An Analysis Of Lizzie Widdicombe's 'The End Of Food'

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The End of Food Isn’t Near Starvation: gone. Dieting: gone.
Family Dinners: gone. Lunch at the new greek place: gone. Meeting up with friends for coffee: gone
Do these two ideas truly have to go together? It seems the Soylent miracle is also a challenge to the universal system of chew and swallow, where the aesthetic and taste of food are prioritized before its nutritional value. Rob Rhineheart is correct to point out a deficiency in the system, that food has acquired something of a social life to it, creating complications that increase the time, effort, and difficulty of gaining essential nutrients. In “The End of Food,” Lizzie Widdicombe shows us Soylent’s potential as a dream substance, but also presents potential despair in a future with Soylent. With its characteristics, it seems that Soylent could go either way.
Simply stated, Soylent could provide easier and cheaper access to proper nutrition. According to Rob Rhinehart, Soylent is “everything your body needs.” Widdicombe describes the recipe: “the major food groups are all accounted for: the lipids come from canola oil; the carbohydrates from maltodextrin and oat flour; and the protein from rice. To …show more content…

It’s integral to accommodate culture in making changes. While accompanying Rhinehart trip to see Ethan Brown and his food truck, Widdicombe tried his tacos and described how “the white substance [of Brown’s taco] was remarkably meatlike: it tasted slightly fatty, and the texture resembled muscle fibre,” yet it was 100% plant-based protein. When asked why he went through the trouble to give it such a likeness to meat, “Brown explained that the main challenge with food tech is cultural. “People have been eating meat for two million years,” he said. “They’re hardwired to love meat, and they love the trappings of meat—Thanksgiving, Christmas, ballgames.” The food truck was there to show that plant-based chicken and beef could be part of an all-American life style.”

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