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6 votes
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Hard cider - making old orchards new again
15 votes -
Scientific research suggests it might be a good idea to add python to your diet
20 votes -
Climate cookbooks
6 votes -
We need cheap protein — but it doesn’t have to be meat
16 votes -
What’s the real cost of mezcal?
9 votes -
Dairy co-operative Arla Foods has announced it will pay its farmers more money for the milk they produce if they meet new environmental sustainability targets
7 votes -
How America's biggest indoor shrimp farm sells two million shrimp every year | Dan Does
5 votes -
Is Denmark Europe's most sustainable wine destination?
3 votes -
With climate change threatening traditional coffee farming, Finnish scientists have produced coffee from cell cultures with an aroma and taste resembling the real thing
9 votes -
The African farmers taking on big chocolate
6 votes -
Trying a Thanksgiving feast made from bugs
7 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 -
Meat isn’t evil, it’s how we raise it, how it’s prepared, and what it’s eaten with
9 votes -
Scientists from the University of Borås are exploring the possibility of converting old pieces of glutinous waste into yarn
4 votes -
If we all ate enough fruits and vegetables, there'd be big shortages
12 votes -
Is fair trade finished? Fairtrade changed the way we shop. But major companies have started to abandon it and set up their own in-house imitations – threatening the very idea of fair trade.
8 votes -
How to feed the world without destroying the planet
8 votes -
The status of vertical farming at the end of 2018 - a summary
13 votes -
World's coffee under threat, say experts
8 votes -
Roaches taste like blue cheese, and other bugsgiving revelations [Warning: graphic bug images]
9 votes -
Dan Barber: 'Twenty years from now you’ll be eating fast food crickets'
6 votes -
Does eating sustainable caught food help or hurt this?
5 votes