Archive for November 9th, 2007

Chicago Sustainability Guide

Environmental issues trigger some common “buzz” words - such as green, sustainable, carbon footprint, etc. - but what do they all mean? To the average person, their definitions could seem hard to tackle.

Although different experts and environmentalists define each term a little differently, some basic principles can be pieced together.

Let’s start with sustainability.

The American Heritage Dictionary has the following definition:

sus·tained, sus·tain·ing, sus·tains
To keep in existence; maintain.
To supply with necessities or nourishment; provide for.
To support from below; keep from falling or sinking; prop.
To support the spirits, vitality, or resolution of; encourage.
To bear up under; withstand: can’t sustain the blistering heat.
To experience or suffer: sustained a fatal injury.
To affirm the validity of: The judge has sustained the prosecutor’s objection.
To prove or corroborate; confirm.
To keep up (a joke or assumed role, for example) competently.

Still, where do you go from here?

The Foresight Design Initiative makes things a little easier and provides an online sustainability guide to living in Chicago.

The guide covers everything about sustainability from A to Z.

About the Guide
Sustainability is about making cities livable and equitable. It’s about creating and supporting an economy that nourishes people, fosters cultural diversity and protects the environment. It starts right here and now, with the decisions we make on a daily basis.

Now, not knowing the terminology cannot be an excuse.

November 09 2007 | General | No Comments »

Table-side Interview

For some people, going green revolves around food. Supporting sustainability and putting healthy, organic and local options on the table is often easier said than done.

Two Chicagoans are taking matters into their own hands and opening a gluten-free, vegan and organic restaurant in November. Pull up a chair and listen to the baker and executive chef discuss the logic behind taking eating green to a whole new level.

For further background, read the post in October about the Balanced Kitchen or the article on Medill Reports.

Listen to the audio interview.

Quicktime Audio Interview

Or read the following transcript.

1. So what is your name?

B: My name is Elizabeth Bell Elper, but you can call me Betty.

2. And how are you involved in the restaurant?

B: I am the baker and the owner.

3. And what’s your name?

Z: Zachary Bello, and I am the executive chef here.

4. So tell me, for people who don’t know anything about the restaurant, what’s the basic premise behind the development – or the restaurant?

B: Well we are the Balanced Kitchen, and we’re 100 percent vegan and gluten-free. And we’re just, you know, trying…

Z: That really is the focus – being gluten-free and vegan and green and natural.

B: Yeah, that’s the focus. As long as everything is that, we’re all right with it. We are also trying to be very local. With the food that we use and with the amount of business we want to do, we don’t want this, a lot of gluten-free business is distance. There are not very many local, gluten-free businesses. So that’s what we’re trying to do.

5. For someone who has no idea what gluten is, how would you describe it?

B: Gluten is a protein that is found in wheat, barley, malt, rye, kaput, spelt.

6. And, so what would you say are some of the things to avoid for the normal human being if they have celiac disease or gluten intolerance?

B: Things to avoid? Anything that has those products in it. Well the obvious is bread, pasta – no traditional bread and pasta. But there are so many things that have gluten in them. Like soy sauce, which is horrible. But you can have tamari, which is good. But wheat-free tamari. And most baked goods – and also with vegan – I mean there are lots of things that you can’t eat. But it’s not really about what you can’t eat. You’re only really cutting out a few things from your diet. There are so many more things that you can eat. And I don’t know, I mean – I like to learn about new foods and explore things. And I feel like as a vegan and someone who does have a slightly restricted diet, you have to want to explore. To be excited about it.

Z: Yeah, to keep the excitement and then especially as a chef and a vegan now, who relies on protein and meat – for their flavor – I mean that’s where they get the bulk of their flavor. And they’re sort of very reliant on that product, and so as a vegan chef, now I have to explore bringing more flavors from the vegetables. You know, I have to incorporate flavor in different ways.

B: You have to be more inventive.

Z: Yeah, I’ve really had to push myself very hard to – not necessarily be experimental – because that’s very easy to just go out and try things. As a chef, I would eat anything. But to cook without those things, which are the moneymakers for chefs, has been a real challenge. It’s been a lot of fun.

7. Is Chicago progressive in the sense that more people – I mean do you think more people are turning to a gluten-free diet and that’s why they’re demanding restaurants like this?

B: There’s a slightly more – I mean especially gluten-free is growing a lot.

Z: There’s a huge awareness because diagnosis is becoming an important thing, especially for gluten intolerance and celiac.

B: And just the word gluten is out there.

Z: Yeah, and also all the people who are living a healthy lifestyle are learning about what gluten does to their body and knowing that it’s not good for their body – and deciding to cut it out because they want to be healthy.

B: And I mean a lot of people are more interested in the environment. The average person is becoming more interested because of popularized movies but it gets them excited.

November 09 2007 | Green Places and Green Lifestyle and Green Food | No Comments »

Walmart Redeems By Going Green

Walmart hasn’t always been on everyone’s good side, but the conglomerate might be moving in the right direction by shifting toward sustainability. Eventhough there aren’t any stores in the city, Chicagoans might have noticed that the company has already changed its brand from “Everyday Low Prices” to “Save Money, Live Better.”

Its new five key initiatives include: sustainability, health and wellness, community, economic opportunity and value.

One blogger, Robert Johnson, writes the following:

Health and wellness kicked off with $4 prescriptions. In conjunction with its huge sustainability initiative, Wal-Mart recently held a conference in which it brought together CEOs from all over the country and announced that it was going to green its supply chain. That means if your company is a Wal-Mart vendor, or if you want to be one, first you must meet the company’s sustainability objectives.

That’s huge because Wal-Mart interacts with 80 percent of the households in the U.S. Anything Wal-Mart does affects most consumer brands and most manufacturers. For example, Wal-Mart now sells a reusable shopping bag for $1 that is made from 85 percent recyclable materials, carries the same weight as a plastic bag and replaces 50 plastic bags in its lifetime.

Six months ago Wal-Mart launched the “Live Better Index” to track its efforts.

The index charts the habits of American households in five major areas, including sustainability. At the six-month mark for the index, Wal-Mart reported that Americans had already purchased 100 million compact fluorescent light bulbs for a $1.5 billion savings on their electricity bills.

Why is this so important? Because Wal-Mart has already found that sustainability is not only cost effective, but it saves consumers money. And now they have decided that they are also going to save themselves and their supply chain money by extending their sustainability initiatives rather than drawing back from them.

We’ll see just how Walmart will sustain its new green approach.

November 09 2007 | Green Trends | No Comments »