Menus of the Future Should Be Difficult to Decipher

Crop Trust thinks chefs can get us to eat unrecognizable produce and save the food system in the process

Whitney Pipkin
Heated

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Consider the jackfruit. Photo: KTSDESIGN/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY via Getty Images

By some estimates, the United States already has lost 90 percent of the fruit and vegetable varieties that would have been available in the early 1900s. Today, humans look to four crops — wheat, rice, corn, and soybeans — to provide 60 percent of our calories, tapping into just 1 percent of the diversity still available to us.

That’s a big concern for the Crop Trust, an international organization focused on securing the future of food through diversity. If the global food system relies on just a fraction of foods, it is not only less nutritious but also less resilient in the face of disease, pests, and a changing climate.

Take the humble banana. There are more than 1,000 types of bananas, and yet we rely primarily on one variety, the Cavendish — which is now facing potential devastation as a fungus spreads to popular growing regions. Growing such crops in monocultures, where one variety is sown across hundreds of acres, makes them more susceptible to diseases and leaves farmers with fewer alternatives should the crop fail.

Stories like these were reason enough for chef Kevin Tien to consider working the…

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Whitney Pipkin
Heated
Writer for

Freelance journalist with a penchant for food, ag & enviro stories. On staff @chesbayjournal. Clips at whitneypipkin.com. instagram.com/whitney_pipkin