisely this distance, in space, time and above all class (even in a supposedly classless society), that made the food — once the barest minimum, eaten and endured only in order to survive — suddenly palatable.

      The time and distance made the food more enjoyable. Even though it was at one point just enough for survival, it tasted better because of the distance