University Food Culture (3)

The much lamented Dutch lunch habit of drinking milk with sandwiches can sometimes be liberating too. Recently a student from Ecuador told me how much she enjoyed not being stared at while drinking milk with lunch. As a nutritionist she knows that milk is a perfect food as it “is the most complete source of nutrition available “(Dupuis 2002:25). However, in her home context milk is associated with baby food or with weak and sick people. Drinking milk with a meal as an adult is frowned upon as inappropriate behaviour.

source; dag.nl

Once, this was the case in our country too. Unfortunately little to nothing is known about the diet of ordinary people during the middle ages, but what we know of lords, knights and kings – the elite at that time –  is that there was a similar taboo on drinking milk here too. Culturally inappropriate, not least because of milk being highly perishable, people mainly drank beer. Urbanisation and industrialization were two important factors which helped milk to its current status of a healthy drink in the USA shows Melanie DuPuis in her great book ‘Nature’s perfect food’. Very much a token of the Dutch lunch culture, drinking a glass of milk is a habit which is only about 150 years old.

And as anthropologist Wiley shows, there is currently a similar relationship between urbanization and fresh milk consumption appearing in China. Growth in milk consumption is largely happening in urban areas and mainly consumed by Chinese upper classes. Milk is now commonly available as an alternative to alcoholic beverages in urban restaurants in China and is associated with a number of beneficial features such as trendy Western food styles, increased body length, healthy teeth and the prevention of ageing (Wiley 2007).

University Food Culture (2)

Reading about the relationships between food categories and social categories I wonder about lunch habits of myself and of this university. Is our Dutch university lunchtime habit a meal? Lunch is, like breakfast and dinner, an indication for a specific type of meal. As Mary Douglas (1972) explains; meals and drinks are social events and they put a frame on the gathering, meals usually restricts alternative occupations. Meals also have an internal structure such as the need for contrasts, like something hot and something cold, or between bland and spicy. If there is only sweet food for example, this is usually not experienced as a meal.

Food taken outside the category of a meal is usually called by its name; have a sandwich or a glass of milk. This signals the line between food as a social category (meal) and food taken for private nourishment (the food item). I am eating my sandwiches with cheese right now, because I will do sports during lunchtime. I usually feel like wanting something warm – soup –  when I go down to the canteen with my colleagues to eat my home brought sandwiches. To have our monthly chairgroup meeting during lunch feels somehow strange.

The meal category is in fact a social category. The type of meal – its internal structure and its external boundaries – says something about work relationships on a continuum of distance versus intimacy. The manifold ways to eat at work, or the lack of one clear pattern with pressure to adhere to signals the individuality of work culture and/or Dutch culture. Eating sandwiches and drinking a glass of milk for lunch hardly contains enough structuring contrasts for it to be called a meal. We even often skip lunch all together. This doesn’t really bother us, only our foreign colleagues.

Touching food and social relations through art

“Since Eve ate apples, much depends on dinner” Byron wrote. Food, both solid and liquid, is making the difference between life and death. For all the interest in and appreciation of ‘landscape’ and ‘nature’ we are most intimately connected to nature through the integration of nature in ourselves; our daily intake of food. However, there can be quite a disparity between care for nature and with what care we fill the supermarket basket. The availability of an abundance of food is such a taken for granted fact of life that we know less and less what food actually is.

“The extent to which we take everyday objects for granted is the precise extent to which they govern and inform our lives” Margaret Visser says.

The couch, the fridge, the supermarket and the fork are making us to who we are and simultaneously prevent us from being different. It is artists, among others, who can address that which has become invisible by its omnipresence.

An interesting art project is currently taking place in Smalle Ee, a tiny little place in the northern province of Friesland. Last week I visited Matthew Mazzotta, an artist from the US who is living in the P.A.I.R installation of the Peergroup for two months. Here, he is building his tea house where he will make tea from locally collected plants and from energy which he generates from methane of locally collected manure. Through this he uncovers knowledge about local food foraging and edible plants.

His project is a social intervention. In every aspect of his project he purposely relies on local knowledge and help of the local community. Since the beginning of March many people have become involved in one way or another. Curiosity to that weird thing he is building, helping out such as the ‘rietdekker’ did and -above all – people come to share. Not least through meals. With a few exceptions he had dinner with local people each night. Dinner is, after all, a matter of life and death. See what he is doing through this link, partly in Frisian and partly in English.

University Food Culture

source: crystalinks.com

Last week I ordered Italian at the new and growing campus lunch food market. What started with some Chinese dishes from a scooter has evolved into a small food market with multiple Chinese and also an Italian warm meal provider and long queue’s at the clock of twelve. The new market is popular, especially among Chinese students but more generally among foreign students. Apparently, a latent market is being tapped into, or how would the business economics department analyse this case.

But I guess it is also a matter of both institutional choices and food culture. The dominance of the Dutch lunch culture revolving around (home brought) sandwiches and milk lacks a true appreciation for the full warm lunch meal. Although university catering is trying to provide a ‘warm option’ to the large amount of foreign students and employees, somehow it stays an additional service rather than a serious business. The rather expensive warm dishes often with ‘exotic’ recipes somehow lack a cultural code which is present in the simplicity of the affordable lunch meals in the new food market.

Stages; Opzetten van buurtmoestuin in Tilburg

De gemeenteraad van Tilburg heeft ingestemd met het initiatief voor het opzetten van  buurtmoestuinen. Om dit te verwezenlijken zullen Brabantse Milieufederatie en welzijnsorganisatie Twern in samenwerking met de gemeente Tilburg en andere organisaties dit project gaan trekken. De BMF en Twern zullen de leiding hebben over dit project, maar er zal wel nauw samengewerkt worden met de andere partijen.

De Brabantse Milieufederatie is een onafhankelijke belangenbehartiger voor natuur,  landschap en milieu in de provincie Noord-Brabant. De Twern is een welzijnsorganisatie die maatschappelijke diensten levert.

Stage mogelijkheid 1:
Buurtmoestuinen kennen vele positieve effecten voor de buurt en het milieu. Het is de bedoeling dat de stagiair het veld in gaat en dit project realiseert. Beide organisaties beschikken over de nodige contacten en netwerken waar de stagiair volop gebruik van kan maken. Het is de bedoeling dat er uiteindelijk minstens 1 buurtmoestuin is opgestart en dat de organisatie voor de andere buurtmoestuinen in gang is gezet.

Stagemogelijkheid 2:
De gemeenteraad van Tilburg heeft al ingestemd op dit initiatief, maar de BMF en  Twern willen dit ook graag in andere gemeentes van Noord-Brabant gaan realiseren. Andere gemeentes zover krijgen en begeleiden bij het opzetten van buurtmoestuinen is een andere stage mogelijkheid.

Zij zoeken naar een enthousiast iemand die in staat is zelfstandig te werken, doorzettingsvermogen heeft, goed kan organiseren en initiatief nemend is.  Zij bieden een uitdagende leerplek, waarin veel ruimte wordt geboden voor eigen inbreng en wensen.

Looptijd is ongeveer 5 maanden voor de verschillende opdrachten en tot 1 jaar voor de combinatie.

Meer info bij Petra.derkzen@wur.nl of rechtstreeks bij:

John Vermeer
E-mail: john.vermeer@bmf.antenna.nl
Telefoon: 013-5356225 | 06-12579879
Karlijn Verschuren,
E-mail: karlijnverschuren@noord.twern.nl
Telefoon: 013-4553800