August 31, 2010
BAN THE BAG
California is voting tonight on a proposed bill to ban plastic bags. C'mon California, make us love you even more!
May 12, 2010
The Lunch Conundrum

Sadly, it takes this much plastic to bring lunch for 6 to our office. The "free side salad" comes in styrofoam. Nice, because everything tastes better encased in styrofoam. All over New York, people are doing this deal for their lunch. And throwing it all in the garbage. All that plastic, just to bring you ten minutes of slurping some wan-tasting soba soup. We can't live like this!!
May 8, 2010
Plastic Monkey On Our Backs
Finally, even our slow-churning government is coming around to recognizing what the Anti-Plastics have worried about for years: that we can't afford to let so many plastics into so many areas of our lives, when the effects of the chemicals that they contain are competely unknown.
This new study from the President's Cancer Panel makes alarming revelations about the dangers lurking in the plastics that are found in all our homes.
It focuses on bisphenol-A ("BPA"), the toxic stuff found in polycarbonate plastic (labeled #7), that is used as lining material for canned food and infant formula, used in making some plastic wraps (apparently) and in molding plastics as a hardener. You've probably heard of it in connection with hard plastic water bottles -- when they get scratched or cracked, they are likely leaching toxic BPA into your drinking water. Exposure is particularly dangerous to infants and fetuses, fostering brain, behavioral and reproductive problems. Not good for adults either, based on the terrible things it does to mice.
Although the evidence that BPA is toxic started to mount years ago, the Bush administration went out of its way to declare it safe -- relying on self-serving "industry reports," generated by the very companies who make and sell BPA.
The new report from the Obama administration, though, is heartening in its understanding: it recognizes the absurdity of the old regulatory approach: instead of requiring the chemical industry to prove the safety of the substances they use in manufacturing consumer, it has put the burden on the public of proving that a given environmental exposure is harmful.
How frightening is the statement that of the more than 80,000 chemicals in use in the United States, only a few hundred have been tested for safety?! What are we thinking??!!
April 8, 2010
Way More Packaged Than Fresh
Not suprising, I guess, but disturbing: last week a New York Times article noted that Americans eat 31 % more packaged food than fresh food. Shockingly too [not], we consume more packaged food per person than people just about anywhere else.
This means two big problems: First, of course, all that packaged food means a crazy amount of packaging. Outside, probably a box. Maybe even a layer of shrink-wrappingoutside the box. Inside, a plastic container, most likely itself wrapped inside another plastic bag. And the whole thing probably ready to be microwaved. Mmmmmmmm, leached plastic.
A second concern, of course, is that the contents of that packaged "food" itself tends to be more plastic than organic. Sure, you can buy Amy's Kitchen and Cascadian Farms, but odds are what we are really eating is more along the lines of the Totino's "pizza rolls" that we popped in the oven for lunch last week, which feature delicious ingredients like Calcium Chloride, Partially Hydrogenated Soybean Oil, Modified Cornstarch and Methylcellulose.
If you get the pepperoni ones (we resisited), you get a bonus dose of Titanium Dioxide, included for "color."
Alarmingly, I saw this on the FAQ section of Pillsbury's website:
Q: I accidentally let my pizza snacks thaw. Can I still eat them?
A: We do not recommend using any product that has been thawed at room temperature. If the pizza snacks have thawed in a refrigerator, you should refreeze them immediately and cook within 24 hours. However, the quality of the pizza snacks may be affected.
Ok, putting aside the question of who is this fictional "Totino" baking -- nay, assembling, these pizza rolls, HOW CREEPY IS IT that Pillsbury warns you against eating their food if it has thawed? Also, notice that they don't even bother to call it "food" -- they tell you not to "use" their "product."
Forgo your pizza rolls, America! Eat Fresh!
This means two big problems: First, of course, all that packaged food means a crazy amount of packaging. Outside, probably a box. Maybe even a layer of shrink-wrappingoutside the box. Inside, a plastic container, most likely itself wrapped inside another plastic bag. And the whole thing probably ready to be microwaved. Mmmmmmmm, leached plastic.
A second concern, of course, is that the contents of that packaged "food" itself tends to be more plastic than organic. Sure, you can buy Amy's Kitchen and Cascadian Farms, but odds are what we are really eating is more along the lines of the Totino's "pizza rolls" that we popped in the oven for lunch last week, which feature delicious ingredients like Calcium Chloride, Partially Hydrogenated Soybean Oil, Modified Cornstarch and Methylcellulose.
If you get the pepperoni ones (we resisited), you get a bonus dose of Titanium Dioxide, included for "color."
Alarmingly, I saw this on the FAQ section of Pillsbury's website:
Q: I accidentally let my pizza snacks thaw. Can I still eat them?
A: We do not recommend using any product that has been thawed at room temperature. If the pizza snacks have thawed in a refrigerator, you should refreeze them immediately and cook within 24 hours. However, the quality of the pizza snacks may be affected.
Ok, putting aside the question of who is this fictional "Totino" baking -- nay, assembling, these pizza rolls, HOW CREEPY IS IT that Pillsbury warns you against eating their food if it has thawed? Also, notice that they don't even bother to call it "food" -- they tell you not to "use" their "product."
Forgo your pizza rolls, America! Eat Fresh!
November 10, 2009
Garbagebergs
I am afraid that soon, instead of icebergs, we will have garbagebergs.
The New York Times ran an article today about how the Pacific Ocean is simply filling up with all the plastic bits of things that you and I throw away. And it's not just that we are "papering" our oceans with tons of plastic, but the floating plastic happily absorbs wildly toxic chemicals:
"PCBs, DDT and other toxic chemicals cannot dissolve in water, but the plastic absorbs them like a sponge. Fish that feed on plankton ingest the tiny plastic particles."
So then the toxic plastic dissolves into a trillion sparkly little pieces that get eaten by fish, who get eaten by other fish, who get eaten by . . . us. Instead of including a picture of the spotted gray trigger fish that just avoided a certain fate as a result of all this floating plastic, the Times should have included a picture of the children whose traumatic legacy our convenience-based lifestyles are ensuring.
The New York Times ran an article today about how the Pacific Ocean is simply filling up with all the plastic bits of things that you and I throw away. And it's not just that we are "papering" our oceans with tons of plastic, but the floating plastic happily absorbs wildly toxic chemicals:
"PCBs, DDT and other toxic chemicals cannot dissolve in water, but the plastic absorbs them like a sponge. Fish that feed on plankton ingest the tiny plastic particles."
So then the toxic plastic dissolves into a trillion sparkly little pieces that get eaten by fish, who get eaten by other fish, who get eaten by . . . us. Instead of including a picture of the spotted gray trigger fish that just avoided a certain fate as a result of all this floating plastic, the Times should have included a picture of the children whose traumatic legacy our convenience-based lifestyles are ensuring.
October 24, 2009
The Opposite of Plastic
Last weekend we went to the fabulous Sheep & Wool Festival in Rhinebeck, where we got to see an alpaca and llama parade, and where these ladies were spinning fiber roving into woolen yarn, and warping and wefting their way into gorgeous textiles. It was our third annual trip to the festival, and as always, I am so impressed by the way the people there know how to take a bag of curly, freshly shorn fleece and literally spin it into a soft and fabulous sweater. It's like magic. Anyway, I left with a bag of thick lopi yarn, spun in a traditional Icelandic fashion, which I can't wait to work into something cool. We left without buying an alpaca farm, or even a spinning wheel or loom, but there's always next year!
August 26, 2009
The Challenge
So there haven't been very many August entries -- partly because, overnight, New York became a sweltering swamp too hot for any activity. But also because finding ways to work around plastic has turned out to be hugely time-consuming. Mostly, it's in the way we cook and eat: plastic affords alot of shortcuts that you wouldn't think of until they're not there.
Like ... take a simple pasta dinner. I prefer to get the pasta from the excellent array of bulk bins at Integral Yoga on West 13th street, but often "splurge" on the boxed kind, removing the tiny plastic window before recycling the box. Then, you'd like some cheese on that? Parmesan options at our three nearest grocery stores are no good: either a shrink-wrapped block (out) or a square plastic tub of pre-grated cheese (out). So we head 30 blocks south to Zabar's, where it's the same disappointing story, but we discover delicious Italian Pavia as a substitute. We carry home our victorious slice of cheese wrapped in paper, but have to use it quickly, because without plastic wrap, it dries out almost overnight. Lesson: use the pre-summer small box of saran wrap sparingly and wisely, enforcing a wipe-it-off, dry-it and re-use-it rule.
What else. Thirsty? We have each drunk tons of plain water this summer, eschewing non-plastic-container drinks and being reluctant to constantly pour milk or orange juice (we have cut back on, but not eliminated, those square cartons -- which, I recently read, are the WORST offenders), so ... we have made alot of lemonade. A perfect alternative, but it ain't fast: squeezing 10 lemons and then making simple syrup to sweeten takes a solid 15 minutes; start doing that every other day or so, and suddenly Vitamin Water starts looking good!
Breakfast ... requires a fair amount of planning. We eat alot of fruit, and about once a week I bake a batch or two of muffins. We make alot of zucchini and banana bread (and sometimes, a weird loaf that combines the two). There is always yogurt (which we still make weekly, best thing ever) with fruit and granola and honey. When we run out of granola though, it's a 20-block trip to the health food store; honey, Sundays from the farmer's market. Eventually, the kids are going to crave some Reeses Puffs or Waffle Crisp, and, eventually, we parents will give in to the quick convenience of breakfast-in-a-box. Leggo my Eggos!
All in all, this has been a summer of planning and strategizing our meals from a new perspective, beyond just flavor. And when my grocery basket looks (ideally, not always!) like the one above, compared to the literally piles of plastic containers I see in the baskets around me, it's clear that the effort is worth it. Articles like today's Times editorial drive the point home: to avoid plastic garbage becoming an eighth continent, we have to develop new habits and new routines. Take up the challenge!
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