Science of Cooking

TacoButtPlug , in Loss of cooking skills has hurt our ability to adapt to rising food prices, experts say
@TacoButtPlug@sh.itjust.works avatar

I wouldn't say we lost cooking* skills. A lot of us just don't have time to cook.

plantteacher ,

Indeed.. now that we can simply enter a couple ingredients into a search field and get countless recipes, and also w/Youtube, I would expect people to be better equipped in recent decades.

SpaceNoodle , in Loss of cooking skills has hurt our ability to adapt to rising food prices, experts say

Groceries cost more too, ya dumb fucks

LemmyIsFantastic ,

My brother in Christ, try reading the article.

plantteacher ,

The article covers that: “Of course no amount of cooking prowess will help if you can't afford a basket of groceries.”

Inucune , in Loss of cooking skills has hurt our ability to adapt to rising food prices, experts say

Any time I read an article title like this, I imagine the 'experts' to be 4 old retired farmers meeting for their morning coffee at McDonald's and jackjaw.

plantteacher ,

.. or farmers trying to sell obscure things like celery root!

seriously though, the article seems reasonable and balanced to me. E.g:

  • “Of course no amount of cooking prowess will help if you can't afford a basket of groceries”
  • “It's important to note, however, that cooking skills alone cannot solve the affordability problem”.
wall_inhabiter , in Loss of cooking skills has hurt our ability to adapt to rising food prices, experts say

More like the basket swapping method of calculating consumer price inflation misled already distracted pop economics writers

Lutra , in You've heard of lab grown meat, are you ready for rice-grown beef?

[pedantic] its still lab-grown rice-grown beef.

the whole "put the concoction in a petri dish at the right temp and hope the matrix grows" thing.

AlpacaChariot , in You've heard of lab grown meat, are you ready for rice-grown beef?

This is basically that slop they eat in The Matrix. Mmm, tasty wheat / meat.

andrew_bidlaw ,
@andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.works avatar

How do machine know how the beef tastes like?

lvxferre ,

With that username*, I'd be extra careful. What if AI confuses you with real cattle?

*Andrej likely knows it, but for the others: быдло/bydlo = cattle.

andrew_bidlaw ,
@andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.works avatar

Lel. You'd be surprised, but I don't. What's the language is it? Polish? I only heard it being associated with unclever commoners lacking any manners.

lvxferre ,

It's Polish in origin, as ⟨bydło⟩ ['bɨd.wɔ]. In the language it refers directly to cattle, but metaphorically to cattle-like people, like a herd of people who don't think by themselves.

The way that you spelled it in your nickname is as Russian borrowed the word from Polish, ⟨быдло⟩ ['bɨd.ɫə]. In Russian I think that the meaning as "cattle-like people" is default.

andrew_bidlaw ,
@andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.works avatar

TIL.

Thank you. That makes a lot of sense. I'd reconsider my relationships with that word in the future.

Son_of_dad ,

How will I know how to enjoy my food if there's no death involved?

CM400 , in You've heard of lab grown meat, are you ready for rice-grown beef?

Well I for one am looking forward to teriyaki beefrice krispies.

lvxferre , in You've heard of lab grown meat, are you ready for rice-grown beef?

I've read this kind of hoping for a gyudon that prepares itself, it would be damn great.

Sadly their idea is a bit more on the eeew side. It could open the lid for tastier developments though.

Gork , in You've heard of lab grown meat, are you ready for rice-grown beef?

Is shelf stability impacted? I guess when it's dry it's like a rice jerky.

darkphotonstudio , in You've heard of lab grown meat, are you ready for rice-grown beef?

Cool.

flappy , in You've heard of lab grown meat, are you ready for rice-grown beef?

Thanks, I hate it so much!

GregoryTheGreat , in You've heard of lab grown meat, are you ready for rice-grown beef?

Yeah

Maoo , in The $10 trillion benefits of overhauling our food system
@Maoo@hexbear.net avatar

This is basically a press release for The Food Systems Economic Commission, a ghoulish think tank for greenwashed liberal policies. Its primary contributors draw from McKinsey, "green" capitalists, useless NGOs offering technocratic solutions that avoid challenging the key status quo, other liberal think tanks, and World Bank (bad things, not to be trusted). And various academics (they run the gamut). There's a reason they all have headshots like every other soulless C-suite exec.

An easy way to tell whether an article on this topic is full of it is to see whether it highlights food sovereignty. Major functions of World Bank and the IMF are to undermine food sovereignty as a condition of receiving loans countries are forced to take on due to the global economic (and military) system. To make imports (usually from the US) cheaper than domestic production for large categories of foods, as richer countries maintain their own food production subsidies while the loans are conditioned on destroying recipients' subsidies.

Neither this article nor its source have anything to say about food sovereignty or these international organs of capital that dictate agricultural policy across the global south, but they do talk about deforestation without describing its root causes and call for using more satellite data derived from African countries.

This is fundamentally a political question and not one that will be answered by a think tank such as this. To understand food sustainability, we have to materially ask how the food system works and why it is seemingly so strange. For example, why is slashing the Brazilian rainforest to grow soy for cattle to be killed and sold to Europeans and Americans (1) somehow cheaper than doing the same in America and Europe and (2) valued above indigenous land rights? What happened when policy changes are attempted (ex: what happened to Lula? To indigenous people?)?

autotldr Bot , in The $10 trillion benefits of overhauling our food system

This is the best summary I could come up with:


All in all, the damages caused by the current system — how food is produced, marketed, and consumed — add up to $15 trillion in losses a year.

It’s time for a makeover, the authors of the report argue, which could garner up to $10 trillion in health and economic benefits (equivalent to roughly 8 percent of global GDP in 2020).

I think the cost-benefit analysis overall is clear,” Vera Songwe, co-chair of the FSEC and executive secretary of the Economic Commission for Africa, said in a press call today.

Health costs alone related to failures in our food system add up to a bulk of current losses — $11 trillion a year, according to the FSEC report.

Continuing current trends would exacerbate undernutrition in other parts of the world, with food insecurity causing 640 million people to be underweight.

The report is the culmination of four years of investigation by the FSEC, including comprehensive literature reviews, case studies, and economic modeling.


The original article contains 731 words, the summary contains 162 words. Saved 78%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!

Cal_ , in The Invention of a New Pasta Shape

I actually bought two bags of the stuff when the podcast came out. Overall it's pretty a good pasta! It certainly had a bit more of a bite than something like penne, but I couldn't say that it really heald sauce any differently. It was a fun novelty pasta but not worth the small batch prices + shipping.

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