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A Conversation with Mollie Katzen

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By Cheri Sicard
Posted August 6th, 2007
FabulousFoods.com Recommends: The New Moosewood Cookbook (Mollie Katzen's Classic Cooking), by Mollie Katzen, (2000, Ten Speed Press)
The New Moosewood Cookbook (Mollie Katzen's Classic Cooking)
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Cheri Sicard: Really?
Mollie Katzen: Oh yeah. As a result of this free trade, the leveling of the economic playing field became the most driving regulating force to the corporations and not the safety of the food and not the cleanliness of the food. It's all about trade and it's all about equal opportunity for the food corporations to make a profit. So, food safety and consumer concerns went out the window because it is so NOT about the consumer anymore.

Cheri Sicard: Those are important things for people to be aware of.
mollie katzenMollie Katzen: Right. So, what got me really serious about promoting organic is learning that very bad, very harmful pesticides that have for decades been banned in this country and were legal in countries like Mexico and possibly South America, were starting to be imported into this country again because the trade barriers came down. And we didn't even have a right to know. So that any bunch of broccoli that you would buy that didn't say where it came from could well be from another country who cares which isn't bad in and of itself. But it could also be laced with DDT, which is illegal in this country, and because they didn't want to make this trade practice 'unfair,' they didn't have to tell us. With that in mind, I said 'oh great, who knows what we are eating unless it's organic?'

Then the next question was, if it's organic, what does that even mean? What can you rely upon it to be or not be if the label says its organic? That's the battle that's going on now. The USDA has been trying to pass standards of what it even means to have organic on there. I have become an activist about that because they are trying to include all sorts of things like radioactive sludge and bio-engineered products. So the first thing is to make sure that there is an organic standard to begin with. The second thing is what is it? I care very much about that. I suspect very strongly that I'm not alone. I also suspect stongly that pesticides are responsible for people getting a lot of cancer and things like that. Yes, I am going to be out there more as an organic proponent.

Cheri Sicard: That's great. Do you have any resources where people can find more information?
Mollie Katzen: A really good place for that is http://www.purefood.org.

Cheri Sicard: Great, we'll include the URL so our readers can go there for more information.
Mollie Katzen: Great, I would love to send people there.

Cheri Sicard: Your cooking style has really evolved a lot from the early days of The New Moosewood Cookbook
Mollie Katzen:
You noticed! I'd love to talk about that.

mollie katzenI started out writing recipes when I was teen. My earliest recipes were for all for desserts. When I started working on what became The Moosewood Cookbook, I really had several different purposes in mind. One of them was a little restaurant that I was a co-owner of. It's still there actually, but I don't own it anymore, I haven't for years. It's in Ithica, New York. We were trying to standardized the cooking in that restaurant because there was no standardized cooking there. I was the only person of the original staff who had ever cooked in a restaurant. I was trying to help to evolve it from sort of homestyle cooking to homestyle restaurant cooking and I needed to get some standardized recipes going. I was also doing recipes for the customers who were part of our community. And, I was also writing them down for my friends and my friends' mothers. When they went home to visit their mothers, the mothers didn't know what the hell to cook for their hippie kids. They were very concerned that they served them something nutritious and substantial.

"My cooking has done a 180 degree turn from the complicated-is-better to the simpler-is-better. I can't take complete credit for that. The produce is better. If it's tastes so good alone, you have to do very little to it to make it taste good."

I loaded my early recipes with a lot of dairy products. It was kind of a comfort food vegetarian cuisine --a lot of cheese and a lot of eggs, not a lot of seasonings. It was a lot of councesy stuff. Also at that time there wasn't as much fresh produce available as there is now. Even though I have always, of course, had a lot of vegetables in my cooking, my cooking wasn't so much about vegetables. Vegetables were an ingredient. The seasoning wasn't as intense. Sometimes the ingredient list was extremely long. I had a notion that it showed off the cleverness and the knowledge of the cook: the more ingredients, the better, the more knowledgeable and clever the cookbook would seem. It was a show-offy way of cooking. It made things really complicated, to go through your cupboards and put in as much as you could. It was very fashionable among my hippie friends.

mollie katzenTime was not an issue at all in the early days. The trend now is that vegetables are much more featured, fruit is much more featured. Better and bigger varieties of produce are available now more of the time.

My cooking has done a 180 degree turn from the complicated-is-better to the simpler-is-better. I can't take complete credit for that. The produce is better. If it's tastes so good alone, you have to do very little to it to make it taste good.

Now my cooking is much simpler, much more focused on seasoning, and texture, and stove top cooking rather than putting something in the oven like a casserole and cutting it into squares. There's a lot more fresh preparation, very short, last-minute stove top to the table type of dishes.




 

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