Food to fix the world
Here Now - A podcast by RNZ
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The Pacific Food Lab is a organisation aiming to change the way we think about, create and consume food with the hopes of improving our health and the environment. Big goals. This week on Voices, we meet two of the passionate people behind this cause.Could the answer to many of the world's problems - be food?Tracy Berno, Professor of Food Studies at Auckland University of Technology (AUT) and New Calendonian chef Gaby Levionnois believes so."We've got a lot of systems problems on the planet and a lot of those have at their source contemporary industrialised food systems," said Berno, "So if food is a big part of the problem, then food must be the answer as well". Listen to Voices - Tracy Berno and Gaby Levionnois finding solutions to big problems one bite at a time.Tracy and Gaby hosted an event at AUT's Culinary Arts and Gastronomy Winter Series, called 'Not Just Another Coconut: The Work of the Pacific Food Lab' where they discussed the work of this organisation and its goals for improving the health of eaters and the world in general.Tracy and Gaby whipped up a fish kokoda, marinated venison and a duck dish as they discussed things like beneficial recipes and being more conscious about what we are eating."It's about feeling good and food making you feel good, as well as engaging with food and food systems that are healthy for the planet," said Berno.Levionnois adds, "We take it for granted now. We have food on the table so easily, but if we run out of it, then you will start thinking more about it. But the goal is for everyone to understand what food is about and not take it for granted."He said we learn to count, talk, write and read, but we have not been taught how to eat.The work of the Pacific Food Lab is about doing all of that.Before lockdown, Tracy worked with students at AUT's south campus to plant and tend their own garden beds."We had a big harvest dinner where we brought I think was eight students into the kitchen, only one of whom had ever cooked before and we catered a meal for 90 people," she said."The buzz, the look of sheer accomplishment on the students faces was just incredible. And it's all about that engaging with that that food system and the food and really getting a lot of enjoyment about it and using it as a tool to bring people together as well."Listen free on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, iHeartRadio, Google Podcasts or any good podcast app. Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details