Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Are all the cows mad? Lorraine Craig Head of Research and Education Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) With Debbie Janes Research assistant.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Are all the cows mad? Lorraine Craig Head of Research and Education Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) With Debbie Janes Research assistant."— Presentation transcript:

1 Are all the cows mad? Lorraine Craig Head of Research and Education Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) With Debbie Janes Research assistant

2

3 Le Menu Apéritif Who is cooking the books? Entrée Poached egg with Salmonella

4 Apéritif

5 Who is cooking the books? Food preferences depend on previous events Lack of academic attention in the UK until recently Eating has been taken for granted Food preparation was women's work Indifference to culinary culture

6

7 Small shop or supermarket? Retailercumulative share of market 19881998 Tesco9.015.6 Sainsbury19.228.2 Asda23.936.9 Safeway30.844.6 By 2003 the cumulative share of the supermarket was 65% source Guardian Unlimited

8 Entrée Poached egg with Salmonella Government minister, Mrs Edwina Curry states that eating eggs can cause salmonella infection Mrs Curry loses her job Egg sales by 50% in 4 weeks

9 Le Plat: Beef with mad cow jus Mad cow disease Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) Human variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD)

10 Beef with mad cow jus 1986 first diagnosis of BSE 1988 all cows in UK with BSE will be destroyed 3.7 million cows destroyed 1993 epidemic slows 1996 first announcement of human vCJD MacDonalds bans British beef EU ban British beef English go across the channel and eat beef instead

11 Why was there no mad cow disease in France?

12 Chicken with bid flu vinagrette Between Aug 2003 and January 2004 80 m birds have been killed

13 Lamb with ‘foot and mouth’ flambée

14 An economic crisis The virus can be carried by transporting animals or in the wind 2001 was last major outbreak

15 The army were called in to deal with the animals – the media had fun with the politicians

16 Four million animals were killed and burnt

17 Land was temporarily destroyed by chemicals used for burning

18 Movement of people and animals were restricted

19 Tourism in the UK was devastated

20 Not just sheep… but pigs and cows were affected

21 Fromage – cholesterol with added salt? 1997 Food Standards Agency introduced post – BSE Increase in number of government campaigns to influence diet Public opinion brought food quality to top of the agenda Would this have happened in France?

22 Fromage – cholesterol with added salt? Move to local products, farmers markets, natural, fresh, and homemade The appellation contrôlée of France? Farmers see quality as a means of creating a new demand or adding value to their food

23 Less salt? £4million campaign by government for less salt in the diet Health campaigners argue salt causes heart attacks Are some of us more susceptible than others?

24 So what do Britons eat? ‘Roast beef is still the national culinary pride…served at midday on Sunday with roasted potatoes, Yorkshire pudding, two vegetables, horseradish, gravy and mustard (Learn English, 2003)

25 Dessert? Local food, fewer chemicals…. vs the landscape Local raspberries and strawberries grown without chemicals Labelling with farmers name in national stores such as Marks and Spencer

26 Strawberry (or raspberry) fields forever? Not when it's tasteless 'junk fruit' grown in ugly 'polytunnels' on my doorstep, Guardian writer Monty Don (July 2004) Hop fields are destroyed to grow strawberries in ‘polytunnels’ – bring in more income for the farmer Tourism brings in more money than agriculture

27 Social class vs income vs geographical region? What influences food habits? Gender – women vs men? Age – do younger adults take note of what they are eating? Are there fashionable foods through the media? Bourdieu argues Class is important in diet Low income families – can they afford to be choosy? Have they been taught to cook fresh vegetables?

28 Geographical It is not safe to eat meat in the UK… but go outside the UK and eat beef, pork, lamb, chicken, eggs Insert image of Britain a nation of foodies from independent article

29 Petit Fours : the future? UK farmers have finally taken to the streets to protest against government intervention After the recent government ban on fox-hunting will the English raise edible horses? Will we have a meal of vitamin pills only as a result of obesity?

30 Or will we all go fishing instead?


Download ppt "Are all the cows mad? Lorraine Craig Head of Research and Education Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) With Debbie Janes Research assistant."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google