A Healthy Bite - ThatOrganicMom

A Healthy Bite - ThatOrganicMom


World Hunger – Starving for the Truth with Manuel Bruscas

November 04, 2019

In this episode of A Healthy Bite, Manuel Bruscas, author of Real Tomatoes are Ugly shares some enlightening facts about world hunger.

Many attribute the hunger problem to availability; however, the world as a whole produces sufficient food.

Food Security

According to the Food Security Program, there are four dimensions of food security. 

* Physical availability of food - supply* Economic and physical access to food - * Food utilization - how the body uses food* Stability - the three previous factors happening consistently

In this episode, I tell Manuel a story about a conversation I had with my son, which you may have had with your children.

We are finishing up dinner, and the conversation goes like this:

Mom: "Please eat all of your food; there are starving kids in the world."Son: "How does eating everything on my plate help starving kids in other parts of the world?"

Supply and Demand

Setting aside the fact that my son loves to debate, this had me questioning my logic. I knew that food waste and hunger were related, but I wasn't sure how to explain it to my son. 

Subscribe to A Healthy Bite for other solutions to reducing food waste, coming Thursday. Right now, listen to this episode, as Manuel explains how I can respond to my son's question.

Manuel Bruscas coauthored a book titled Real Tomatoes Are Ugly to raise awareness of a global issue: Food Waste. The title of this book is derived in part by the dictatorship of beauty in society, according to Bruscas.

Get a peek of Real Tomatoes Are Ugly in the video version of this podcast

Would you buy an ugly tomato?

Americans throw away almost as much food as they eat because of a "cult of perfection," deepening hunger and poverty, and inflicting a heavy toll on the environment.

"In 2015, we disposed of 37.6 million tons of food waste," according to the EPA.

I think for many of us is that we are busy, and we're in a hurry - we don't stop and think, "do I need this?" So, poor planning, impulse buying, and avoiding imperfect produce are top factors in food waste.

We have an abundance mindset. If our fridge has empty space, just like a plate, we feel like we need to fill it up.

Waste on the farm.

United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization estimates that one-third of all food grown is lost or wasted,