tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9437268.post611982588203087531..comments2024-02-03T07:12:06.620-05:00Comments on U.S. Food Policy: The real food stamp challengeusfoodpolicyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17098394318544229984noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9437268.post-26995783052375315792008-06-24T23:25:00.000-04:002008-06-24T23:25:00.000-04:00I've puzzled over this one myself. I advocate cook...I've puzzled over this one myself. I advocate cooking from scratch, and I know you can be employed and do it. It does, however, require planning and some know-how.<BR/><BR/>I know there are or have been some Extension programs aimed at teaching people survival cooking skills and knowledge, but I wonder whether those should be part of the high-school curriculum, since lots of people obviously aren't learning them at home.<BR/><BR/>Of course, Food Channel notwithstanding, home cooking just doesn't have the marketing that fast, processed food gets, and in our media-obsessed culture, I suspect that makes a difference. Somehow, I can't see a "Beans--it's what's for dinner" campaign anytime soon, because beans aren't high profit and would need an image remake, too.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9437268.post-51583476851191781932008-06-23T21:15:00.000-04:002008-06-23T21:15:00.000-04:00Thanks, Rebecca. I think the recent 2006-2007 edi...Thanks, Rebecca. I think the recent 2006-2007 edition of the Thrifty Food Plan is a little more lenient toward packaged food, requiring a bit less cooking in the kitchen, but your point is well taken. <BR/><BR/>What a quandry. <BR/><BR/>If the Thrifty Food Plan were set higher, to allow for even more packaged and ready-to-eat food, what would be the rationale for not allowing restaurant food? Cost? Healthfulness? <BR/><BR/>And suppose the TFP were set higher to allow for more packaged and ready-to-eat food. Would we really tell a low-income family that wants to save money by cooking at home, freeing up money for other critical needs, that doing so is criminal?usfoodpolicyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17098394318544229984noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9437268.post-68697613275200975652008-06-23T16:40:00.000-04:002008-06-23T16:40:00.000-04:00As you know, I did the same challenge (with organi...As you know, I did <A HREF="http://www.rebeccablood.net/thriftyo/" REL="nofollow">the same challenge</A> (with organic food) last year, and it was easy for me, too. I shopped the way I usually shopped and cooked the way I usually cook and we ate very well.<BR/><BR/>However, I concluded that the Thrifty Food Plan is fairly unrealistic for most people for one main reason:<BR/><BR/>The Thrifty Food Plan says it is designed for food that will be <EM>cooked from scratch at home</EM>. Since I am at home all day, this was no big deal for me. But as you know, most people work outside their homes and so they can't stop in the middle of the day to mix up some bread or start beans cooking or the like.<BR/><BR/>Furthermore, when you're out all day at work, often the easiest and most appealing thing is to have someone else cook and clean up - a restaurant, or even a heat-and-serve meal (processed food - which is more expensive).<BR/><BR/>It would appear to me that the Thrifty Food Plan model is premised on an outdated idea of the family: one parent in the workforce, and the other one at home. With someone at home, it's perfectly doable to cook this way. (I didn't need to shop any differently than most people do.)<BR/><BR/>It's also based on an outdated idea of homemaking skills. Whether or not it *should* be so, in the last generation, lots of "basic" homemaking/meal planning/cooking skills just haven't been passed on.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com