The Omnivore's Green Grill
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More Meat & Poultry Resources
*To find local producers of sustainable meat and poultry, go to www.eatwellguide.org and type in your zip code.
*GRACE Factory Farm Project (www.factoryfarm.org)
*IATP (www.iatp.org)
*"Meat-Industrial Complex" by Mark Winne, March 22, 2006, In These Times (www.inthesetimes.com)
*"Swine of the Times" by Nathanael Johnson, Harper's (www.harpers.org), May 2006
Finessing Fish
When it comes to seafood, green-conscious grillers face a confusing range of choices. Farm-raised or wild? Are contaminants of concern? Which fish come from well-managed vs. overharvested stocks?
Salmon remains ever-popular, and evidence continues to mount that the benefits of wild salmon outweigh those of their farmed counterparts. Independent tests in 2005 showed that seven out of 10 farmed salmon purchased at grocery stores contained 16 times the levels of polychlorinated biphenyls, a nervous system toxicant, as wild salmon.
Choose Alaska or California wild-caught salmon, in season, like grilling, from May to September. Also enjoy, low-mercury sardines, scallops, Pacific flatfish, Atlantic mackerel, farmed U.S. catfish, sturgeon or European certified-organic farmed fish. For more choices, see Smart Shopper's Fish Picks
Vital Vegetables
Soy burgers/dogs and slices of fresh vegetables add vitamins, color and fiber to your grill and are free of heart-damaging saturated fats. Do look for local, certified organic or "GMO-free" soy products (see "Should You Eat Soy?" GG #106.
Recommended Reading: The Omnivore's Dilemma, by Michael Pollan (Penguin, 2006, $26.95). See review at www.thegreenguide.com/books.
Green Guide 115 | July/August 2006 | For Cooks
The Green Guide To Go
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