advertisement

People and events of the new century set the table for a decade

Want an easy way to sum up how Americans ate during the first 10 years of the new century? Three words should do it.

Sushi at 7-Eleven.

For this was the decade of the gourmeting of America, an era when cola wars and burger battles made way for artisanal sodas and grass fed beef, when coffee went from a cup of joe to a double shot-half-caff-soy-latte, ethnic was de rigueur and local became the new global.

It was a fine time to be a foodie.

Not that everything exactly whet the appetite. Contaminated produce and soaring food prices turned our stomachs. And we lost some of the luminaries and institutions - Julia Child and Gourmet magazine - that had worked so diligently to brighten our meals.

More than ever before, issues long treated as the mushy peas on the collective American dinner plate - organics, local and sustainable agriculture, animal welfare - were getting sirloin-style treatment, sometimes in the least likely of places.

Walmart embraced organics - a $21 billion industry, up from $3.6 billion in 1997 - a decision that broadened access, but that critics feared would dilute the industry's standards. And the home of the Egg McMuffin said it would study how to raise chickens without cramped cages.

Meanwhile, books and movies that tore into big industry food and would have been relegated to the granola set a decade earlier - Morgan Spurlock's 2004 film "Super Size Me" and Michael Pollan's 2006 tome "The Omnivore's Dilemma" - pervaded the popular consciousness.

Eating became a political act. Whether prompted by concerns about the quality of school lunches, climate change or worker conditions in the Third World, more Americans started to vote with their stomachs. Suddenly, the carbon footprint of your carrots was an issue.

Slow Food, a highly politicized Italian-born movement dedicated to preserving artisanal and sustainable foods, made its first major foray into the U.S. in 2008. It sputtered shortly after, but that such a Eurocentric group even made it on the American scene is remarkable.

Speaking of voting... It says something about our appetite for good food when the most-watched kitchen is at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

Following the ketchup-as-vegetable Reagan years, the no-broccoli-allowed Bush Sr. years, eight years of Bubba's burger fixation, and finally the fake turkey faux pas of Bush Jr., America put a Foodie-in-Chief in the White House.

Everything from the peach cobbler President Barack Obama ate in Chicago to the arugula harvested from the South Lawn garden planted by first Lady Michelle Obama suddenly became sought after news.

Food also had a lighter side. We were primed by the Food Network (whose viewership jumped 392 percent from 1999 to 2009) and other channels to treat what we eat as entertainment.

The era of Child's behind-the-stove television was fading, replaced by an army of reality programs with screaming chefs, cooking throw downs and towering cake creations. Good luck if you just wanted to learn how to make beef bourguignon.

For that, you'd have been better off tuning out and logging on. The Web exploded with food-driven content, much of it fed from social networks and blogs. Even Martha Stewart got in on it, using Twitter to send 140-character recipes.

By the middle of the decade, we'd pretty much given up demonizing carbs. And though our waistlines continue to expand, Americans haven't latched on to any one diet since. We do, however, fret over gluten and trans fats, neither of which seems to be in anything anymore.

Weight problems be damned. Eating became ever more ubiquitous. The food industry sought to maximize our so-called eating opportunities. And so we were able to buy soda alongside our staples at the office supply store and candy with our kitty treats at the pet store.

As part of that, on-the-go grub got a serious upgrade. Convenience stores morphed into mini grocers. Nearly 1,700 7-Elevens now sell sushi. Wondering which Slurpee flavor pairs best with California rolls? It doesn't matter. The chain also sells its own line of wines.

And that's because store brands have become the new must-have (non) label. Thanks mostly to the sagging economy - but also to sharp spikes in quality and marketing - so-called private labels have become an $88 billion industry.

The economy also made us get old school in the kitchen. Sales of home canning supplies shot up and - especially after the first lady planted her kitchen garden - we all reached for our spades and seed catalogs.

Perhaps you ordered some bok choy and tomatillo seeds, because mainstream American food got seriously ethnic. It's partly because we are an increasingly ethnic (and especially Hispanic) nation. But it's also thanks to the growing ranks of young, adventurous eaters.

Sushi? Sorry 7-Eleven, that's so '90s. Young people today are eaters-without-borders and are forever on the hunt for new and more intense flavors. Vietnamese, North African, Indian and South American flavors are where it's at.

Which explains the explosion of food trucks. The trucks themselves aren't new, but the attention they got from serious foodies is. It's also a credit to their inventiveness, quality and deeply ethnic roots. It helps that food trucks are cheap, both to operate and eat from.

Which brings it back to sushi. At 7-Eleven. It was an on-the-go decade that favored ethnic and affordable. Whatever the economy does, and whether we eat at home or in restaurants (or even more likely in our cars), that's unlikely to change during the next 10 years.

• Associated Press Food Editor J.M. Hirsch can be e-mailed at jhirsch@ap.org.

Socorro Soria, owner of "El Pulpo," a sea food catering truck serving her last two shrimp cocktails before moving from her downtown Los Angeles location. Associated Press
Customers order food at the Kogi BBQ truck near the campus of UCLA in Los Angeles. Associated Press
Arjun Singh prepares an Indian dish called "pav bhaji," a mixture of vegetables and potatoes, that will later be packaged and frozen at the Joy Foods warehouse in the Queens borough of New York. Associated Press
Fifth graders from Bancroft Elementary School and assistant White House Chef Sam Kass weigh some of the lettuce that they and First Lady Michelle Obama harvested. Associated Press
Vacuum-sealed jars of green beans and tomatoes stored in the Mt. Jackson, Va. home of Bobby Clark. Associated Press
Cookie Glover picks greens on her family's organic farm in Douglasville, Ga. Associated Press
A recipe that was tweeted. Recipes complete in under 140 characters, are becoming regular Twitter offerings. Associated Press
An Angus calf nurses while its mother grazes on grass at the Swingley Angus Century Farm in Days Creek, Ore. Associated Press
First Lady Michelle Obama eats with fifth graders from Bancroft Elementary School in the first lady's garden after they harvested some of the vegetables that they planted in a garden on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, Associated Press
Julia Child explained "with a little practice" you can do everything with the flare of a gourmet. Associated Press
Alice Waters, the grand dame of the "slow food" movement, in her garden in Bolinas, Calif. Associated Press
Morgan Spurlock, director, producer and star of the documentary film "Super Size Me." Associated Press
Article Comments
Guidelines: Keep it civil and on topic; no profanity, vulgarity, slurs or personal attacks. People who harass others or joke about tragedies will be blocked. If a comment violates these standards or our terms of service, click the "flag" link in the lower-right corner of the comment box. To find our more, read our FAQ.