Sometime I talk with smart people about agriculture
In the first of our 3 panel discussions at Food Dialogues New York, experts gather to debate some of the biggest questions in modern food, health, and agriculture. Questions came from our website, twitter, and straight from attendees at the event and include topics such as:
What more can be done to ensure consumers have access to the right kind of information?
What tools are marketers using to promote certain types of food choices over others?
What additional voices are needed to help consumers navigate the supermarket and restaurant menu?
See more at fooddialogues.com
My canon of wickedly well-written slam restaurant reviews
It is my pleasure to announce a new inductee: Jay Rayner on Le Cinq, Four Seasons Hôtel George V (Post updated 4/9/17)
Previous inductees include:
Marina O’Loughlin on Hotel Chantelle
Pete Wells on Javelina and Guy’s American Kitchen & Bar in Times Square
Chris Nuttall-Smith on America at the Trump Hotel
Seymour Britchky on Luchow’s and Joe’s Pier 52
Frank Bruni on Ninja and again on Kobe Club
Eddie Huang on Lavo
Sam Sifton on Lavo
AA Gill on L’Ami Louis
Sometimes I talk to Anthony Bourdain
Sometimes I get to sit at the desk with Suzanne Malveaux
Sometimes I just get thirsty
Sometimes I talk about depression on Canadian radio
Sometimes I write about living with a big, grey monster
I am 14 years old, it’s the middle of the afternoon, and I’m curled into a ball at the bottom of the stairs. I’ve intended to drag my uncooperative limbs upstairs to my dark disaster of a bedroom and sleep until everything hurts a little less, but my body and brain have simply drained down. I crumple into a bony, frizzy-haired heap on the gold shag rug, convinced that the only thing I have left to offer the world is the removal of my ugly presence from it, but at that moment, I’m too exhausted to do anything about it.
I sink into unconsciousness, mumbling over and over again, “I need help… I need help… I need help.” I’m too quiet. No one hears.
Several months, countless medical tests and many slept-through school days later, a diagnosis is dispensed, along with a bottle of thick, chalky pills. There is palpable relief from my physician and parents; nothing is physically wrong with me (thank God, not the cancer they’ve quietly feared) — likely just a bout of depression. While it helps a little to have a name for the sensation, I’m less enthralled with the diagnosis, because I know it will return. While this is the first time it’s manifested heavily enough for anyone else to see it, I’ve been slipping in and out of this dull gray sweater for as long as I can remember.
Read the rest at CNN: “Going public with depression”