Define "natural"
It's tricky. Even Food Manufacture puts the word in inverted commas: "The march to all things 'natural' is likely to persist as consumers increasingly buy into the perceived healthiness of the additive-free or 'natural' proposition." Says it all, really. When the anthropologist Jeremy MacClancy wrote Consuming Culture: Why We Eat What We Eat and What It Says About Us, in 1992, the Oxford English Dictionary offered 26 definitions for natural, and he saw the concept of natural foods as a cynical marketing ploy. Since then, he says, he hasn't seen, "any good reasons to make me change my views".Advertisement
Is natural healthier?
The treat section is a big appeal of health-food stores. I was once at a vast branch of Wholefoods in New York, where idiosyncratically shaped cookies were foisted on anyone who had to wait in line at the checkouts. A 2010 study (PDF) found that people rated cookies as lower in calories when labelled organic. It also found that people with weight-loss goals were more likely to forgo exercise if they'd chosen an organic dessert rather than a conventional one. You may scoff at this, but intelligent folks are more than capable of temporary fuzzy logic to justify instant gratification. In reality, natural doesn't always signify healthy. As Rozin points out, what could be more natural than death? "It's misinformation really - natural is unrelated to health."Advertisement
There's natural, and then there's disgusting
Spence puckishly suggests that the power of natural-style labelling could be harnessed to encourage westerners to eat critters for our economic and environmental good. "Insects are natural, right?" he reasons. "Though we will probably need to think of some pretty fancy naming strategies to get people eating such a nutritious food source." Wild, organic land shrimps? Crunchy, toasted eco puffs? Pure critter fritters?Unnatural haute cuisine
The notion of molecular gastronomy rather turned the distaste for "unnatural" on its head. Diners embraced the haute-cuisine application of scientific food-processing techniques that many frown upon in mass-produced products. When I mention this to Spence, who has worked with Heston Blumenthal, he agrees and says: "From my reading of things, companies like Firmenich - one of world's largest flavour and fragrance houses - were funding people like Blumenthal a decade ago precisely to try and change the public's perception of 'synthetic' and 'scientific' in mass food via their acceptance of it in modernist cuisine."Advertisement
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