Can Technology Save Breakfast?
Cereal companies, maligned for overprocessing, are now using the same techniques to put some nature back in the bowl
- By Corby Kummer
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2012, Subscribe
What do foodies want? It’s not hard to answer, at least not for right-minded ones: locally raised food grown organically, completely unprocessed, delivered by hand or mule-driven cart. As the author of one of the first books about the slow food movement, I certainly want that kind of food to be both affordable and widely available. But that’s not what most of the industrialized world can get. I break from my soul mates in believing in the power of evolving technology and, yes, the food industry to help people find and afford—and even like—food that new machines and processes can bring near its unprocessed, whole state.
Technology and food aren’t supposed to go together in any context but angry scorn. Technology and industry, in unholy collusion with all forms of media, are responsible for most every ill that food has anything to do with—particularly the U.S. epidemic of childhood obesity, laid squarely at the doorstep of cheap, greasy fast food and sugary sodas. The food industry, in large part, denatures food, often to sickening effect. Think of “pink slime,” only the most recent outrage, with its bits of mechanically stripped scraps extruded into ammoniated filler that turns up in school-lunch hamburgers.
But maybe the food industry can re-nature products. Maybe it can make the best of the food we care about—whole grains, fiber, and vitamins, minerals and antioxidants—convenient and accessible. Sure, it’s unlikely. But not impossible. If technology, scale, industrialization and relentless marketing have been the forces of nutritional evil, maybe they can be the forces of nutritional salvation. The food industry, pretty much everyone recognizes, has a lot to answer for. Some forward-looking companies are already beginning to find some of the answers—and more need to follow.
Finding current examples isn’t simple. Huge corporations do manufacture “better-for-you” foods—a term they’re glad to use, though of course they don’t talk about “bad-for-you” foods. But good-for-you foods can be bad for the bottom line. Public commitments, like Pepsi’s to become more nutrition-minded and Wal-Mart’s to reduce sodium and added sugars and eliminate trans fats from many private-label foods, can curdle with a bad quarterly profit-and-loss statement. When Campbell’s retreated from a very loud commitment to cut salt in a wide range of its soups, admitting that its “health-inspired low-sodium push failed to lift sales,” as one report said, its stock price went up the next day.
One packaged, industrialized food that practically everybody buys is an exception: cereal. From the time of its wacky origins, manufacturers have been glad to trumpet breakfast cereal’s wholesome attributes. It has also been the object of ridicule when it has gone too far in saying just how good it is for you, and for blatantly advertising to children. Advertising food to children under 12 is now considered second only to advertising cigarettes to minors. Children, the anti-advertising argument goes, are unable to judge what is good or bad for them; and the companies that have the money to buy TV time will spend it not telling children what’s actually good for them but pushing the highest-sugar and -sodium foods, which sets children up for impulse eating, unbalanced meals and obesity.
The cereal industry, however many black eyes it gets, still likes its healthy image. It might be the food industry least afraid of slow food types with prying eyes. And so it was that I found myself at a long white table in front of nine plastic bowls of Cinnamon Toast Crunch.
Like all professional food people, I have food peculiarities. One is that I am incapable of keeping a box of dry cereal in my cupboard without consuming it in a very short period—say, before daybreak. When it comes to burgers, fries and soda, I am immune to the diabolical neurotransmitter mechanisms that David Kessler, in his bestseller The End of Overeating: Taking Control of the Insatiable American Appetite, accuses the food industry of mastering. Industry tripwires our brains, he and others say, to consume limitless quantities of food with insidiously increasing levels of fat, sugar and salt. I pride myself on distinguishing, and rejecting, artificial flavors like the ones Eric Schlosser describes in Fast Food Nation, engineered to taste better than, say, strawberry, and to make fat even more craveable. In a fairly excruciating smell test in which I had to distinguish the smell of rotted fish in ever-tinier concentrations (laugh, but then think of Vietnamese fish sauce and Worcestershire), I was declared a “supertaster.” Yet I am helpless before a box of dry cereal.
“Ready-to-eat” cereal happens to be a prime contender for the title of most manipulated food product. It’s also the likeliest to make outlandish health claims. Cereal was initially marketed as a health food, as has been documented in books and movies (The Great American Cereal Book; The Cornflake Crusade; T.C. Boyle’s novel about the promiscuous revivalist sanitarium community of Battle Creek, The Road to Wellville, which was turned into a movie with Matthew Broderick as a patient and Anthony Hopkins as Harvey Kellogg). Its creation and rise have been products of ever-devout American beliefs in the power of technology and marketing, and of food to improve health.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (6)
Why do we need technology to save breakfast? Even if Nestlé improve their products, will it ever be better than fresh, whole foods? Nestlé are still mostly trying to sell you solutions to problems you're better off solving yourself by making a lifestyle change.
Posted by Justin on July 5,2012 | 10:50 PM
ahhh science to the rescue....of what exactly? Not even to mention that it is getting practically impossible for people having food allergies to find out what's in it. Trace amounts are not mentioned under 'ingredients'. The food industry tries everything to replace real food with scientific crapoly. Next step: natural pregnancy is 'unhealthy'. Scientific tubes do a much better job and safe lives!
Posted by Karl on July 5,2012 | 05:04 PM
Rolled oats are less than a dollar a pound. Pour them into your bowl raw or make a porridge. Add fruit. Call it breakfast.
Posted by Russell on June 21,2012 | 05:25 PM
The only cereal I can find on grocery shelves without added salt and sugar is Shredded Wheat made from nothing but whole wheat. I prefer the old-fashioned large size but the same is true of the bite-sized version.
Posted by John Geyer on May 31,2012 | 01:32 PM
Plain English: if you break down a whole grain with enzymes, it is now something called "not-a-whole-grain-anymore". The effect will include an even more rapid rise in blood sugar, which is both detrimental and contributes to cravings. I just don't think we have any chance of saving ourselves from what is coming our way as a health and economic crisis by making tiny incremental changes. These companies aren't trying to bring change, they are instituting stalling tactics. A newly-published study of US teens showed that among the teens of NORMAL weight, 1 in every 8 were classed as diabetic or pre-diabetic. For the total group of all the kids of all body weights, 23 of every 100 were pre-diabetic or diabetic. Spikes in blood sugar are just as poisonous whether they come from orange juice, toast or dry cereal.
Posted by Dea Roberts on May 28,2012 | 06:07 PM
The author is obviously completely taken in by the health claims made for "whole grains" even though he says he has read David Kessler's book The End of Overeating (Kindle edition), and even admits indirectly to a food addiction involving wheat. Anyone who has read Dr. Davis' book, Wheat Belly (see wheatbellyblog.com), knows that addition of wheat to anything is for taking advantage of the appetite-stimulating action of gliadin, which makes people want to eat more (even if they don't particularly like the taste), and therefore buy more of that product. Which, in turn, increases profits.
Posted by Howard on May 28,2012 | 11:46 AM