The Circus Gardener's Kitchen

seasonal vegetarian recipes with a side helping of food politics

strawberry sorbet

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Not long ago Monsanto, the world’s largest seed company (and several times voted “the world’s most evil corporation”), caused alarm amongst environmentalists by launching a hostile take over bid for Syngenta, the world’s largest crop chemical producer.

The bid was ultimately unsuccessful, but it now appears that the proposed takeover was merely a precursor for a much larger feeding frenzy within the agrochemical industry.

Monsanto is back in the news again, this time playing the role of prey rather than stalker, subject to a proposed takeover by Bayer, the world’s largest chemical company.

In the meantime, Syngenta finds itself once again the subject of a proposed takeover – this time by the state-owned China National Chemical Corporation, a vast conglomerate which in recent years has swallowed up other chemical companies in Europe.

Not to be outdone, Dow Chemical Company, the world’s third largest chemical company is proposing a merger with its rival DuPont, the fourth largest chemical company in the world. Together they would form another hugely powerful global chemical corporation.

What could possibly be fuelling such activity?

We live in a world with a population growing out of control. Simultaneously we are losing arable land at an alarming rate. If we are to survive as a species one imperative is to find a way to optimise agricultural production, to have a system which is sustainable and which can withstand or even help combat climate change.

This is not a world that sits easily with the prospect of these proposed mergers and acquisitions. If they all come to fruition, the six biggest agrochemical companies in the world would become three. They would have a stranglehold not only over the agricultural chemicals and seeds markets but over governments too.

Those three, vastly powerful corporations would form an irresistible force propelling us more and more towards a highly chemical dependent agriculture, awash with the artificial fertilisers, pesticides, herbicides and fungicides which they produce. They would be determined to lock us deeper and deeper into the current, failed, corrupt system of industrial agricultural production and would make it much harder for any government to bring in legislative change in favour of a less chemical dependent and more sustainable agriculture.

Mara des bois strawberrieslemonsmashed strawberriessorbet and empty bowl

Summer is finally upon us, and with it comes the strawberry season. With just three ingredients, this lovely sorbet could hardly be easier to put together.

Use home grown or locally grown strawberries, and only use organic: non-organic strawberries are notorious for containing pesticide and fungicide residues (and we know where they come from).

strawberry sorbet

Ingredients

400 g fresh organic strawberries
50 ml organic maple syrup
juice of half a lemon

Method

1. Hull the strawberries. Place in a blender with the lemon juice and process to a smooth pulp. Alternatively, mash the strawberries and lemon juice with a fork.

2. Pour the pulp into a bowl through a fine sieve, to remove the seeds. Add the maple syrup and whisk to combine. Chill in the fridge for 30 minutes then pour into an ice cream maker and churn. Once it is starting to set, tip the sorbet into a freezer proof container. Cover the container with a lid and freeze for at least 4 hours.

3. Remove the sorbet from the freezer and leave to stand at room temperature for 10 minutes before serving.

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Categories: dairy free, gluten free, raw, vegan

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7 replies

  1. Looks delicious and oh-so easy. But the shenanigans by the chemical companies is depressing.

  2. other than joining in with emails generated by the likes of 38degrees, Sum of Us what else can we do to stop this, how can we make our governments listen to us and get over the message to people at large that this has to be prevented.
    I despair and wonder what the future for agriculture will be.
    in the meantime I keep trying to explain to people the consequences of this merger, why we must protect our bees, the importance of organic growing but I feel as if the message is just not listened to by our governments.

    • I would say the biggest single influence we can have is in what we buy. Each time we buy non organic food, processed food or junk food we are in effect casting a vote for that kind of world, a world where the agrochemical giants hold sway without government challenge. And each time we buy organic, locally grown food, we are not only encouraging local organic producers we are casting a vote for a better way of living, for a vision of a world free from corporate greed and corruption.

      Steve

  3. I am concerned that it is the “Stock Market” that is the bad foundation for all this. In many countries there are laws which compel company directors to buy or sell shares for no other reason than what will increase the company’s wealth — all in the name of the shareholder. And most people who own shares have little idea of what the company does — just so long as the shares hold their value.
    (Ps. I have had to go private. So if you want to visit me you have to click the prompt and I will give you the ok to unlock the door.)

  4. These mega-mergers are certainly not a pretty prospect! It would trap our food supply in a toxic web. We must keep shouting out the organic message and vote with our individual spending power.

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