June 14, 2009
Alice Waters' Crusade For Better Food
Lesley Stahl Profiles The Outspoken, And Sometimes Controversial California Food Activist
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Play CBS Video Video Alice's Restaurant Legendary cook and natural food enthusiast Alice Waters creates a breakfast treat for Lesley Stahl.
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Video Exclusive: Home Cooking When you're Alice Waters' daughter, lunch is always an adventure!
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Alice Waters (CBS)
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Food For Thought Fact Or Fiction? How much do you really know about nutrition? Take our quiz!
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She was going to cook some eggs and make a salad with tomatoes. It was at the house that Stahl realized that Waters lives in a different world - for one, she doesn't have a microwave.
Asked how she lives without one, Waters replied, "I don’t know how you can sort of live with one."
But how many stressed out working mothers have this kind of patience in the morning? She chopped up chives, diced up tomatoes, and marinated them in olive oil and garlic.
Waters told Stahl she rarely goes into a regular supermarket. "I'm looking for food that's just been picked. And so, I know when I go the farmer's market that you know, they just brought it in that day."
"I have to say, it's just a luxury to be able to do that," Stahl remarked.
"In a sense it is a luxury," Waters agreed.
A luxury that's delectable: once she spread the ripe tomatoes and Tuscan olive oil on a slab of organic bread, she started on the eggs.
Her cooking "equipment" includes a fireplace in her kitchen.
Not sure if it was the roaring fire in the kitchen or the "fast and easy" part - is she kidding? But Stahl said it was one of the best breakfasts of her life.
Waters is already trying to influence the next generation by creating another garden, something she calls "The Edible Schoolyard."
"This is an effort to bring kids into a new relationship to food," she explained.
Waters got a local middle school in Berkeley to create a course where kids learn about growing food right on the school grounds.
The students told Stahl they were planting strawberries and cultivating the bed; one kid says it was the most fun class he had.
They also thought they were learning something important. "We're learning about compost, crab grass, how to raise [a] good healthy garden," one boy told Stahl.
"You know it's kind of a thrill every time I come here. I think I just want to get my hands in the soil," Waters told Stahl. "I want to go down on my hands and knees and be a child again."
Produced by Ruth Streeter
© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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- I really appreciate your efforts to write articles that are informative in nature and undertake different issues and happenings in our society. These posts keep me updated with these matters that make me aware on the current situations in our society. Thanks for your dedication on providing relevant articles. I acknowledgment your great work!
http://www.hydroponicswholesale.com - Reply to this comment
- Ah yes, the aristocratic flare of frying an egg in your personal hearth poured over freshly cut tomatoes, lettuce and olive oil ... yes, let the little people eat cake because expensive, small portioned food with little relevance to today's economic perspective is soooooo relevant ... Lesley you got this one wrong.
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- she is an interesting woman, who has done much good, often with no thought of profit (in general). and i think it is great that she has held to her ideals and some compensation (financial) is starting to come.
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- The thing is that fresh natural food should be considered standard/ normal for and the distinction should be made to identify the industrial GM hodgepodge for what it is, fake food. Better to cut back on super soft toilet paper and preety much everything else than to settle for that deadly rubbish, besides if you plant your own garden it is even better and costs a lot less than the industrial sludge.
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- The thing is that fresh natural food should be considered standard/ normal for and the distinction should be made to identify the industrial GM hodgepodge for what it is, fake food. Better to cut back on super soft toilet paper and preety much everything else than to settle for that deadly rubbish.
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- Organic food is SO POTENT, and valuable (price included) that you tend to use it wisely, making up the difference by cutting back on other things you spend your money on. (My favorite analogy is the choice to eat a spinach salad instead of using iceburg lettuce. That's more POTENT).
You use less of it, in a way. There is a tendency to cut back on meat and eat a lot more produce. DO YOU KNOW THAT ORGANIC MEAT AND POULTRY IS ALWAYS "FREE RANGE" TOO. If you choose to eat meat and poultry, ORGANIC is more humane than the horrific mistreatment of many farm animals, including DAIRY COWS. Organic dairy products, poultry and meat is starting to appear in the regular grocery chains, and those prices are coming down.
Also, CUT BACK ON EATING OUT. If I'm out and about in my neighborhood, I drive home to fix something to eat and go back out. If I had to, I'd take my food to work, or find healthy options near where I would work.
The quality and flavor is amazing, AND you will
SAVE ON MEDICAL BILLS because of MUCH BETTER HEALTH, and not so easly become DISEASED.
It amazes me to watch many people waste their money, or splurg on so many other things, and then, some are, so extremely cheap about groceries.
If we, the public, would make those healthy choices and reject the junk food, the prices would come down.
And come on, about Alice Water's egg cooking over her firepit, that was HER kitchen. I hardly expected that she and Leslie Stahl were suggesting that everyone should get a firepit, and obviously most of us do not have a place to grow our own.
This was a beautiful story, and inspiring for people to open their minds to CHANGE for the better. Change takes a transition, and, although the story didn't go into it in much detail, apparently, Ms. Waters has been an advocate for this, regardless of whether you've heard of her, or not. Thank you to Whole Foods, Trader Joe's (ECONOMICAL PRICING), and even our regular grocery chains, who have positively affected this change. Find the health food stores with the BARGAINS. They're out there.
Keep making the HEALTHY CHOICES, and THE PRICES WILL COME DOWN as well as your medical expenses, from care to prescriptions.
I'm tired of overly analytical stories comparing healthy foods vs. junk food, and thought it was great to focus on the POSITIVE expose' of the inspiring Alice Waters.
Next, I'd like to see tobacco farming transition to more herbals for economical fresh spices, and for herbal health supplements, more natural toiletries, etc.
IT'S AN EASIER TRANSITION THAN YOU THINK WHEN YOU CARE TO SWITCH YOUR PRIORITIES IN YOUR SPENDING (on other things). - Reply to this comment
- Alice Waters is clearly a "let them eat cake" kind of a person. I have a six figure income but won't pay $4 a pound for pathetic little grapes like she was helping to sell. I have been to her exceptional restaurant but it is clearly not the food for the masses she says she wants to feed us. She is really arguing that we should let millions die so that we can all grow less food in a way acceptable to her. Also, how much hydrocarbon volume did she send into the air to cook those two eggs? Finally, it's nice that the White House will have an organic garden, but bet that the peasants will be doing most of the work.
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- Apparently alot of people didn't understand this story. Unless we all get on the same page as a nation and demand organic foods we will never have a mass opportunity to eat organically. What this nation is doing to our food supply is appalling. Instead of dumping on Alice Waters do a little research online. Find out the meaning of GMO foods, find out what happens when cows are given antibiotics and hormones. This type of behavior is putting farms out of business. American food has turned into big business. When I was growing up I don't remember food ever getting recalled. People dying from eating beef, peanut butter or spinach. Please research online and educate yourself before throwing stones at Alice Waters. By the way, I'm a conservative woman with these opinions, just in case anyone is judging.
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- Please reconsider your statement that Alice Walker has done more to change the way we eat than anyone, ...
Dr. Vandana Shiva, former nuclear physicist, environmentalist, ecologist, author, speaker, and winner of the Right Livelihood Award (Alternative Nobel Prize), has done more. - Reply to this comment
- Leslie, come on, you were looking at Alice like she was a freak, like she was the only person in the world who actually cooked, and the only person in America who did not have a mircrowave oven! I work a 40 hour week and travel to and from work about an hour a day, and manage to go home, feed the dogs, put the horses up and feed them, feed the wild deer, water the garden and then cook dinner for my husband and myself, with fresh veggies that are mostly organic or grown locally. It is the price you pay for being healthy, give up your big S.U.V's and start eating right to save this planet or the planet will evict us from inhabiting it. Everyone should start out making small changes to their eating habits and go from there, I'm telling you it will work.
Good Luck! - Reply to this comment

