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Sustainable revolution in the kitchen! | Lisa Casali | TEDxTrento

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    I thought that starting a revolution
    required being an important person,
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    such as Mao, Che Guevara or Gandhi.
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    Then one night, my life was changed
    in an unexpected and very simple way,
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    and I realized what my mission
    in the world was.
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    It was not for a mug of beer
    nor for a romantic encounter -
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    as some earlier speakers have told us -
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    but for a vegetable.
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    It was fine; it could have been worse
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    because it was thanks to an artichoke,
    so I feel very lucky.
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    Maybe, while you've been
    cooking vegetables,
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    you've had the realization
    of how much you discard every day,
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    and the percentage of that waste.
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    That's what happened to me that day,
    thanks to an artichoke.
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    It opened my mind,
    and it changed my perspective a bit.
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    In that moment,
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    I decided that my mission in the world
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    would be to take nothing for granted
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    and to try to make the world
    a little more sustainable,
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    starting with food.
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    Why food?
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    With food, we have the freedom of choice.
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    It's something which we get to decide,
    for ourselves and for our family,
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    every single day.
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    It is, therefore,
    not only a matter of choice,
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    but is also a matter
    of environmental impact
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    because our daily food choices
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    constitute a large part
    of our daily environmental impact.
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    If we want to translate it to an index,
    we can talk about environmental footprint.
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    It affects much more than what
    we decide to order in a restaurant,
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    more than, maybe, the way
    we dress or get around in the city.
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    For this reason,
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    I believe it's important
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    to be fully aware of the choices
    you make every day,
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    and to maybe try something different
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    and begin a small revolution, if possible.
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    My code word is a very simple one,
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    a common sense word:
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    optimize.
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    I guess that's not a word usually used
    to refer to economy in the home,
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    but is more often used
    to refer to environmental impact.
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    But I think it's a very simple concept
    that we can apply in daily life,
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    especially in our relationship with food.
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    Optimizing means, for example,
    in the way we go shopping -
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    how much we decide to buy,
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    what is essential,
    what do we really need -
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    all this can help us try to reduce waste.
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    Then we could try to use
    100% of the raw food materials.
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    The concept of optimizing consumption
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    is, above all, about the way
    we compose our meals every day,
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    in what we really bring to our table.
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    Waste.
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    At the end of this project
    that began with an artichoke,
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    I was left with the end of the chain -
    the waste - what we usually throw away.
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    Here we have a small example
    of waste versus noble raw materials.
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    Every day, we all do
    what I'm doing right now.
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    We clean vegetables,
    and we separate them -
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    on one side is the noble part that we use,
    and on the other is the waste.
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    The waste - the less noble part -
    is on average at least 50%.
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    In winter, we can get even 70% waste
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    because many vegetables
    have more protective parts.
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    What does it mean
    to optimize in the kitchen?
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    I want to say that to change
    our approach to food,
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    use 100% of the raw materials.
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    But not simply by taking them
    out of the garbage.
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    It means having a different approach,
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    to see all these parts as a whole.
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    As an example, let's use an apple.
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    I can see the apple as, okay, an apple,
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    but I can also see it
    as a set of four ingredients.
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    For example, the pulp.
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    For simplicity, I made some chips,
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    but I could have eaten it
    or baked it in a cake.
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    The peel -
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    maybe I eat it as it is, or I dry it,
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    or I make a fantastic
    rejuvenating herbal tea
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    that I'd pay much more for
    if I bought it at an herbalist's.
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    The core.
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    I centrifuge it and
    let it ferment in its own juice,
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    and it becomes a delicious apple vinegar,
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    because vinegar
    can be made from apple cores.
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    The seeds I can use as a gelling agent.
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    This is just an example
    with a familiar product,
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    but it's a concept we should apply
    to every single ingredient.
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    Another example:
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    this is one of the vegetables
    it took me some time to love,
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    to love 100%:
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    the pumpkin.
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    I really like it because
    the peel is the truly noble part,
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    the part with the greatest
    amount of fiber.
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    It is less sweet than pulp,
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    so maybe if you don't like
    the strong sweetness of the pulp,
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    you can focus on the peel,
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    which also contains more fiber
    and certainly has health benefits.
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    But not only that - with all the inner
    filaments, I can prepare a wafer.
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    The seeds can be toasted,
    or I can simply let them sprout.
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    I think to let something sprout
    is a practical example
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    of an easy technique
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    that allows you to transform
    and find value in something
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    we all have at home
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    and that we usually don't even look at -
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    we just throw it away.
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    To optimize in the kitchen
    is for me especially this:
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    to change a little bit
    of your way of thinking
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    and to see vegetables and all food
    with a different eye,
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    to waste them less
    and use them to their fullest.
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    To optimize also means optimizing
    consumption of water and energy.
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    For example, every time
    that I cook pasta or vegetables,
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    I can simultaneously cook other things,
    maybe other vegetables.
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    Just get a basket -
    you don't need anything complicated.
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    Or every time that I use
    a household appliance,
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    such as the dishwasher,
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    I could also use it for cooking.
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    This is not a joke.
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    I'm sure some of you
    are turning up your nose,
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    but it is an outstanding
    cooking technique using low temperatures.
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    So you do not need to buy
    a professional tool that cost 2000 euros;
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    you can just use the dishwasher
    every time you wash the dishes.
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    How can you do that?
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    A very practical example
    is to take a jar like this -
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    it has to be hermetically sealed -
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    and put, for example, an egg inside,
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    cover the egg with water, close it tight,
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    and store it in the dishwasher
    when it is full of dirty dishes.
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    And use whatever wash setting you want,
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    choosing the setting based
    on what the dishes need, not the egg.
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    When the washing is complete,
    your egg will be boiled,
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    soft-boiled or hard-boiled,
    according to the setting you chose.
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    It will be great because
    it will be cooked at a low temperature -
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    with an incredible texture,
    better than the classic hard-boiled egg.
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    And you did it at zero impact, zero cost,
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    and getting a result that would be hard
    to get using traditional techniques.
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    So, optimizing the use
    of a household appliance
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    may give some interesting benefits.
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    Let's see another example of optimization.
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    This time, I come into your home
    even more, into your recipes.
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    When we were at war, okay,
    there were a lot of food shortages.
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    We had only a few proteins,
    so we ate a lot of potatoes and polenta.
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    When you could put meat on the table -
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    a course with protein -
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    it was a feast and it was great.
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    But now the problem is the opposite.
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    Now we have abundance,
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    and we have a tendency
    to use twice the protein we need.
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    Why is it a problem?
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    It's a problem because if we eat
    too much polenta or potatoes,
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    yes, we might put on weight,
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    but too many proteins in the pot
    can tire our kidney and liver,
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    and it increases the risk
    of developing certain diseases.
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    So it's something that's no good for us.
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    The classic restaurant portion
    that we have at the table -
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    such as vegetables, meat, fish -
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    is too much.
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    Actually, if we eat lots of vegetables,
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    we'll cover a large part
    of our daily protein needs.
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    Why did I put this concept in my talk?
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    Because to eat more than what we need
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    is a waste of resources.
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    It's definitely something
    we could improve upon.
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    Furthermore,
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    if these proteins are animal proteins
    with a high environmental impact,
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    reducing them also means
    to lessen our environmental impact.
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    So, I think it is important that we all
    put a little less protein on our plate.
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    It would be enough -
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    just with a small effort from all of you -
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    to have an important
    environmental benefit,
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    not only to our health,
    but to the health of our entire country.
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    It would create even more benefits
    if we did it worldwide,
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    in terms of public spending on health.
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    It is beneficial for both individuals
    and the entire society.
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    I believe it is more effective
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    to try to convince you
    to use less protein,
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    than to try to convince all of you
    to abandon animal products.
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    I would persuade one of you
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    while I hope these ideas
    will remain impressed in your mind.
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    You don't have to worry
    about eating enough protein,
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    but about eating too much.
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    This is the problem with protein.
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    And above all, try to eat
    proteins of good quality,
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    and, if possible, choose animal products
    with a low environmental impact.
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    "Which ones?" you probably wonder.
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    The Expo will be next year,
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    and many people are talking
    about the food of the future.
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    I have heard so much talk
    about eating insects.
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    Personally, I don't think
    that this will fit in our culture.
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    I don't know if you agree with me,
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    but we are not insect-eaters,
    and I doubt we will become them.
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    But there is a food protein
    that has zero impact,
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    and we can produce it
    by ourselves in our own homes,
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    nourishing it with vegetable waste,
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    maybe not the vegetables
    that we will eat tonight,
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    but the things
    that we are not able to use.
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    What am I talking about?
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    I'm talking about the surprise guests
    that are with me on the stage tonight -
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    snails - that have suffered
    from the harsh climate of Trentino,
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    and so they have decided
    to go into hibernation.
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    However, I have here
    a representation of them.
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    Why do I like snails?
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    Because anyone can self-produce them,
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    and they are a gourmet product
    of Italian tradition.
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    Who among you have ever eaten snails?
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    Who wouldn't eat them ever?
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    Very good.
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    Probably ten years ago,
    this number would have been lower
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    with more people eating snails.
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    About 35 years ago, a law
    prevented us from collecting them.
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    We were snail harvesters,
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    but we could also procure them
    from professional producers.
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    This has fostered a great development
    of snail producers in Italy,
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    producing at the highest
    quality levels in the world.
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    There are thousands of producers in Italy,
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    and not only for food use,
    but also for makeup and other uses.
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    It is also a food that -
    even asking my chef friends -
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    has a great potential:
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    it's extremely versatile
    and tastes very delicate.
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    But you need to know how to do it.
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    To breed your snails at home,
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    you just need a small balcony
    or a vegetable garden with loam,
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    a small net to prevent them from escaping.
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    Snails arrive on their own,
    it's enough to just plant lettuce.
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    Or you can take eggs
    and feed them with vegetable waste,
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    thus reducing food waste even more.
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    You will have a twice-a-year harvest,
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    once in autumn and once in spring,
    like a vegetable.
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    They will need one hour cooking time,
    and then you can use them as you want,
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    in bourguignon, French escargot
    or in your own recipe.
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    They can give a sense of satisfaction.
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    It's a low-fat meat
    which has a lot of benefits.
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    I think it can become
    not only the food of the future,
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    but also the food of the present.
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    I hope that if I ask you again next year,
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    there will be more people who eat them
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    and less people who
    wouldn't eat them ever.
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    It's certain that a mental switch
    is needed to do this,
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    but also overcoming prejudices.
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    So, sustainable revolution!
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    I'm sure that it can reach all of you,
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    and it requires just a little change,
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    certainly a change in thought
    and overcoming of prejudices.
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    I know that to ask you
    to cook in the dishwasher,
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    to eat all the peels,
    to start eating snails,
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    is not a simple thing.
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    But I'm a very optimistic person,
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    so I hope I have at least
    aroused your curiosity.
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    Less proteins on your plate,
    changing the way you see ingredients -
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    there are truly so many benefits.
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    So join with me and become revolutionaries
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    because the benefits are so many:
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    for our health, for our well-being,
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    and most of all for our happiness
    and that of our planet.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Sustainable revolution in the kitchen! | Lisa Casali | TEDxTrento
Description:

Our planet needs revolutionaries: people who look at their daily life and think of ideas and practices that will make the world a happier, wealthier, healthier and more sustainable place. Lisa Casali tells us how we can encourage this revolution by starting in our kitchen with the food choices we make every day.

This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx.

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Video Language:
Italian
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
14:00

English subtitles

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