A foodie tastes climate change
Our lobsters are moving north |
This
past week, I distinctly heard the sound of a butter knife clinking against the
bottom of a four-ounce jar.
Dijon mustard had
joined the list of edible climate victims.
NPR
sent its veteran Paris correspondent Eleanor Beardsley to the Bordeaux region.
Not to report on the threat to Bordeaux wine, mind you, but on the region’s
Dijon mustard. It turns out that genuine Dijon requires mustard seeds from
Canada, and last year’s brutal, record-setting “heat dome” ruined the hot
mustard crop.
And
there’s more concern at the other end of the condiment aisle.
Olive output has suffered in recent years as more frequent winter waves of warm and chilly Mediterranean weather impact the trees’ flowering and fruiting. And as olives go, so goes olive oil.
And
with our olive oil, so goes tomato sauce for
pizza and pasta. About thirty percent of the world’s canned tomato crop comes
from California’s Central Valley, where near-catastrophic drought threatens not
a bad year, but a bad forever in one of the world’s key food-producing zones.
So,
if Marie Antoinette were around to witness this, would she offer a tomato sauce
workaround? Maybe, “Let them eat white clam sauce?”
Well...
even for those of us who can stand white clam sauce, clams and other mollusks
are vulnerable to the oceans’ rising levels of acidification.
And
then there’s the wheat flour that’s turned into traditional pasta. Breadbaskets
like Ukraine and the U.S. heartland are increasingly subject to drought, and
nutritionists predict that rising CO2 levels could rob wheat, rice and other
grains of nutrients.
As
early as 2011, a study predicted
problems for all manner of fruits and nuts grown throughout the world’s
temperate regions. Pistachios, walnuts, cherries and peaches are among the
crops that need warm summers and chilly, but not frigid winters to prosper.
Warming winter temps may be a problem from Israel to Georgia.
So
let’s take a break
Enough about our food for now. Let’s have a drink to relax. Are you a wine person? Well, get some Bordeaux while you can. It’s expected that the world’s prime grape-growing regions may shift with the climate.
Beer?
Subtle changes in hops, barley –the yeast that turns sugar into alcohol– and
other brewing essentials may not kill your favorite microbrew, but we have no
idea how it will taste.
And
if you prefer to inhale your escape, the folks at www.mjbizdaily.com have
some news for you. The publication, which seems to regard itself as the Wall
Street Journal of weed, projects marijuana growers as
following the vineyards’ paths on the where cannabis will struggle, and the new
places where it could thrive.
The 800-pound steer in the room
Blake Filippi has been shrieking about the threat to his cows - cows he raises for slaughter - by climate activists |
I
could lose five pounds just writing down why I’m a climate-writing,
meat-eating, climate-destroying hypocrite.
Prefer
seafood? Sensitive to water temperatures, forage fish like sardines and
anchovies are de-camping for warmer waters. On the North American East Coast,
lobsters are deserting the southern New England coast for the cooler waters of Maine.
But lobstermen worry that the crustaceans are merely biding their time to dodge
the thermal draft and eventually will head to Canadian waters.
For
their part, North Carolina fishermen, rigged and experienced to capture summer flounder, have
to chase their target hundreds of miles up the coast to New Jersey.
So
some of our food is leaving us. Other food is running and hiding.
Thanks,
climate change!
Peter Dykstra is our weekend editor and columnist and can be reached at pdykstra@ehn.org or @pdykstra.