Here's the conceit: Build a single wood fire and, over the course of 30-plus hours, use it to roast, braise, bake, simmer and grill as many different dishes as possible — for lunch, dinner, breakfast and lunch again.
The 36-Hour Dinner Party by Michael Pollan
posted by AceRock
on Oct 6, 2010 -
35 comments
Natalie Portman has been a vegetarian for twenty years, but was recently inspired to become a vegan by
Jonathan Safran Foer's first nonfiction book,
Eating Animals. Portman wrote
an essay for the Huffington Post in which she compares the book favorably to Michael Pollan's
The Omnivore's Dilemma (
previously on the blue), and makes this specific criticism of the latter book:
But he reminds us that being a man, and a human, takes more thought than just "This is tasty, and that's why I do it." He posits that consideration, as promoted by Michael Pollan in The Omnivore's Dilemma, which has more to do with being polite to your tablemates than sticking to your own ideals, would be absurd if applied to any other belief (e.g., I don't believe in rape, but if it's what it takes to please my dinner hosts, then so be it).
[more inside]
posted by Halloween Jack
on Oct 28, 2009 -
283 comments
You are fat because there is too much corn. [NYT, forfeit of first-born son required] I love good old-fashioned materialism, and Michael Pollan (author of
The Botany of Desire) scores one for the team with this article on the economics of corn production. Are we fat because New Deal agricultural policy was overturned in the 70s by Rusty Butz? Now there's a trailing question we can all enjoy.
posted by condour75
on Oct 11, 2003 -
31 comments