Zero miles (or zero kilometres) is a really fascinating food theory.
It asserts that we should consume food grown and marketed close to
the place where we live. By doing so, we avoid food that travels for
many miles by flight, ship, truck and other polluting means of
transport. Apart from pollution, zero miles also allows us to eat
fresher food which does not contain preservatives and other
ingredients that threatens health, taste and nutritional values.
As often happens, good theories fail when they are turned into
practice. First of all, it has been demonstrated that the
environmental relevance of zero miles does not apply to everywhere.
In the northern part of Britain, for example, growing fruit and vegetables needs
energy-consuming, heated-up greenhouses, as the weather does not
permit the natural growing of some vegetables. A recent research has
demonstrated that importing products from Spain pollutes less than
growing them in the central and northern part of Britain. Thus,
the first point is that zero miles does not guarantee environmental
advantage on some parts of the planet.
However, the real problem with zero miles is cultural. In fact, in
this era more than in any other, people travel and live for long
periods far from their original places, often for their entire lives.
In these new places, they build new lives, establish new
relationships and do things that they would have never done at their
original homes. Yet, they often feel the need not to lose their
roots, and consuming foods from their birthplaces is the easiest and
best way to retrieve those roots.
My Italian friends living in London theoretically support zero
kilometres, but their refrigerators and kitchen shelves are full of
Parmigiano Reggiano, authentic Italian pasta and mozzarella,
extra-virgin olive oil authentically produced in Italy and an array
of Italian foods much more various than those I have in Italy. They
find them in the most popular supermarkets in London, which import
all that food from Italy ignoring the zero miles theory. Questioned
by me, my friends have said that they would never replace Parmigiano
Reggiano with British cheese, Italian pasta with British pasta, and
so on. Clearly, those products make them feel at home. Apart from
their wonderful taste, those foods have the function of retrieving my
friends' roots. The same happens to the other Italians who have
emigrated everywhere, and to the Indians, Egyptians, Bulgarians and
so on that have built new lives far from their birthplaces.
Food is a magician. It conveys memories, emotions, scents and people
that have been important in our past. This is not theory, but
everyday life. A useful and effective theory such as zero miles
cannot keep up with the strength of the flood of emotions and
nostalgia that sometimes gets into our lives without asking
permission. It is probably disputable, but when at the crossroads
where we will have to choose between correctness and emotions, we
will more often give up our environmental awareness and take the road
of the taste of our past.
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