Nick Gillespie | August 2, 2004
Sometime back in the 18th century, Ben Franklin pioneered a pragmatic defense of vegetarianism: It was cheaper than eating meat.
Poor Richard, rest his soul, now officially has the federal government on his side: The U.S Department of Agriculture has released a report showing that people can scarf down the daily recommended three servings of fruit and four servings of vegetables for a measly 64 cents. Whole account here (reg. required).
The USDA's finding undercuts some anti-fat activists' claims that "healthy" foods need to be subsidized so that they within reach of everyone's budget.
If you subscribed to the print edition of Reason, you'd know which activists I'm talking about. They're discussed in our August-September cover story, "The War on Fat: Is the size of your butt the government's business?" by Jacob Sullum. (The short answer is no, but the long answer is a compelling, insightful read.)
Really, what are you waiting for? For just $15, you'll get a year's worth of Reason, delivered steaming fresh every month to your door (and you won't have to wait a month for the print edition's content to be slapped up here on the Web site.) And you'll join a community of readers that includes the great humorist Dave Barry, who recently opined: "Reason is a brilliant magazine, written and edited by brilliant people. And I am not saying that only because they agree with me."
So think about subscribing today to the mag that was ranked No. 13 in the Chicago Tribune's second annual list of "The 50 Best Magazines."
And remember to eat your vegetables. Like Reason, they're good--and cheap.
Help Reason celebrate its next 40 years. Donate Now!
Try Reason's award-winning print edition today! Your first issue is FREE if you are not completely satisfied.
Here's a cheap vegetarian meal:
1) Buy a package of couscous ($2.79 at my local grocery store).
Bring 1 cup of water to a boil, add couscous, flavor pack, and a
little vegetable oil if you like.
2) While the water is heating, put some pea pods and chopped
carrots in a skillet with some vegetable oil. Cover and cook on low
heat for about 10 minutes. Stir occasionally. When there's about a
minute left add in a little balsamic vinegar.
It's easy, it's fairly cheap (the most expensive ingredient, the
balsamic vinegar, is used in sparing quantities and so lasts for a
while), and my wife and I think it's pretty tasty.
The couscous I like is the Near East brand because it comes with a
seasoning packet.
Here's another good one. It involves butter, so strict vegetarians
or vegans might not like it, but still:
Get a box of Near East brand wheat. Mix the wheat, water, and
seasoning packet with an 8oz package of chopped frozen broccoli and
some butter. Microwave 18 minutes.
Neither of these recipes is rocket science, both are fairly cheap.
The first one takes a total of 15 minutes with time to clean and
chop the vegetables. The second is 20 minutes to prepare, 18 of
those minutes in the microwave so you can do something else.
And actually, my wife and I eat meat, but we also eat a lot of
vegetarian dishes because they're cheap.
Joe, you don't know it and so I won't be mad, but you're not
correct when you say cooking vegetarian is less convenient than
eating meat. I've done both and I know.
You can make great vegan burgers by grilling eggplant rounds, or
portobello mushroom caps, or tofu slices marinated in soy sauce...
all of which are as cheap or cheaper per serving than meat these
days (assuming cheap ground meat is about $1.50 per raw pound, 3
hamburgers a pound). Last time I bought Boca burgers, I think they
were on special for $1.29 (4 patties in a box). Avocados are in
season right now, 4 small or 3 large for $1.00 in Houston, and
they're wonderful warmed just a bit in a pan, served on a bun or in
a tortilla with salsa and lettuce.
My point is that the alternatives are there, tasty and inexpensive.
You'd be surprised what is actually cost-effective if you buy in
season and don't ignore certain things just because you *think*
they are expensive.
Oh, and before I forget... I made Scotch broth (traditionally
made with lamb, turnips, and barley) Saturday for dinner, Brunswick
stew (first made with squirrel but now made with pork and chicken)
on Sunday, a pot pie Friday, and a pot roast (with rosemary
carrots, onions, fingerling potatoes, and parsnips) last Wednesday.
These are not that difficult, take a minimum of watching, and taste
great, if you're not afraid of meat substitutes and a few
spices.
I'm telling you this because I was thinking about how much my
cooking improved when I got away from Mom's meat-and-two-veggies
routine.
Eric S., if you're still here--
I am neither anti-fact nor anti-fat; I am anti- those people who
insist that fat people are purely victims of circumstance. Unless
I'm shown evidence that food stamps can only be used to purchase
solid blocks of lard, I refuse to believe that poor people in this
country are forced to become fat. Anyone who disbelieves me is
welcome to check out either my waistline OR my pay stubs--both are
pitifully small.
George Runwick,
I believe the quote your searching for is: "What the fuck
is the internet?"
Facts be damned. Plenty of people will still insist that poor people are forced to get fat and only the Paris Hiltons of the world can afford to eat a healthy diet, and so any fattening foods, or indeed any foods other than the bare minimum for survival, must be taxed at a special rate to prevent these poor fat people from buying them. Let's all continue to save people from themselves. And remember: free will is only for those who use it in a sober, healthy, non-prurient fashion resulting in a low fat-to-muscle ratio.
"Speedwell, I don't think poor people would attend your cooking
class regularly. That's how they became poor in the first
place.
I'm going to refrain from putting the worst possible interpretation
on this and simply ask what you meant.
So, what did you mean by this?"
---------------------------------------------
Sorry, I was gone all day. I meant simply that people who actually
go to class and learn do not end up as poor people. So, the
inclination to do so (go to your suggested cooking class) is most
likely lacking.
Anyway, it's not about cooking veggie burgers vs. cooking
hamburgers. Lots of people basically don't cook at all, and that
laziness causes the unhealthy eating habits.
Example: Bowl of cereal for breakfast - reasonably healthy, pretty
cheap, and EASY.
Lunch: Quarter Pounder meal ("hold the supersize, I'm on a diet!")
Not too healthy, medium priced, and EASY (unless you park your car
and walk in, that's a lot o' effort, so heck with that)
Supper: 1 wing, 1 thigh chicken meal at KY Fried Chicken "Move
over, burger boys!". Side orders of mashed potatoes and slaw. Not
healthy, high priced, but EASY.
I could go on for a week, but I'm not sure how long these posts can
be. It might bore some people to tears, anyway. My point is, it's
just lazy habits. I've been there myself for a week at a time or
so. If I could see I was seriously gaining weight, I believe I'd
stop.
Oh, you can get PLENTY of fat on a strict vegetarian diet,
particularly if you insist on eating like a moron. Potato chips,
macaroni and cheese, and beer make a vegetarian meal, and I've
known vegetarians who actually eat that way. Blech.
That said, I've found that being a vegetarian has spurred my
culinary creativity to an extremely high level while keeping my
grocery budget low, low, low. The meat eaters in my family will eat
anything I make. I wish someone would hold cooking classes for poor
people; it would teach them how to get more for their dollar, get
more variety out of what they can afford, and improve their quality
of life measurably.
Dave Barry! What a scoop. I haven't subscribed in a year or so,
but it sounds like I should.
Oh, and put me down for Paris Hilton being thin, too.
Speedwell, I don't think poor people would attend your cooking
class regularly. That's how they became poor in the first
place.
" you'll get a year's worth of Reason, delivered steaming
fresh every month to your door
(1) Why exactly would I want a "years worth" delivered every month?
I love Reason but I do have other things to read as well. Besides,
I think Reason writers would blow a gasket trying to churn out 48
issues a year.
(2) Unless your using Fedex, the bundle of 12 issues won't land on
my doorstep. I'll have to trudge the 75 yards down to my mailbox
and back again. As I am currently boycotting exercise in an attempt
to win a bet with my doctor over whether exercise prologs and
improves the quality of life this presents me with an overwhelming
obstacle.
(3) I just had to build yet another bookcase. I already have so
much deadtree media in my house the foundation is cracking.
You could overcome all these problems by providing an online
subscription. Please, please, please, I'll be your friend!
Speedwell, I don't think poor people would attend your
cooking class regularly. That's how they became poor in the first
place.
I'm going to refrain from putting the worst possible interpretation
on this and simply ask what you meant.
So, what did you mean by this?
No, really, you're making me think now. I wonder who in town
would buy in to providing this as a truly voluntary public service.
Or I could sharpen my quill pen and write a cookbook (that my
target audience likely would not buy or read, sigh).
Or--wait--there's this new thing called the Internet--I hear a lot
of people are contributing to it for nothing but pleasure and
notoriety. I'll have to look into it.
speedwell, aren't you leaving out a couple of variable? Namely,
skill and cooking, and time available for preparation?
You have to admit, cooking a burger in a skillet and putting it on
a bun is much easier and faster than preparing a vegetarian entre
of similar quality. If you want to get to the same level of cooking
skill and time, you're basically back to the mac and cheese and
junk food.
Y'know, I am just about the laziest cook you are ever going to
meet, but I can put on a cheap feed even without turning on my
oven.
1.) Buy an inexpensive cut of meat, like a chuck steak, or chicken
(parts or whole, cut up by me),
or pork chops. Get what's on sale. Fresh turkey breasts and
drumsticks are surprisingly inexpensive. Vegicans can substitute
neat alternatives like portobello mushrooms.
2.) Marinate the meat. Adds flavor and cuts down on the
carcinogenic byproducts of grilling.
3.) Grill it on my table-top grill, or outdoors if the weather is
nice, and you like all the attendant rigamarole.
4.) Steam a cup or more of rice in your handy-dandy rice steamer,
or on the stovetop in a pot.* Steamed new potatoes are good,
too.
5.) Steam some veggie or other. Broccoli is a good one. In the
summer, ears of sweet corn are always nice. You can even roast
those on the grill. Then there are sugar snap peas. MMmmmm!
Kabobs on the grill are easy, too.
I had a feast like this for Sunday dinner. It is low fat, tasty,
full of vitamins, and doesn't require a certificate from the CIA to
pull off. Nothing is fried and it beats "fast food" all hollow. The
trick is to avoid loading the food up with butter, salt, steak
sauce and/or soy sauce, washing it down with sugary pop or a couple
of pints of microbrewed malty goodness, then having a sugar &
chocolate infusion for dessert.
Maybe one day I'll learn that trick!
Kevin
*Making a pot of rice on a stove, and not no "Minute Rice" neither,
is a cornerstone of Bachelor Survival Cooking. It helps with
anything from stir-fry to chili. If you can boil water and use a
clock, with or without a timer, anyone can do this. Yet friends
still tell me they are prone to letting rice boil over....
To Jennifer:
My comment was not directed at you. I agree with everything you
said. But this quote:
"The USDA's finding undercuts some anti-fat activists' claims that
"healthy" foods need to be subsidized so that they within reach of
everyone's budget."
originally said "anti-fact activists'." I thought that was a
delicious (pun intended) Freudian slip on Nick's part.
Site comments/questions:
Media Inquiries and Reprint Permissions:
(310) 367-6109
Editorial & Production Offices:
3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Suite 400
Los Angeles, CA 90034
(310) 391-2245