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6 votes
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Why You Shouldn't Use Nonstick Cookware (Most of the Time)
10 votes -
Block on GM rice ‘has cost millions of lives and led to child blindness’
10 votes -
Mash made in heaven: Tips for making better mashed potatoes
8 votes -
Outback Steakhouse franchise begins testing system that uses machine learning to analyze footage of restaurant staff
10 votes -
Why does dairy-loving America still shun the “milk bladder” when it’s commonplace in so many other countries?
11 votes -
1915 Black Pepper Cake recipe
4 votes -
The secret to sriracha hot sauce’s success
8 votes -
The great Texas whiskey boom
6 votes -
Matpakke – How to pack a Norwegian sandwich, the world's most boring lunch
15 votes -
Why US cities are banning new fast food drive-throughs
8 votes -
Four sentenced to federal prison for organic fraud
8 votes -
Made in America: How four dishes with roots in other lands tell a story of immigration and transformation
5 votes -
Cocktails from the 1970s
6 votes -
One supermarket chain in Finland has an idea to address food waste – S-market has started holding 'happy hours' for products nearing expiration date
6 votes -
Headline Whiplash: Red meat is good for you now? (Research meta-review)
4 votes -
Meatless meat is becoming mainstream — and it’s sparking a backlash
15 votes -
Is anyone else interested in (or actively pursuing) meat from more ethical and sustainable sources?
I consider both industrial meat production and veganism to be sub-optimal across all dimensions. I've recently jumped into this growing niche market for more sustainable and ethical meat. It's a...
I consider both industrial meat production and veganism to be sub-optimal across all dimensions. I've recently jumped into this growing niche market for more sustainable and ethical meat. It's a little more pricey, unless you buy in bulk (e.g. 1/4 to full cow at a time), but I think it's worth it in the end.
I'm looking to share sources of info and network of producers/farms in this regard. Allan Savory has the Savory Institute which I found to be a good start. Though FYI there have been back-and-forth essays written about the criticism and defense of these practices (too many to post here but easy to find in the two above links).
I found one local family-operated farm that practices e.g. "organic" (in this case no herb/pest/fungi-cide) farming (crops for the animals), legitimate free-roaming chickens and sustainable land management that allows soil and ecology equilibration (reducing fertilizer use and subsequent runoff). Plus, buying and directly supporting local farmers and ranchers is always a plus!
EDIT: I foresee this thread being hijacked towards a discussion about how "meat is bad" and how we eat too much meat etc. I am being narrow here because I want to be pragmatic, rather than opine on global economics and dietary needs.
15 votes -
Norwegian teen cooks and eats her own horse after it was put down
6 votes -
One Mai Tai, and hold the colonialism
4 votes -
"We are in a war zone against this disease.” Climate change is fueling fire blight, and Northern Michigan’s apple orchards are at risk
4 votes -
India isn’t letting a single onion leave the country
9 votes -
A field guide to sweet potato varieties (and the dirt on yams)
5 votes -
Peel, chop and stir for hours: How Appalachia’s beloved community apple-butter parties live on
7 votes -
In Greenland, Thai restaurants serve whale skin sushi and reindeer pad krapow
7 votes -
How Ireland's Kerrygold butter became a mainstay in US kitchens
9 votes -
The next big thing in dining: virtual restaurants
5 votes -
What makes gumbo gumbo? A guide to Louisiana's signature stew
6 votes -
Meal-kit delivery teardown: Blue Apron vs. HelloFresh
8 votes -
Things chefs do that you should not do: Just say no to lemon zest, “ripping hot” pans, and the ice bath
18 votes -
Are New Zealanders buying slave-picked tinned tomatoes?
7 votes -
Meat isn’t evil, it’s how we raise it, how it’s prepared, and what it’s eaten with
9 votes -
Every way to cook a steak (forty-three methods) | Bon Appétit
6 votes -
The schools where meat is off the menu for climate reasons
8 votes -
How Texas barbecue found a home in rural Sweden
7 votes -
You might not want to eat bugs. But would you eat meat that ate bugs?
15 votes -
American connoisseurs have traditionally stayed away from German wine. A new generation of producers — and global warming — is changing that
6 votes -
Blindfolded Tasting Challenge - Recreating Maangchi's Dakbokkeumtang (Spicy Braised Chicken)
4 votes -
The tangled history of spaghetti bolognese
8 votes -
Inside the launch of the Cosmic Crisp apple, the “largest launch of a produce item in American history”
9 votes -
Making sense of all the choices in the yogurt aisle
6 votes -
Shalt thou eat an Impossible Burger? The definitions of "halal" and "kosher" are being challenged by new food technology
9 votes -
Inside the competitive oyster-shucking scene in China
8 votes -
Impossible at home
8 votes -
How to make alkaline, low-hydration ramen noodles at home
9 votes -
On Restaurant Day in Helsinki anyone can open an eatery anywhere
5 votes -
A taste test of meat-replacement burgers, including the Impossible burger, Beyond Burger, and others
12 votes -
How tax policy gave us White Claw hard seltzer
7 votes -
The infamous, vertically sliced St. Louis bagel is not an abomination—it’s a brand-new playing field
18 votes -
After bears kept coming to this man’s bee farm to steal honey, he decided to turn them into honey tasters
9 votes