Marion Nestle's Green Bean Moment

When I asked professor and author Marion Nestle how she got interested in the whole realm of food and nutrition and what kind of food she grew up eating, and she got this sentimental look on her face and said she was going to tell me about her "green bean moment."
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Last week, I had the honor and pleasure of interviewing professor and author Marion Nestle about her new book Eat Drink Vote: An Illustrated Guide to Food Politics (Rodale, 2013). We actually did a video interview in my New York office, fulfilling one of my youthful dreams of being a talk-show host just like Mike Douglas (I'm talking about the one with the 1960s show, not the Michael Douglas y'all read about today.)

Anyway, back to Marion. I asked her how she got interested in the whole realm of food and nutrition and what kind of food she grew up eating, and she got this sentimental look on her face and said she was going to tell me about her "green bean moment."

Marion grew up in New York City, and when she was about 8, she went to a summer camp in Vermont. It was there that her life-altering moment occurred when she picked a fresh green bean from the plant and bit right into it.

Now, anyone who has ever eaten a fresh, raw green bean knows what happened next. In fact, I'd just done this a few days ago, eating one of the last crisp green beans of the summer (a climbing rattlesnake bean) right from the vine, and the late season tinge of end-of-summer made it all the more sweet. A fresh green bean is sweet, crisp, and packed with flavor and crunch, with a clean and fragrant aftertaste. Well, when Marion experienced one, it changed her view of food forever. Fresh green beans are nothing like canned, which was all she had known up until that moment.

That one vegetable awakening led her to become one of the world's greatest writers and teachers on food issues.

What struck me most about Marion's story was that just the week before, Alice Waters told me the exact same story about the children she works with at The Edible Schoolyard in Berkeley. Alice spoke about how city kids first enter a garden with trepidation and fear, but after tasting fresh produce like green beans or tomatoes, they suddenly fall in love with nature -- and food -- and before you know it, they're lying in the grass with soil on their hands, happy and healthy.

Both Marion and Alice are asking, or perhaps demanding, for all schools to serve children good, clean, free food at lunch, preferably food that comes from a garden they grow themselves as part of their curriculum. I think that's a great idea and we should all work toward that. But in the meantime, if you have kids, you need to have a garden -- even if it's in a pot. This past summer, even though we have a big garden, my little one planted carrot seeds amidst some dahlias in a pot by her swing set. She checked on them constantly, and even though they were Dan Barber-big baby carrots when she pulled them, we relished them.

Please check out Eat Drink Vote -- it's a fun and informative book filled with cartoons on food and the politics of food. And never forget the power that one small green bean has to change the world!

For more from Maria Rodale, visit www.mariasfarmcountrykitchen.com

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