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Never Out of Season
Never Out of Season: How Having the Food We Want When We Want It Threatens Our Food Supply and Our Future | Rob Dunn
2 posts | 1 read | 5 to read
A Fast Food Nation for the foods we grow and depend on The bananas we eat today aren't your parents' bananas: We eat a recognizable, consistent breakfast fruit that was standardized in the 1960s from dozens into one basic banana. But because of that, the banana we love is dangerously susceptible to a pathogen that might wipe them out. That's the story of our food today: Modern science has brought us produce in perpetual abundance-once-rare fruits are seemingly never out of season, and we breed and clone the hardiest, best-tasting varieties of the crops we rely on most. As a result, a smaller proportion of people on earth go hungry today than at any other moment in the last thousand years, and the streamlining of our food supply guarantees that the food we buy, from bananas to coffee to wheat, tastes the same every single time. Our corporate food system has nearly perfected the process of turning sunlight, water and nutrients into food. But our crops themselves remain susceptible to the nature's fury. And nature always wins. Authoritative, urgent, and filled with fascinating heroes and villains from around the world, Never Out of Season is the story of the crops we depend on most and the scientists racing to preserve the diversity of life, in order to save our food supply, and us.
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quote
keithmalek

During the years between 1845 and today, new pathogens and pests have threatened every major crop. But in the years between 2006 and 2016, the rate of these new threats has accelerated. What used to be a slow tap, tap, tap on the thin ice of civilization has turned into a pounding, drumming announcement.

quote
keithmalek

Shipwrecks from the time are riddled with gnaw marks made by the teeth of rodents. The conditions of the food on Columbus's fourth voyage to the Americas are said to have been so poor in hygiene and rich with life--grains and meats writhing with larvae--that the men preferred to eat at night so as not to see what moved in their bowls.