![]() ![]() I am looking forward to spending time at Eugene’s Saturday Market and speaking with the local farmers and buying fresh produce. Living in Las Vegas, our farmer’s markets are more of a prepared food court than actual farmers’ bring produce and fresh meat and eggs to purchase. The argument that I remember, yet has been the most difficult for me to follow this past month, was getting out of the supermarket whenever possible. As a result of avoiding foods that are a) unrecognizable and b) capable of rotting, I inherently have to eat mostly plants. Foods that are incapable of rotting are faux foods that have turned into a science experiment and are therefore unrecognizable. ![]() By only eating food that my great grandmother would recognize as food and not question what the item is, I am therefore avoiding foods that are incapable of rotting. When I read the statement, “Don’t eat anything that your great grandmother wouldn’t recognize as food.” I had a light bulb moment and realized that this statement sets up the next three statements that have stuck with me. ![]() These arguments have stuck with me the most in the past month because they make sense and are not outlandish. Get out of the supermarket whenever possible. (148)Ģ.ĝon’t eat anything incapable of rotting. Arguments that have stuck with me and pop in my head as I am deciding what to buy at the market and what to eat:ġ.ĝon’t eat anything that your great grandmother wouldn’t recognize as food. ![]()
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