Deconstructing Dinner: 100-Mile Diet / Local Food Strategies

100 Mile Diet

11 Jan 2007 |
View all related to Climate Change | Deconstructing Dinner | Food Security | Local Food | Relocalization
When the average North American sits down to eat, each ingredient has typically travelled at least 1,500 miles. On the first day of spring, 2005, Alisa Smith and James MacKinnon chose to confront this unsettling statistic with a simple experiment. For one year, they would buy or gather their food and drink from within 100 miles of their apartment in Vancouver, British Columbia. Since then, James and Alisa have gotten up-close-and-personal with issues ranging from the family-farm crisis to the environmental value of organic pears shipped across the globe.

Deconstructing Dinner is designed to educate listeners on the impacts our food choices have on ourselves, our communities and the planet. The show, hosted by Jon Steinman, is produced at Kootenay Co-op Radio (CJLY) in Nelson, British Columbia, Canada.


AudioDeconstructing Dinner: 100-Mile Diet / Local Food Strategies (length 60 min): download, stream
Read transcript: English