Maybe people will finally shut up about bacon.

Feb 12, 2011 18:22

 The backlash against foodies is official, voiced by no less than The Atlantic in an piece titled The Moral Crusade Against Foodies. Seems like it was just yesterday that all the middlebrow publications were celebrating the new food culture and calling it a movement. Now:

IT HAS ALWAYS been crucial to the gourmet’s pleasure that he eat in ways the mainstream cannot afford. For hundreds of years this meant consuming enormous quantities of meat. That of animals that had been whipped to death was more highly valued for centuries, in the belief that pain and trauma enhanced taste. “A true gastronome,” according to a British dining manual of the time, “is as insensible to suffering as is a conqueror.” But for the past several decades, factory farms have made meat ever cheaper and-as the excellent book The CAFO [Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations] Reader makes clear-the pain and trauma are thrown in for free. The contemporary gourmet reacts by voicing an ever-stronger preference for free-range meats from small local farms. He even claims to believe that well-treated animals taste better, though his heart isn’t really in it. Steingarten tells of watching four people hold down a struggling, groaning pig for a full 20 minutes as it bled to death for his dinner. He calls the animal “a filthy beast deserving its fate.”

Even if gourmets’ rejection of factory farms and fast food is largely motivated by their traditional elitism, it has left them, for the first time in the history of their community, feeling more moral, spiritual even, than the man on the street. Food writing reflects the change. Since the late 1990s, the guilty smirkiness that once marked its default style has been losing ever more ground to pomposity and sermonizing.
The whole article is well worth reading. Still, I'm glad foodies had their moment. I can buy hummus, Greek yogurt, and goat cheese at Aldi's these day. That is completely awesome.
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