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The Rural Voice, 1980-09, Page 21KEITH ROULSTON When it comes to food, do we know what we're missing? It's a hot, muggy summer day. Something cold to help you cool off would be nice. How about some ice cream? Sounds nice, but did you know that when you eat ice cream you might be eating plaster of paris? According to a recent magazine article I read that is one of the additives sometimes used to keep ice cream smooth and increase its storage life. Oh there were plenty of other additives mentioned too, some with long complicated names. Some of the additives may have been even more questionable than the plaster of paris but somehow it was that name that caught my attention. It was so easy to understand. The story of ice cream follows an interesting path in the food industry. Ice milk desserts first were discovered thousands of years ago in Rome where they were the secrets of the Roman emperors. In different countries in the years that followed the recipes for ice cream and sherbet were carefully guarded by the upper crust of society. It was in the late 1600s before even the middle class began to discover this delicacy when a cafe opened in Paris that served the precious commodity to the rich of the city. Eventually the recipe was published in cook books. Ice cream became more accessible in the middle 1800s when an American woman, Nancy Johnson, invented the hand -cranked ice cream maker. It made it easier to make ice cream but it was still work. The demand for ice cream grew in equal proportion to the dislike to work in our leisure time in the present century. Manufacturers began to fill the gap by providing ice cream already made. Of course transportation and storage of ice cream meant changes had to be made in the recipe because it was no longer a food consumed minutes after it was made. Additives were included to keep it smooth and creamy, to help increase the shelf life. So today we have the delicacy of kings available in any corner grocery for even the poorest of families. But do we? Canadians consume 60 million gallons of ice cream a year but those who make their own ice cream from fresh products in their own homes probably wouldn't agree that these people are eating ice cream at all. In the interests of making something special readily available our modern food system has taken all that was special out of the food. Ice cream is readily available today but it bears little resemblance to the original product. AN OLD STORY It's an old story visible in nearly every other food offered in your supermarket. Orange juice comes in many different forms but how much of it really tastes like juice squeezed from a fresh orange? Today's bread has the consistency of playdough when compared to the homemade bread that once dominated our diets. People eat tomatoes in winter that are picked green, turned pink by gas and taste like wet newspaper. And yet we call it progress. We have after all made food a smaller and smaller portion of our overall family budget. We've been able to add so many more pleasures to our life thanks to the industrialization of the food industry. Instead of spending time growing our own vegetables and preserving them, instead of hours of drudgery baking bread or cranking an ice cream maker, we can devote our time and money to colour television sets, expensive stereo sets, snow- mobiles and vacations in Mexico. We've gained too much being free from the work of food making. But it seems to me we've lost so much we don't even realize. Oh 1 know that this worry about additives in food may be the hysterical reaction of a few overreacting consumer groups (it may also be a real danger for all I know) but what really hits me is that for all our affluence we're not getting as much out of our food as we were a half century ago. People today are willing to pay SO a couple to go out to an expensive restaurant to get an unusual taste experience when if they could simply taste food the way it used to be they'd have an unusual taste experience in their own kitchen. MODERN SYSTEMS Take the modern food systems way of handling eggs, for example. 1 keep a few chickens out back as much for relaxation as food but I have friends who will drive miles out of their way to buy fresh eggs rather than storebought. There's but one drawback. You can't hardboil these eggs, not without letting them sit in the refrigerator for a couple of weeks. If you don't let them age the shells won't peel off easily. Yet you can hardboil eggs from a store the day you buy them. It shows how long it takes our modern food system to move eggs from the farm to the store. Fifty years ago, in the day of the horse and buggy, it took a day or two. Today it takes a week or two. There are consumer activists who make this sound like a plot of the farmers and the food manufacturers perpetrated on the unwilling consumer but ladies this is something more than a classic case of rape. The consumer has been so conscious of having variety and low prices at the supermarket that she has necessitated the current changes. Through the power of the shopping basket she has wiped out the small farmer, the small manufacturer and the small retailer. She deserves what she gets. The problem is she probably doesn't even know what she's missing. Winthrop GENERAL STORE Open Mon. -Sat. till 9:00 P.M. Grocery 8 Hardware Work Boots - Rubber Boots CEDAR POSTS FENCE SUPPLIES 45 Gal. Steel Barrels -Gas- DOUG & GAIL SCHROEDER 527-1247 THE RURAL VOICE/SEPTEMBER 1980 PG. 19