Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Food is a Socio-Economic Problem, Part Two: How Processed Food Began

Food is a socio-economic problem. The more wealthy you are in the United States, the more likely that you will eat nutrient dense food. Poor nutrient quality food, excessive sugars and overly processed fats are omnipresent in the diet of low-income Americans. That is not to say that every person of meager means is eating a crappy diet of cola and fast food hamburgers. So no need to write me any letters scathing me for being elitist. But being low income increases the likelihood that you will be eating lousy food, simply for financial reasons.

I have been interested in how we got here. If you read Fast Food Nation then you know the story about McDonald's being started in Southern California by the McDonald's brothers. They had a restaurant or two, were making a good living flipping burgers. And they ordered a ton of ice cream mixers made for milkshakes. The mixer salesman was so intrigued by the large mixer orders that he went down to check the place out and he discovered a gem. Ray Kroc was the mixer salesman and shortly after meeting the McDonald brothers he bought them out. Now I wrote that from memory, and I read the book 6 years ago, so please correct me if I am wrong. But I tell the story because how does something grow from a fun diner you hang out with your friends to becoming the nations largerest purchaser of beef and potatoes? How did they go from being a charming burger stand to a national pariah sickening hundreds of thousands with their low quality fare?

My honest opinion? It wasn't their fault. I cannot blame McDonald's for being McDonald's. And in my mind it isn't even them that is the problem. They are part of the problem, one finger of a national body of problems that is our sickened food culture. But I repeat, how did we get here? How did we go from homemade healthful food to soda and fake food in a mere 100 years? Baby steps, baby steps.

I have been reading an interesting book recently: Something for the Oven by Laura Shapiro. The book examines food in the 1950's, largely from the perspective of the women cooking it, but also with a fair amount of company insight. I admit, when I began reading I had some preconceived notions about how processed food evolved. I thought (as I bet 90% of you guys do) that processed foods like TV Dinners and cake mixes began when our environment began to modernize and consumers began to demand faster products. But Shapiro corrects me. That wasn't exactly how it happened, that is just what the food marketers want you to believe.

In the beginning of the 20th century the average homecook was spending virtually all her food dollar on food that she prepared from scratch. If she lived in the country, she was shopping locally, gardening and canning much of what she grew. She was doing alot of work, defeathering chickens, fileting her own meats, trimming and washing all her vegetables, etc. Major advances in freezing (I'll write about that later) and canning created companies that had vision for America. Food companies realized the potential for their time savers: frozen spinach that was washed and chopped and ready to use, canned macaroni and cheese, complete dinners prepared and frozen solid? Many manufacturers assumed that this would be something that the average housewife could not resist! More leisure time? Yes, please!

But the average housewife did not care for the first processed foods. However in a sea of canned hamburgers and frozen tasteless peas, there were certain stand out favorites. TV Dinners eventually took off, but the average family reported using them for a meal fix. For example she might buy them for the children to be eaten on a night that husband and wife were going out rather than far Sunday dinner or when you had company coming over. Other products also took off, frozen orange juice concentrate, cakes mixes, etc. After reading the book what stands out to me is that the products that took off were products that tasted reasonably good and replaced very time consuming things that most women really hated doing, like juicing oranges and baking cakes. If you think about it, these products are largely unnecessary, yet making them is difficult. I like having dessert at a meal, but if I am too busy I simply will omit it. For a food company, making dessert easy makes it more likely that someone will prepare it (or buy it) at all.

It steamed the early food companies that women looked down upon ready made food like a second class citizen. If you really wanted to show your love for your family, you made a from scratch dinner. You didn't open up a can and just throw it onto a plate. Most women liked cooking above other household duties, and early processed foods took away their most pleasurable chore. And if it didn't taste good why on earth would you accept that? Not to mention that many women experienced guilt in serving food that was so easy to prepare. The food companies knew that these issues were inhibiting sales. So they worked hard on their marketing.

Glamorizing was the tool that food companies latched onto that really helped sales. Glamorizing is what takes time saving into the socio-economic realm. Glamorizing is the art of taking a simple box of cake mix and dressing it up with homemade frosting and fresh fruit, for example. A woman could buy canned soup and add a little cream and voila! A homemade delicacy that required real creative ingenuity! This is where processed foods finally found their niche and acceptance. For the homemaker, the guilt was removed, because she was contributing to the final product. Now a cake mix could be used for company, because the cake could be adorned with coconut, or pecans or whatever! Food companies heavily marketed glamorizing to low and middle income women, because it allowed them access to the other food trends of the 1950's, cooking with wine and cognac or more difficult french recipies, all that were time consuming and challenging. Shapiro states "Glamorizing sounded expensive, but it was utterly democratic".

Once the door had been opened for packaged and processed foods, their rise to the top could finally begin. "As the concept of easy haute cuisine spread from kitchen to kitchen, often via pantry shelf items, it banished the dowdy image of packaged foods and gave them a powerful boost toward the ranks of company cooking", Shapiro states. I have mentioned before that the journey forward then becomes generational. Children of the Fifties remember the special occasions that they ate TV Dinners and they readily served them to their children. Their children of the Seventies and Eighties ate and loved processed foods, however they were expensive. But by the time they had children in the new century, that had changed and now delicious packaged fare was cheap. Not to mention that our lives are now filled with new activities like talking on cell phones and texting and Facebook! Who has time to cook anymore?

And by the time we got to this new century, there were few home cooks left to teach kids how to cook from scratch. My own mother "cooked from scratch" with canned vegetables. She is turning over in her grave right now because I have just told the world that she didn't cook from scratch. But truthfully, while my mother did cook from scratch to the best of her ability, she bought such fine ingredients as Velveeta Cheese and Tater Tots and Crisco Vegetable Shortening. I always had a hot (and usually homemade) dinner on the table every night, but we ate the same way as other middle-class Americans did. With no Internet, we didn't have the knowledge that certain groups of people were starting to see that this fake food was hurting us.

Food is a socio-sconomic problem. It always has been, since the days when being poor meant being hungry, to today where being poor means that you are more likely to be diabetic. Our culture needs to be examined. We seriously need to look at our taste buds, our food policies and our defense of all things drive through and fastfastfast! This is a bigger problem than just McDonald's and soda. It is a cultural issue.

6 comments:

  1. continued from my previously submitted comments today....

    You wrote that "...being poor means that you are more likely to be diabetic." I understand where you're coming from with that statement but that's a widely-held misconception perpetuated by the likes of Marion Nestle and others. It is the one topic that knocks Marion off the food activist pedestal that I otherwise place her on. Diabetes is no more prevalent among the poor than it is among the rich. Diet does NOT cause type 2 diabetes. Genes cause type 2 diabetes. A poor diet can and will cause a person with one or more of the genetic markers for diabetes to develop type 2 diabetes at an earlier age but it absolutely, unequivocally cannot and does not cause the disease. If you do not have a genetic marker for diabetes, you cannot and will not "get" the disease.

    The children who have type 2 diabetes today eventually would have developed the disease decades later if they had eaten a more healthful diet and had been physically active. I really wish food writers would stop perpetuating the myth that a poor diet causes diabetes. If this were true, all fat people would develop diabetes and thin people would never develop it. Of course, that's simply not the case.

    My knowledge of diabetes comes from my own experience as a diabetic in a family of both type 1 and type 2 diabetics. Add to that education about the disease and treatment by a leading endocrinologist and former researcher in the field. On this topic, I know what I'm talking about and it's a real hot-button, soapbox issue for me.

    A poor diet hastens the onset of type 2 diabetes and that's a tremendous concern. Let's not misstate the issue lest it serve to undermine the movement we're trying to further and support.

    ReplyDelete
  2. This was supposed to appear before my other comment today (apologies):

    Christa, IMO, you are spot on when you say that food culture is a socio-economic problem in this country at present. I whole-heartedly agree that somehow, we seem to have lost our way when it comes to scratch cooking and nourishing ourselves in a healthy way. I believe that an important step in finding our way back is to understand how that happened.

    I think that the cultural shift you described in your post was heavily
    influenced by what was arguably the most significant event of the 20th century, World War II, and the ensuing entry of women into our country's workforce. During that war, our government recruited women to fill manufacturing jobs vacated by men who went off to war. This catapulted women into the American workforce in unprecedented numbers and created a demand for convenience in cooking (and other household chores) that barely existed prior to the 1940s. Indeed, it was considered patriotic to step away from your domestic duties and take a job in a factory (defense-related or not) to make your contribution to the war effort. Even many white collar jobs traditionally held by men were
    filled by women during the war.

    U.S. involvement in the Korean War extended this phenomenon into the 1950's, albeit to a lesser degree. Even as men returned from the wars of the 1940s and '50s, many American housewives had had a taste of convenience and never looked back.

    Frozen foods, canned ready-to-eat foods, and other convenience foods were made possible by technological innovations of the first half of the 20th century. Frozen dinners and baking mixes were the smart phone and e-reader of that era. The cache of convenience foods to mainstream America was due in large part to their innovative nature. Innovation has held a strong appeal to the American psyche for centuries. It's deeply rooted in our culture at least as far back as the time of Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson. That appeal continues today.

    Many, if not most, of the convenience foods of the mid-20th century did not contain the same food additives we commonly see in processed foods today. (One possible exception is hydrogenated fats which were developed around the turn of the 20th century.) HFCS was invented in approx. 1956 (can't find my source for that year at the moment, but I believe 1956 is close) and was recognized by the FDA as safe in 1976, but it couldn't and didn't become the cheap ingredient it is today until corn became a heavily subsidized crop in the 1970s under the Nixon administration. Thanks to the food shortage panic that occurred in 1973,
    the missing ingredient for the food culture dilemma we face today was provided by the federal government's food policies that were introduced by Nixon's Secretary of Agriculture, Earl Butz, whose term continued into the Ford administration. There is a thought-provoking article about Butz's legacy that was published on Grist a couple of years ago but unfortunately, I can't get Google to accept the URL. If you'd like to read the article, do a Google search on
    grist.com earl butz
    and you'll see a link to the Feb. 7, 2008 article titled "The Butz Stops Here."

    ReplyDelete
  3. This was supposed to appear before my other comment today (apologies):

    Christa, IMO, you are spot on when you say that food culture is a socio-economic problem in this country at present. I whole-heartedly agree that somehow, we seem to have lost our way when it comes to scratch cooking and nourishing ourselves in a healthy way. I believe that an important step in finding our way back is to understand how that happened.

    I think that the cultural shift you described in your post was heavily
    influenced by what was arguably the most significant event of the 20th century, World War II, and the ensuing entry of women into our country's workforce. During that war, our government recruited women to fill manufacturing jobs vacated by men who went off to war. This catapulted women into the American workforce in unprecedented numbers and created a demand for convenience in cooking (and other household chores) that barely existed prior to the 1940s. Indeed, it was considered patriotic to step away from your domestic duties and take a job in a factory (defense-related or not) to make your contribution to the war effort. Even many white collar jobs traditionally held by men were
    filled by women during the war.

    U.S. involvement in the Korean War extended this phenomenon into the 1950's, albeit to a lesser degree. Even as men returned from the wars of the 1940s and '50s, many American housewives had had a taste of convenience and never looked back.

    Frozen foods, canned ready-to-eat foods, and other convenience foods were made possible by technological innovations of the first half of the 20th century. Frozen dinners and baking mixes were the smart phone and e-reader of that era. The cache of convenience foods to mainstream America was due in large part to their innovative nature. Innovation has held a strong appeal to the American psyche for centuries. It's deeply rooted in our culture at least as far back as the time of Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson. That appeal continues today.

    Many, if not most, of the convenience foods of the mid-20th century did not contain the same food additives we commonly see in processed foods today. (One possible exception is hydrogenated fats which were developed around the turn of the 20th century.) HFCS was invented in approx. 1956 (can't find my source for that year at the moment, but I believe 1956 is close) and was recognized by the FDA as safe in 1976, but it couldn't and didn't become the cheap ingredient it is today until corn became a heavily subsidized crop in the 1970s under the Nixon administration. Thanks to the food shortage panic that occurred in 1973,
    the missing ingredient for the food culture dilemma we face today was provided by the federal government's food policies that were introduced by Nixon's Secretary of Agriculture, Earl Butz, whose term continued into the Ford administration. There is a thought-provoking article about Butz's legacy that was published on Grist a couple of years ago but unfortunately, I can't get Google to accept the URL. If you'd like to read the article, do a Google search on
    grist (dot) com earl butz
    and you'll see a link to the Feb. 7, 2008 article titled "The Butz Stops Here."

    ReplyDelete
  4. This was the 2nd part of my comment which Google replaced with the comment above. It's a little confusing but I'm posting the following anonymously so Google doesn't replace 1st comment with this:

    You wrote that "...being poor means that you are more likely to be diabetic." I understand where you're coming from with that statement but that's a widely-held misconception perpetuated by the likes of Marion Nestle and others. It is the one topic that knocks Marion off the food activist pedestal that I otherwise place her on. Diabetes is no more prevalent among the poor than it is among the rich. Diet does NOT cause type 2 diabetes. Genes cause type 2 diabetes. A poor diet can and will cause a person with one or more of the genetic markers for diabetes to develop type 2 diabetes at an earlier age but it absolutely, unequivocally cannot and does not cause the disease. If you do not have a genetic marker for diabetes, you cannot and will not "get" the disease.

    The children who have type 2 diabetes today eventually would have developed the disease decades later if they had eaten a more healthful diet and had been physically active. I really wish food writers would stop perpetuating the myth that a poor diet causes diabetes. If this were true, all fat people would develop diabetes and thin people would never develop it. Of course, that's simply not the case.

    My knowledge of diabetes comes from my own experience as a diabetic in a family of both type 1 and type 2 diabetics. Add to that education about the disease and treatment by a leading endocrinologist and former researcher in the field. On this topic, I know what I am talking about and it's a real hot-button, soapbox issue for me.

    A poor diet hastens the onset of type 2 and that is a tremendous concern. Let's not misstate the issue lest it serve to undermine the movement we're trying to further and support.

    Kim (comment not intended to be anonymous)

    ReplyDelete
  5. I'll get this right one of these days. That's grist (dot) org, not grist (dot) com.

    -Kim

    ReplyDelete
  6. Kim--I got all your comments, so sorry that you had trouble with Google. It happens to me sometimes too.

    I hear your point. The war was absolutely influential, because it created an economic engine of manufacturing that would have come to a complete stop had companies not shifted their production line to making consumer goods. It was a major turning point. Many of the prepared food companies that Shapiro cites were servicing the army and made that shift when their army contracts expired.

    However I do want to argue one point with you, that the entry of women into the work force perpetuated processed and readymade foods. Shapiro specifically states that this is a misconception of the modern era, because the idea of saving time through ready made products in the 21st century is the major theme of modern food marketing. I actually began reading the book with largely the same assumption as you.

    And while many women did take advantage of the processed foods for the reason that they didn't have time to cook or didn't like to cook, those women were a drop in the bucket compared with working women who still felt it was their duty to "do it all" and cook from scratch meals while they worked. And a closer look into the most popular packaged foods of the era tells that story. Boxed caked mixes and frozen orange juice concentrate were both items based on making difficult items easy. They were not products eaten every day, so they likely did not save anyone time....they just made them eat MORE of those once difficult to produce food items. I don't think that every homemaker was baking a cake every day. They did it occasionally until boxed caked made it convenient enough to do it every day.

    I do agree with you about the additives. This new inclusion of scary ingredients are what make processed foods so detrimental today. I wish I had time to research FDA laws. It seems like somewhere in the 80s or 90s that rules became more lax and more additives and higher levels of existing additives were allowed...If you have any info please pass it along.

    ReplyDelete