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  • Thanksgiving is Almost Here!

    November 20th, 2009 Posted by Dawn 2 Comments

    Sustainable Table and The Meatrix are taking a Thanksgiving break! We will be back on the 30th, and can’t wait to hear about all of the sustainable shopping, cooking, and eating that happened. Have a wonderful holiday!

    For some tips to create a sustainable Thanksgiving, please read Take Part’s 10 Tips for a Sustainable Thanksgiving by Sara Newman:

    Since I wrote last year about tips for a sustainable thanksgiving meal, much has transpired in the food movement. We now have a First Family that regularly toils in their backyard to grow and harvest organic produce. The hit documentary, Food, Inc. was released this past year and is now in the running for an Academy Award. I had the pleasure of working on the Social Action campaign for the film which has given me the privilege of learning much from amazing food activists who are working daily in fields, offices, schools and boardrooms daily to help to build a more just and sustainable food system.

    Preparing a sustainable meal can be a selfish endeavor; I guarantee you that it will be more fun, tastier and make for a good conversation at your table. However, it’s also about our global community; you’ll help to prevent the emission of greenhouse gas emissions, the slaughter of animals living under inhumane conditions, meet local farmers and help to foster the establishment of a more equitable food system through your creation of the biggest American meal of the year.

    1. Buy organic. Organic produce and products are so commonplace now that Coca-Cola and Doritos are practically getting pushed off shelves to make extra space for these hot items. Try to purchase from a small, local farmer, but if you can’t find one, then you can stock up on your Thanksgiving goods at any major retailer. By choosing organic foods, you are helping to prevent the usage of millions of pounds of poisonous pesticides and fertilizers and emission of greenhouse gas emissions. Best of all, organic foods taste better.

    2. Save a turkey. Choose the most humane option that will significantly lighten your environmental impact by having a meat-free meal. You can make your centerpiece a hearty, fall-themed vegetarian dish or opt for a tofurkey. Either way, you’ll be saying no to our industrial food system, reducing your global warming contribution and saying yes to a healthy, happy meal. You can also make a turkey happy by adopting it. Yes, you read correctly, save a turkey from the chopping block and give it the gift of a happy home at Farm Sanctuary. For those of you who roll their eyes at my incredible suggestion in tip two of going meat-free on Thanksgiving. If you fall into that camp, I’d suggest you opt for a humanely-raised turkey.

    Read the full article here.

    Tags: sustainable food take part thanksgiving 

     

    2 Responses to “Thanksgiving is Almost Here!”

    1. Thanks so much for the link to this article – it’s really exciting and empowering to think of all the ways we can embrace longstanding traditions while still bringing something new to the proverbial table! Now more than ever are there so many resources available to us to help us bring our values into our most cherished traditions. One way many of us New Yorkers are spending the holiday is dining out – often a tricky proposition when trying to keep local, organic, and sustainable foods in mind. Clean Plates NYC (cleanplatesnyc.com) is a fantastic guide to the many health-minded and sustainable restaurants in the city – and lots of them are serving Thanksgiving meals! I’m interested to hear where other non-cooks are dining this year…

    2. Great tip about giving the turkey a miss on Thanksgiving.

      Turkeys are very intelligent and sensitive birds and once they are used to people love nothing more than a stroke.

      You can make a delicious dinner with no cruelty at all.

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