Americans are currently embracing a strange sort of primitivism. Bicycles are losing gears, runners are afoot in shoes designed to create a barefoot sensation (some are even running barefoot), and men are growing bushy Will Oldham-like beards. It’s all very curious and entertaining.
But nowhere has our love for the supposed simplicity of the past been more evident than in food trends.? Guided largely by Michael Pollan‘s seductive mantra-”Don’t eat anything your great-grandmother wouldn’t recognize as food”-millions of earnest consumers are declaring loyalty to the stripped-down essence of a pre-industrial diet. We eat local, buy organic, and support small farms. Some of us even forage and hunt, going so far as to consume meat raw (ill-advised) to honor our cavemen brethren.
This trend appears to be a unique response to a declension narrative that goes something like this: Americans once lived on small farms, ate locally-produced food, did not poison the soil with chemicals, and always knew from whence their food came. Then industrialization and urbanization hit, bringing us mass production, factory farming, chemical dependence, culinary uniformity, global trade, and, eventually, the Twinkie.? Eaters became separated from the means of production.? We lost our culinary innocence, fell from grace, and got fat.
I’m simplifying, of course. But not by much. Like so many other stories America tells itself, the narrative of modern food is a classic jeremiad, a linear tale of success and virtue brought to a halt by modernity and greed. The Puritans, who perfected the genre, would understand it well.
For all their moral impact, our linear jeremiads fail to capture the circularity of history. This is especially true with our back-to-the past reaction to “industrial food.” Current calls for dietary simplicity might have a revolutionary ring to them. But what’s overlooked in all the enthusiasm is this: Americans have always idealized, or at least harkened back to, an agricultural era when production was supposedly simpler, closer to the land, and unadulterated by the complexities of modernization. What we’re seeing right now with the food movement is, for all its supposed novelty, a stock (even banal) reaction to broad historical changes.
Consider Great Grandma’s era.? World War I was an era of voluntary rationing and, as a result, national discussions about food were common and heated.? Herbert Hoover, as head of the Food Administration, beat Michelle Obama to the publicity punch when he exhorted Americans to “Go back to the simple life, be content with simple food.” The Food Administration itself urged Americans to make Christmas dinner “according to ancient custom.” An article in the Philadelphia Inquirer evoked the importance of returning to “simple food” and “wholesome pleasures.”? Many commentators at the time highlighted the Civil War as a time when Americans ate in a way that reflected a more ascetic ideal, one that Americans were evidently losing by the time of WWI. (Hat tip: Helen Veit‘s wonderful Yale dissertation, “Victory over Ourselves: American Food and Progressivism in the Era of the Great War.”)
But did people living in the 1860s really see themselves as eating a simple diet?? Not so much. This was an era of frequent food adulteration, with consumer goods being leavened by sawdust, engine grease, plaster of Paris, pipe clay and God knows what else. Responding to the increasing complexity of food in 1870, John Cowan, author of What to Eat; And How to Cook It, lambasted Americans for eating “conglomerate mixtures”-ingredients “mixed in all shapes, in all measures, and under all conditions.” He insisted that these overly processed foods not only led to “a clogged brain” but also a “sickly and unenjoyable life.”
His solution could be mistaken for a line from the muckraking film Food, Inc. Cowan wrote: “To live a sweet, healthy life implies the use of simple, nutritious food, cooked in a plain, simple manner, and as nearly in its natural relations as possible.”? It was in the spirit of Cowan’s advice that mid-century Americans evoked early Americans for their simpler, more natural, and thus more virtuous eating habits.
And those rugged early Americans?? Yet again we find evidence suggesting that the idealized group-in this case early Americans-saw matters quite differently. The American Revolution drove Americans to define who they were as a culture. After years of approximating the increasingly luxuriant habits of Empire, early Americans reacted to independence by playing up their status as rough-hewn frontiersmen and self-sufficient survivalists. In terms of food, this self-identification meant rejecting luxury for-you got it-the primitive simplicity of the first European settlers.
James Madison got caught up in the trend, so much so that his food became rustic enough for European to comment on it. One noted that dinner “was more like a harvest home supper than the entertainment of the Secretary of State.” Patrick Henry mocked Jefferson‘s taste for fancy French food by declaring that he’d forgotten “his Native victuals.” By 1840, when elite Americans were becoming gourmands, William Henry Harrison scorned his presidential opponent, Martin Van Buren, for enjoying soupe a la reine. Harrison, by contrast, took a strategic page from the colonial past, portraying himself as a humble farmer sharing homemade cider after a hard day’s work.
Granted, every case described above has a very different context.? But still, the persistence of the primitive is hard to overlook. Faced with the inevitable-and often threatening-complexity of historical change, Americans have always reacted by idealizing a mythical golden age, a time when life was understood to be simpler, people less greedy, and values more virtuous.? So it has been with food.
I wonder if 100 years from now-when our meat will be engineered in laboratories, our crops will be grown hydroponically or on vertical farms, and cloning and biotechnology will determine yields- we’ll look back on the second half of the twentieth century and glorify the primitive simplicity of growing plants in soil, spreading crops across vast acreages, and relying on slaughterhouses to provide our meat. If the past is any clue, it seems likely.

There’s a streak of Puritanism in today’s progressive, back-to-basics culture. It need not have anything to do with the valid pragmatic reasons for changing agricultural practice, but you have to expect it to happen, all the same.
A certain subset of the populace will always aestheticize any popular movement or change, and other subsets of the populace are attracted to puritanisms in themselves. When these groups come into alignment, you get moral fervors like the ones surrounding the contemporary food movement; giving rise to seductive feelings of establishing new values and contributing, one suspects, to the air of the folk devil now surrounding obese people.
Particularly today, popular culture is besotted with a vision of wholesomeness, purity and goodness that smacks of a revival. But this isn’t the first time it’s has happened (nor even the first time this feeling has come from the left), and honestly, it could have happened with or without the food issue to fixate on. The food issue is convenient, but in a way, the beards precede it.
I think it’s much simpler than that. Every time you see something in the news about a carcinogen, or birth defects, or a crazy recall in the food area, there’s always something artificial happening.
For example, you should most definitely try to reduce your sugar intake, but the health detriments of sugar are much smaller than those of High Fructose Corn Syrup. Fat vs. Partially Hydrogenated Soybean Oil or any of the trans-fats.
Today, our meat has half as much protein as it did 60 years ago. How is that progress?
this “declension narrative” idea is flaccid and contrived… aside from a tiny handful of groups ideologically bent on raw food diets, there is no “primitive food movement” afoot, as you say.
did you even read michael pollan? how about paul pitchford? any magazines or cookbooks with recipes focusing on food quality, as opposed to convenience and thrift?
your wholesale dismissal of the global (at least in industrialized countries) trend towards eating fresh, local, unadultered, and unprocessed foods smacks of indignanation and offers no insight into any “hidden side” of people choosing to avoid high fructose corn syrup, aspartame, hydrogenated soybean oil, sucralose, pesticides, herbicides, fungicides, and genetic modification of their foods.
ironically, there is a “hidden side” to industrialized food production; but you missed it this time…
You’re right on. I’ve been studying this issue of the supposedly virtuous rural past, and it’s quite clear that you’re correct.
I urge you, however, not to be so quick to vilify eating raw meat. While poultry is certainly dangerous, raw beef can easily be consumed without great danger of harm. Anecdotally, I do it often (steak tartare, primarily), and I’m fine. Raw tuna, too, has never steered me wrong.
Michael Pollan’s “In Defense of Food” actually qualified the statement as ” someone’s great-grandmother would recognize as food”.
As I remember the context is that someone’s great-grandmother would have recognized tofu, but the processed soy meat substitutes aren’t a traditional food.
In my case, if I was limited to my own great-grandmothers’ personal experiences, I would be forced to live a life without black pepper. . . which would make me very sad.
I expected a comment thread full of caustic vitriol, but I’m pleasantly surprised… I have to say I agree with everyone’s comments and can’t add anything of my own. Which essentially means I’m writing this just to hear myself talk.
I find this piece to be missing the point entirely.
The problem with industrial food is that you do not really know what is in it or who grew it and under what conditions.
If you are concerned about your intake of salt, sugars and fats, if you do not really think that chemicals made to kill insects and other life forms are a great thing to consume in mass quantities and if you derive some satisfaction from the thought that the people who raised your food and packed it might just be making a decent living then primitive food is for you.
On the other hand, if you want to stuff yourself with the cheapest possible fodder and it makes you feel good to pay others as little as you can get away with then go industrial.
This is really about value judgements. You are asserting your own values as if they were an economic and technical norm. Sorry, I do not buy it.