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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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Mollie Katzen Profile
Named one of the "Five Women Who Changed the Way We Eat" by Health Magazine (June 1999), Mollie Katzen's career has been illustrious and enduring. From her debut as a co-founder of Ithaca, New York's Moosewood Restaurant and author of The Moosewood Cookbook, which with over 4 million copies in print is one of the 10 best-selling cookbooks of all time, Mollie is widely credited with moving healthful cooking from the fringes of American society onto mainstream dinner tables.

Mollie followed up The Moosewood Cookbook with more wildly successful tomes on vegetarian cooking The Enchanted Broccoli Forest, Still Life with Menu Cookbook, and Vegetable Heaven. In addition to being an excellent cook, she is a talented artist who provides beautiful watercolor illustrations and hand lettering for many of her books. Vegetable Heaven, her latest effort was the winner of the "Best Vegetarian Cookbook of the Year" in 1999 by the International Cookbook review and was a finalist for the Julia Child award.

Mollie KatzenNot content to change the eating habits of adult, Mollie also authored two delightful cookbooks for children: Pretend Soup and Other Real Recipes, geared toward pre-schoolers and Honest Pretzels and 64 Other Amazing Recipes for Cooks Ages 8 & Up. With colorful step-by-step illustrations, kids can now fix wholesome vegetarian favorites while learning a host of skills that will come in handy throughout their lives. Both children's books have won awards and Honest Pretzels was recently honored by its selection as an American Library Association Notable Book. Mollie is also a columnist for Children's Television Workshop On-Line and for Sesame Street Parents Magazine.

Aside from her writing career, since 1996 Mollie has been the star of the Mollie Katzen Cooking Show, which has been appearing on public television stations nationwide. The shows are based largely on recipes from her classic books The Moosewood Cookbook and The Enchanted Broccoli Forest, both which have been revised by Mollie and the original publisher to reflect today's lighter, healthier ways of eating.

As if all that weren't enough, Mollie truly is further her impact on the way the world eats by serving as a charter member of the Harvard School of Public Health Nutrition Roundtable. She is also a judge for both the James Beard Cookbook Awards and the Julia Child/IACP Awards of Excellence.

Mollie KatzenCheri Sicard: Thanks for talking with us today Mollie.
Mollie Katzen:
Thanks for inviting me.

Cheri Sicard: There are so many things we want to ask you. Since you are most known as being an author of vegetarian cookbooks, let's start with, how long have you been a vegetarian and was your family vegetarian growing up?
Mollie Katzen: No, my family was not vegetarian growing up, but I came from a Jewish family that was, although not strictly Kosher, had a lot of awareness when it came to eating meat. What that taught me was that it's not bad or wrong to eat meat. But it's very important that if you are eating meat to eat it with compassionate awareness and with an eye towards its cleanliness in a food safety kind of mind.

Cheri Sicard: That's a great attitude.
Mollie Katzen: That is my attitude. I actually am not a strict vegetarian. I eat vegetarian food, that's the mainstay of my diet. That IS my diet. But, I don't believe that eating meat is wrong at all. If someone serves me meat I will eat it. What is a concern of mine, stemming from my upbringing and now it's very big in the news, is food safety and food cleanliness. Organic, when possible in a balanced diet, is also a big concern.

"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."

Cheri Sicard: Actually, the subject of organic food was one of the questions I had prepared for you.
Mollie Katzen: Oh goodie! That's my favorite subject these days.

Cheri Sicard: Let's talk about it. How imp[ortant is eating organic foods?
Mollie Katzen: It's extremely important. At this point I'm uncomfortable eating things - fruits and vegetables that are not organic. I will eat them if I'm hungry. I travel quite a bit for my work and I don't have that option as much as I'd like, but it has become so important. I've done very few bandwagons ever. I've had a long career of writing about food and my food is always categorized as healthy or niche. That's fine, although I would like to go mainstream. But in the course of that, even though I have written some of the most basic vegetarian cookbooks, I have never been on a bandwagon about it. But with all the organics legislation that's being discussed, with the free trade, the loosening up of standards around pesticides, I have become very opinionated about organics. I am becoming more of an activist about it.

Cheri Sicard: And that was your inspiration, a loosening of the standards?
Mollie Katzen: My inspiration originally was the free trade agreement. I do keep up on politics. I was following that very closely about twelve years ago when the big NAFTA thing was passed. There was a lot of discussion about that among chefs and food writers. The Chef's Collaborative, which is a big national group, found ourselves discussing it at meetings. It was making everybody more political. What was coming up was the loosening of all sorts of regulations surrounding the use of chemicals in order to take out what they call unfair competition in the world of food trade from one country to the next.

So, if we are importing something from Chile or something from Mexico, even something down from Canada where we get a lot of canola oil, we are advertising that this is pesticide free and it isn't necessarily so. But to label it otherwise is considered an unfair trade practice.




 

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