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
(Page 4 of 4)
The research I saw at the world’s largest and sixth-largest food companies will, of course, come at a price. Processing, even to restore a food’s natural ingredients or not remove them in the first place, always adds to a food’s cost. Another potential threat of the new food research is that these products could co-opt traditional markets, like the ones for quinoa and amaranth, and begin to erase native foods, which can be made for a fraction of the cost and have been shown for millennia to be healthful and practical. And there are plenty of other costs I’m leaving out: the treatment of labor, the environmental costs of packaging and transport, the general destruction of small businesses as large corporations grab local markets with lower prices and often bad-for-you food, deceptive claims and advertising, the checkered political history of all these companies.
But if huge corporations able to finance basic research don’t build the kind of centers Nestlé has, government won’t. Sputnik caused a technology-research revolution financed by massive government investment, often in partnership with private industry. The cold war gave us the Internet and GPS and a slew of electronic devices we rely on. As for comparable leaps forward in food—well, we got Tang.
Locally raised food, which I hasten to say governments and consumers should strongly support, won’t meet the needs of the developing world. Or the world of time- and money-pressed American working families. But lowering the price of and improving the quality of packaged foods can help people eat better and weigh less. And, without a focused government investment in research or a retooled farm bill that favors health-minded farmers and food producers—both of which seem unlikely—those initiatives will be left to the seldom philanthropic free market.
As part of its commitment to lowering sodium and sugars in private-label foods, Wal-Mart also committed to eliminating the premium its consumers usually pay for whole-grains foods and fresh vegetables. That move jibes with the main finding of “It’s Dinnertime,” a recent national survey of American low-income families conducted principally by Share Our Strength, the national hunger-relief organization: Low-income families cook and eat at home much more often than is popularly supposed; the single biggest barrier to their doing it more is the cost of food.
But I did see and taste hope for a better nutritional future. Nestlé is working to simplify the ingredients in some of its popular foods, taking out everything artificial and all preservatives and limiting the ingredients on the label to five recognizable components. OK, the first product line it began to overhaul was Häagen-Dazs, but it was a start. Next is...Coffee-Mate, hardly a health food, but a product practically everyone uses, horrifying as the ingredient list has always been; the new Natural Bliss line is made with milk, cream, sugar and natural flavors. (We’ll save the discussion of “natural,” maybe the most misused word on a label, for another day.)
And in the Nestlé flasks, I smelled not just “sauerkraut” but the potential for re-naturing foods. I also heard about preservation and pathogen-killing treatments that can do the same thing: ultra-high pressure, at low temperatures, that can kill pathogens without denaturing flavorful bacteria as does the current, hated-by-foodies ultra-high pasteurization. Already pressure is used to kill viruses and other pathogens in oysters, preserving texture, liquid and flavor far better than pasteurization. The potential for long-life milk and cheeses that actually taste, well, natural, is large.
At the General Mills company store, I bought a can of green beans and a frozen product the people I visited kept mentioning, Steamers, thick plastic bags of vegetables that go right into the microwave. I wanted to compare frozen to canned green beans. The canned were terrible: as waterlogged, briny, sour because overcooked, and otherwise flavorless as the ones I remembered from school lunches, and just as likely to make kids hate vegetables. But the frozen were bright, fresh-flavored and better than the fresh green beans I can get at any market for nine months of the year, and they had no added salt and no preservatives. I’d buy these for a weeknight,environmentally incorrect packaging and all.
The place I couldn’t restrain myself was in the test plant at Bell Institute, in front of a large aluminum tray of Wheaties. I never much liked Wheaties: They lack the light crispness of corn flakes, and, admirably high as they are in whole grains and low in the number of ingredients (whole wheat, sugar, salt), Wheaties are too reminiscent of cereal’s health-food origins. A very few hours before, a machine had made a test batch, starting with whole wheat berries in a pressure cooker, turning them into dough, extruding that dough into pellets, then running the pellets between steel rollers. Mendesh had thoughtfully set aside samples of the wet, sweetish dough and very good nuggets pre-flaking. But those flakes! Incredibly fresh, crisper than any Wheaties I’d certainly had, and tasting strongly of the whole wheat they had so recently begun as. “The minute you make it, it starts getting worse,” Mendesh said, beaming as he watched me go back to the bin again and again. He didn’t protest when I asked for a bag for the road—a bag that filled a good portion of my overnight luggage. Most of it was gone by the next morning.
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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