Bloomsbury presents Avocado Anxiety written and read by Louise Gray. WINNER OF THE GUILD OF FOOD WRITERS INVESTIGATIVE FOOD WORK AWARD 2024 JAMES BEARD FOUNDATION BOOK AWARDS NOMINEE 2024 SHORTLISTED FOR SCOTLAND'S NATIONAL BOOK AWARDS 2023 A TIMES ENVIRONMENT BOOK OF THE YEAR 2023 'This is fantastic' THE TIMES 'Deeply relatable' SPECTATOR 'Rigorous, incisive, warm and brave' LUCY JONES 'Essential reading for anyone that eats' JAKE FIENNES 'Universally urgent. Everyone should read it.' CAROLINE EDEN The food stories behind your favourite fruits and vegetables. Have you ever wondered who…mehr
Bloomsbury presents Avocado Anxiety written and read by Louise Gray. WINNER OF THE GUILD OF FOOD WRITERS INVESTIGATIVE FOOD WORK AWARD 2024 JAMES BEARD FOUNDATION BOOK AWARDS NOMINEE 2024 SHORTLISTED FOR SCOTLAND'S NATIONAL BOOK AWARDS 2023 A TIMES ENVIRONMENT BOOK OF THE YEAR 2023 'This is fantastic' THE TIMES 'Deeply relatable' SPECTATOR 'Rigorous, incisive, warm and brave' LUCY JONES 'Essential reading for anyone that eats' JAKE FIENNES 'Universally urgent. Everyone should read it.' CAROLINE EDEN The food stories behind your favourite fruits and vegetables. Have you ever wondered who picked your Fairtrade banana or how far your green beans travelled to reach your plate? We are all part of a complex food system. Trying to make sense of it, environmental journalist Louise Gray tracks the stories of our five-a-day, from farm to fruit bowl, and discovers the impact that growing fruits and vegetables has on the planet. Visiting farms, interviewing scientists and trying to grow her own, she asks important questions to dig up the dirt on familiar items in our shopping baskets. Are plant proteins as good for us as meat proteins? Why can we buy so-called 'seasonal' fruits like strawberries all year round? And is the symbol of clean eating, the avocado, fuelling the climate crisis? As pressure grows to share our healthy, environmentally friendly lives on social media, Avocado Anxiety is also a personal story of motherhood and the realisation that nothing is ever perfect.
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Autorenporträt
Louise Gray is a freelance writer based in Scotland. She trained with The Press Association and was a staff writer for The Scotsman. She covered UN climate change talks, GM foods and the badger cull during five years as the Environment Correspondent for The Daily Telegraph. Louise specialises in writing about food, farming and climate change. In recent years, she has written for The Sunday Times, Scottish Field, the Guardian and The Spectator, among others. She has also appeared on BBC television and radio. Louise is passionate about environmental issues, increasingly focusing on how individuals can make a difference through the choices they make, such as the food we eat. Her first book, The Ethical Carnivore, won best Food Book and Best Investigative Work at the Guild of Food Writers Awards and was shortlisted for the Fortnum and Mason Food Book of the Year. @loubgray / louisebgray.com
Inhaltsangabe
Prologue - Roots Chapter 1 - Old Beans Why plant protein will save the planet Chapter 2 - Bananageddon Why you should eat Fairtrade bananas Chapter 3 - The Valuable Esculent Why we should look after the soil Chapter 4 - Miciri Why food miles are not that bad Chapter 5 - Humblebees Why bees are important on farms Chapter 6 - Nightingale Farm Why birds are important on farms Chapter 7 - The Taste of Summer Why seasons are not that important Chapter 8 - The Space Zucchini Why gardening is good for mental health Chapter 9 - Magic Berries Why foraging is magic Chapter 10 - The Orchard Why diversity matters Chapter 11 - Perfectly Imperfect Why we have to cut food waste Chapter 12 - Avocado Anxiety Why simply being anxious won't solve the problem Epilogue - Roots
Prologue - Roots Chapter 1 - Old Beans Why plant protein will save the planet Chapter 2 - Bananageddon Why you should eat Fairtrade bananas Chapter 3 - The Valuable Esculent Why we should look after the soil Chapter 4 - Miciri Why food miles are not that bad Chapter 5 - Humblebees Why bees are important on farms Chapter 6 - Nightingale Farm Why birds are important on farms Chapter 7 - The Taste of Summer Why seasons are not that important Chapter 8 - The Space Zucchini Why gardening is good for mental health Chapter 9 - Magic Berries Why foraging is magic Chapter 10 - The Orchard Why diversity matters Chapter 11 - Perfectly Imperfect Why we have to cut food waste Chapter 12 - Avocado Anxiety Why simply being anxious won't solve the problem Epilogue - Roots
Rezensionen
A portrait of a food system that has become miraculously proficient at giving us cheap produce whenever we want it but at the expense of so much else.
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