Food For Thought

Don’t we all love our cookies! With chocolate or with hazelnuts, perhaps a classic French Madeleine or a Dutch Stroopwafel: two crispy wafers held together by sweet syrup, baked perfectly golden brown and of course round. Unfortunately, not alle cookies are perfect, sometimes the Madeleines are too brown, or the chocolate chunks are on one side of the cookie only, or one of the wafers is broken or not perfectly round. Manufactures know these products will not be bought by consumers, so what to do? Destroy them? Feed them to pigs?
Which is actually done in the Netherlands: discarded Stroopwafels, Wine Gums, Donuts, Pies and Cakes are fed to pigs. Anything goes. We feel it’s very wrong, poor pigs having to eat all these unhealthy left overs, sometimes passed their best-before-date, containing tons of sugar, food additives and modified, refined ingredients. Not to mention feeding pork pies to pigs.

250X150 Containerschip MSC Leanne in de haven van Jebel Ali in Dubai, 2023, © Kadir van Lohuizen, Het Scheepvaartmuseum, available via https://www.hetscheepvaartmuseum.nl

Photographer and documentary maker Kadir van Lohuizen explored the world behind our global food production. He visited cow farms in the USA, he made videos in mega slaughterhouses where tens of thousands of chickens are slaughtered daily and in a factory with an overwhelming number of chicken incubators (also showing how sick or weak female chicks and all male chicks are separated from the healthy female chicks and destroyed).

One of the videos shows a dairy farm in Al Kawaneej, United Arab Emirates, where they cool 12.500 cows with mist and fogging nozzles (in the middle of the desert), producing some 260.000 liters of milk per day. He travelled to China and visited enormous distribution centers, delivering food, drinks and meals 24/7. In the Netherlands he visited the world’s leading centre of plant breeding and seed technology.
The result of this impressive project is an exhibition called Food For Thought in the Dutch National Maritime Museum in Amsterdam. Food For Thought explores the origin of our food, and the role the Netherlands and the global shipping industry play in our food system. Food For Thought raises questions and dilemma’s; you will go from admiration to bewilderment and back again.

In an interview Kadir van Lohuizen mentioned he liked the idea of feeding left over stroopwafels to pigs. Normally the bakery would destroy the cookies. Isn’t it better to feed them to pigs and import less soy products (apparently that’s what pigs normally eat)?

250x150 Transport van avocado's door groenten- en fruitverwerker Plan Fresh in Kabati (Kena), © 2023, Kadir van Lohuizen, Het Scheepvaartmuseum_0, available via https://www.hetscheepvaartmuseum.nl

Another dilemma: we are not keen on buying asparagus when they are not in season. Or strawberries, green beans, mangos et cetera. Even though the supermarket will offer them every day of the year. Most of these products are grown in Kenia. The country has a great climate for growing vegetables and fruit. Food For Thought shows how people in Kenia benefit from the export, socially and economically.

Why wouldn’t we buy products from Kenia? Because the carbon footprint of the transport? But how about all these lovely Dutch tomatoes and onions? The Netherlands is the second largest exporter in the world, after the United States, producing everything from potatoes to cheese, from seeds to flowers, from eggs to meat. We expect people to buy Dutch food, but we don’t buy avocados from Kenia?

Transport is clearly one of the key aspects of global food production. When pigs are slaughtered in the Netherlands, the spareribs are shipped to the US and the head, kidney, nose, heart and tail to China, because the Dutch consumer loves pork loin and chops but not the other parts.
The Nile perch, introduced in Lake Victoria in the 1950s, completely changed the eco-system, disrupted the circumstances of local fishing communities, is fished commercially, forbidden to be eaten by locals and shipped globally.

250x150 Foodnetherlands_2021_08392 © Kadir van Lohuizen, Het Scheepvaartmuseum , available via https://www.hetscheepvaartmuseum.nl

Food For Thought shows the global food production, distribution and the enormous scale of every aspect. A farm in Hereford (Texas) with 250 thousand animals, a Dutch grower producing 80 million kilos of tomatoes per year (see picture), 100 million chickens living in the Netherlands.

Today 783 million people, meaning 10% of the world’s population, face chronic hunger.

Did we mention that 35% of all food is wasted?

Food For Thought made us think again about our food and how we can contribute to a healthier, better world, with less hunger. We think Ralph Dahlhaus, Chef of the National Maritime Museum, is very wise and helpful in his video statement, shown at Food For Thought:
Your choice of food does not need to be perfect, but it must be responsible.

More information on the website of the National Maritime Museum. Food For Thoughts runs until January 5th, 2025.

PS

Male chicks are destroyed on day one by asphyxiation and/or maceration. For every chicken you eat, one is destroyed. Knowing this we only buy eggs that are organic and if we are sure the male chicks are given a decent life, A demeter egg will cost 65 eurocent compared to 20 cent for a free range egg.
Big difference?
Not really when you think of a soft, cuddly chicken ending up in a shredder.


9 thoughts on “Food For Thought

  1. Thank you so much for this post! I truly appreciate the essence “Your choice of food does not need to be perfect, but it must be responsible.” We have become blind and deaf in our world about how our food is produced on the mass scale, or we just don’t want to see and hear about the consequences. Conscious choices are essential not only for our own health but the health of the planet as well.

    Liked by 2 people

  2. A very sobering post, but so necessary for us to understand what and how we are being fed. I read an article a few years ago that, here in the US, food manufacturers in the 80’s saw the population growth rate slowing, so they decided to just feed MORE food to fewer people to keep sales up…as a result the average size of a food portion went up 40% in 20 years….and has led to this obesity crisis we face…food waste is horrible!

    Liked by 1 person

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