Thursday, January 19, 2012

Kimchi Making, Sodium Games, and the UN Right to Food Rapporteur


Digging into cabbage kimchi at our most recent free fermentation workshop.


In case you missed our cabbage kimchi workshop, you might want to check out the Trout Lake-Cedar Cottage Food Network's upcoming workshop:

"Kimchi, a staple in the Korean diet is a medley of pickled vegetables in a spicy marinade. Come learn how to prepare, can and serve this traditional Korean side. Take a couple of cans home with you!
Wednesday, February 29th , 6-9pm
$15/$5 seniors

Register online or call 604-257-6955.



Sodium Games


How much do you know about sodium (salt) and its effects on your health? Are you looking for some low-sodium recipe ideas? The Healthy Eating Team and Healthy Families BC web team has developed an online interactive game called Sodium Sense. You can play the game here.

Right now there isn't a lot of diversity in the menu options, but the team will be adding more food ideas as time goes on. Have ideas for food and snack options that should be included in the game? You can send your comments to Lisa Forster-Coull, Provincial Nutritionist.


UN Right to Food Rapporteur Plans Spring Mission to Canada


The United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food is planning a mission to Canada this spring -- the first such mission to a developed country.

Olivier De Schutter was appointed to the position in 2008 and is tasked with promoting the right to adequate food and freedom from hunger, examining ways to overcome barriers to these rights, and recommending steps to help achieve the UN's Millennium Development Goal of halving global hunger by 2015.

Previous missions have included Nicaragua, Brazil, China and most recently Madagascar. The Canadian mission is planned for May, although the exact dates and itinerary are not yet confirmed, according to the team's communications assistant, Nick Jacobs.

De Schutter has criticized the WTO's "trade-centric approach" to food security and cautioned against simply boosting food production as a reaction to world hunger. In a June, 2011 op-ed in the Guardian, he wrote that "hunger is neither the result of demographic problems nor just the result of a mismatch between supply and demand. It is primarily the result of political factors that condemn small farmers, the main victims of hunger, to poverty."

In response to a request from the office of the rapporteur, Food Secure Canada compiled a "joint civil society" submission that lays out five broad priority issues for Canada: poverty and the right to food; indigenous peoples and the right to food; the industrial food system and the right to food; governance and the right to food, and Canada and the right to food internationally. These priorities were established based on submissions for more than 40 groups across the country (including the Aboriginal People's Congress, Food Matters Manitoba, the People's Food Policy (National), the Arctic Institute of Community-Based Research and the Squamish Foodies, according to the submission document.

The submission also noted three topics where there was a divergence of opinion -- food banks, raw milk and supply management. "Some submissions suggested that food banks be immediately closed down due to the potential for masking issues of hunger and poverty, and others underlined the very necessary role they play in meeting day to day urgent food needs," the document reads. Likewise, "some submissions made a strong case for legalizing raw milk. . . while other within the dairy sector are opposed to the legalizations of raw milk stating health concerns." On the issue of supply management, the submission notes that while it elicited general support in principle, there is disagreement over the form it should take. "Some support the existing supply management models, while others feel the system often works to the disadvantage of smaller producers.

By Colleen Kimmett
January 13, 2012 03:00 pm

No comments: