Tag Archives: food

A Renaissance painting reveals how breeding changed watermelons

Giovanni Stanchi's painting from the 17th century shows how much watermelon has changed.Christie Images LTD 2015
Giovanni Stanchi’s painting from the 17th century shows how much watermelon has changed.

Look in the bottom right corner of this painting. If you’ve never seen a watermelon like that before, you’re not alone. This 17th-century painting by Giovanni Stanchi, courtesy of Christie’s, shows a type of watermelon that no one in the modern world has seen.

Stanchi’s watermelon, which was painted sometime between 1645 and 1672, offers a glimpse of a time before breeding changed the fruit forever.

The watermelon, then and now.Christie Images LTD 2015/Shutterstock
The watermelon, then and now.

James Nienhuis, a horticulture professor at the University of Wisconsin, uses the Stanchi painting in his classes to teach about the history of crop breeding.

“It’s fun to go to art museums and see the still-life pictures, and see what our vegetables looked like 500 years ago,” he told me. In many cases, it’s our only chance to peer into the past, since we can’t preserve vegetables for hundreds of years.

The watermelon originally came from Africa, but after domestication it thrived in hot climates in the Middle East and southern Europe. It probably became common in European gardens and markets around 1600. Old watermelons, like the one in Stanchi’s picture, likely tasted pretty good — Nienhuis thinks the sugar content would have been reasonably high, since the melons were eaten fresh and occasionally fermented into wine. But they still looked a lot different.

That’s because over time, we’ve bred watermelons to have the bright red color we recognize today. That fleshy interior is actually the watermelon’s placenta, which holds the seeds. Before it was fully domesticated, that placenta lacked the high amounts oflycopene that give it the red color. Through hundreds of years of domestication, we’ve modified smaller watermelons with a white interior into the larger, lycopene-loaded versions we know today.

Of course, we haven’t only changed the color of watermelon. Lately, we’ve also been experimenting with getting rid of the seeds — which Nienhuis reluctantly calls “the logical progression in domestication.” Future generations will at least have photographs to understand what watermelons with seeds looked like. But to see the small, white watermelons of the past, they too will have to look at Renaissance art.

Further reading: Here’s what 9,000 years of breeding have done to corn, peaches, and other crops.

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Jennifer Lawrence on Eating

I really never knew much about Jennifer Lawrence.  I watched her in Hunger Games that was about it.  Recently, I saw her cool interviews where Jack Nicholson came over after the Oscar win for Silver Linings Playbook, and a few other shows, and I must say she has a refreshing non-self-absorbed candor, humor, and sweetness rarely seen in Hollywood today.  I wanted to showcase a link about her and food.

 

The reason is that although the link is supposed to be funny, I totally approve of Jennifer Lawrence’s fight against anorexic expectations.  She was called too fat to play the girl in The Hunger Games.  Really?  Once again, culture has a sickly thin view of how we should look.  I am so glad a role model like Jennifer Lawrence is out there to show all the girls and young ladies that you can eat normally and still be beautiful and successful.  We need more people to stand up and fight the weight nazis who want people to be starved.

http://www.buzzfeed.com/bennyjohnson/things-you-can-learn-about-eating-from-jennifer-lawrence

 

 

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Pink Slime in Our Meat – It’s Already Here

As a follow-up to my post on stem cell meat, here is a link to a story on pink slime:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/03/05/pink-slime-for-school-lun_n_1322325.html

It is a product so vile, that even Taco Bell and McDonalds refuse to serve it in their beef.  By using it, you can cut the cost of a pound of hamburger by 3 cents.  It is made from all the stuff normally thrown away from slaughtered animals.  Parts that would disgust you to hear their names.  It is turned into a semi-edible goop by treating it with ammonia (the stuff that smells like urine) then turning it first into a soup, then into a slime.  You then mix this delectable treat with real hamburger.

So who would buy such a horrible thing?  The federal government, for our children in the free breakfast program.  The same people who took away a Mom packed lunch because it did not have a vegetable in it and gave her kids chicken McNuggets instead.  Soylent pink for all our kids in school.  Yummy.  Just wait till the feds are controlling your healthcare too…

How about a nice bowl of ammonia soaked meat by products?  Even a cartoon character will have a hard time convincing kids this is tasty.

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