Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Labrador Inuit inspired frozen food inventor
Every generation has its own foodies. Clarence Birdseye, born in Brooklyn in 1886 and remembered as the father of frozen food, was one of the leading foodies of his generation.
He loved food, talked about it constantly and mentioned what he was eating in almost every letter he wrote. In a 1915 letter to his family from Labrador, where he was a fur trader, Birdseye wrote: "Every letter has to begin with something about food. These are the two items of principal interest today," and proceeded to describe the butter he had acquired from a neighbor and the fresh seal meat he had eaten.
When he encountered a new plant or animal, he immediately wondered what it would taste like. He would kill it, cook it and eat it. He also loved to cook. Among the treats he wrote home about from Labrador were polar bear, snipe, skunk (he claimed the front end was the tastiest), horned owl, beaver and hawk. Later the process became more sophisticated. He would kill it, freeze it, then cook it.
Birdseye was born into a time some have labeled "the age of extermination," in which buffalo, whales, coyotes, wolves, passenger pigeons and many other species were slaughtered by the thousands without a second thought. The most famous man living in New York during that era -- the most famous man in the world, according to some historians -- was Buffalo Bill Cody, who was celebrated for having shot 4,280 wild bison in an 18-month hunting spree.
But it also was the height of the Industrial Revolution. New life-changing mechanical devices were being invented and mass produced.
Not unlike today with electronic gadgets, young people eagerly awaited each invention, and there was much talk about how these new devices were going to alter everything.
And because of that excitement, combined with his love of food, Birdseye believed industry was going to do wonderful things with food. Industry would free the consumer from the small local farm and, with the help of the fast-freezing process he devised, would bring everyone food from around the world, any time of year, free from seasonal restrictions.
Birdseye, however, grew up in a locavore world. Farming was local and artisanal, yields were small and the process was organic, or at least lacking in chemicals. The result was most people had very limited food options, almost no fresh food in the winter and shortages caused by blights. Birdseye imagined something better.
In Labrador, he had often noticed when the Inuit fished, their catch would freeze almost instantly in the 40-degree-below-zero winter. Unlike the dreaded frozen food known at the time, this fish tasted remarkably fresh. Sometimes he insisted it even swam away when thawed. He began freezing food for the health of his wife and infant son because there was no other source of fresh food in the eight-month Labrador winter.
Today, many of us don't think his ideas were better, and we don't believe his argument frozen is as good as fresh -- or food should be always available, no matter the season. We have to remember when he talked about how fresh his frozen food was, he was comparing it with the other off-season food that was available: salt-cured, canned or slow frozen and mushy.
It is also important to remember we tend to want what we can't have. This thinking may explain why so much of the modern locavore movement comes out of California. The state historically had a weak tradition of small family farms. Today, the $34 billion in products California family farms are bringing to market every year is probably the highest yield from family farming the state has ever known. California was the birthplace of American agribusiness, and when small family farms around the nation failed, the farmers packed up and went to California to work for agribusiness.
If we ever achieve the goal of getting all of our food from local family-owned organic farms, we might end up wanting industrial food again because it's quicker, easier, more varied and possibly cheaper. Birdseye's leading food ideas -- freezing and dehydrating -- were about producing more food less expensively that could be more easily transported over long distances.
The truth is that both approaches have failed. Today, about one in six North Americans is malnourished. The important issue is not how to produce the best food but how to feed everyone a healthy diet. We haven't figured that out yet.
Mark Kurlansky is the author of, most recently, Birdseye: The Adventures of a Curious Man.
--The Los Angeles Times
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition June 18, 2012 A10
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