100 Mile Diet Meals
The 100-Mile Diet: A Year of Local Eating (or Plenty: One Man,
One Woman, and a Raucous Year of Eating Locally) is a
non-fiction book written by Canadian writers Alisa Smith and
J.B. MacKinnon. In the book, the authors recount their
experiences, including motivations and challenges, on
restricting their diet, for one year, to include only foods
grown within 100 miles of their residence. Beginning in March
2005, with little preparation the urban couple began only
purchasing foods with ingredients they knew were all from
within 100 miles. Finding little in grocery stores, they relied
on farmer's markets and visits to local farms. Staples in their
diet included seafood, chicken, root vegetable, berries, and
corn. They lacked cooking oils, rice, and sugar. They preserved
foods for use in the winter but ended with extra supplies.
The couple first wrote about the experience in articles for
the online magazine The Tyee. The popularity of the articles
led to a book deal. In the book, Smith and MacKinnon each write
alternate chapters, 12 in total. The first chapter is written
by MacKinnon and focuses on the first month of their
experience. They write in the first person as a memoir that
explores their own dietary experiences and personal
feelings.
|