Reclaiming Food

Taking it Back

Reclaiming Food means taking it back – not just what we eat, but everything food really is.

Food is nutrition, health, energy, power, independence, and the flavour of life. It’s the foundation of our existence and the thread that ties us to land, community, and each other.

Over time, all of that has been replaced by substitutes that answer shallow questions of cost, convenience, and speed, while quietly stripping away the deeper value we still assume is there.

We feel the loss instinctively – the sums don’t add up – and when we look closer, we see how our modern health crises began the moment food stopped being food and became a consumer product.

There’s a strange thing happening in the world today. We talk about food all the time – what we like, what we don’t, what’s healthy, what’s cheap, what’s convenient – yet very few of us ever stop to ask the most basic question of all: what is food, really?

It sounds almost ridiculous to ask. Food is food, isn’t it? It’s what we eat. It’s what fills the shelves. It’s what keeps us alive.

But if you sit with that thought for even a moment, you start to realise that the word “food” has been stretched so far that it no longer tells us anything useful. It’s used to describe a carrot pulled from the ground and a fluorescent, ultra‑processed edible product that contains ingredients you’d never recognise. It’s used to describe something nourishing and something harmful. Something grown and something engineered. Something that supports life and something that slowly undermines it.

We’ve allowed one word to cover two completely different realities. And that confusion isn’t harmless. It’s shaping our health, our communities, our economy, and our future in ways most people never see.

This essay is about reclaiming that word – not inventing a new one, not moralising, not lecturing, but simply restoring clarity to something that should never have been allowed to become so muddled.

Because once you understand what food really is, everything else begins to make sense.

The moment the meaning slipped

For most of human history, food was simple. It came from the land, the sea, the seasons, and the hands of people who understood how to grow, raise, catch, preserve, and prepare it.

Food was local because it had to be. It was recognisable because it couldn’t be anything else. It nourished because that was its purpose – to sustain life, vitality, and community.

Then, slowly at first and then all at once, food became something else.

It became a product.

A commodity.

A brand.

A profit centre.

A tool of influence.

A vehicle for additives, preservatives, enhancers, stabilisers, colourings, and chemicals that no home kitchen has ever needed.

And as this shift happened, the meaning of the word “food” didn’t change – but the reality behind it did.

We still call everything “food,” even when much of what fills our supermarkets and our diets no longer behaves like food at all.

It doesn’t nourish.

It doesn’t support health.

It doesn’t come from a transparent or resilient supply chain.

It doesn’t strengthen communities.

It doesn’t resemble its original form.

It doesn’t even need to be grown in the traditional sense.

Yet it sits on the same shelves, carries the same labels, and is spoken about in the same breath as the things that do.

That’s where the trouble begins.

Why the meaning matters more than we think

When governments talk about food security, they often mean something very narrow: if people can eat something – anything – then the job is done.

It doesn’t matter where it comes from.

It doesn’t matter what’s in it.

It doesn’t matter whether it’s nourishing or harmful.

It doesn’t matter whether the supply chain is fragile or resilient.

It doesn’t matter whether the ingredients have crossed ten borders or been through five factories.

If the shelves aren’t empty, the system is considered to be working.

But this definition hides more than it reveals.

It hides the fact that the UK relies on overseas imports for a huge proportion of what we eat.

It hides the fact that much of the food produced in the UK isn’t actually edible in its raw form and must be processed elsewhere before it returns to us.

It hides the fact that if the borders closed tomorrow, we would have only days before shortages became unavoidable.

It hides the fact that millions of people can only access food that is cheap because it is ultra‑processed, not because it is nutritious or sustainable.

And it hides the most uncomfortable truth of all: that a population can be fed without being nourished, supplied without being secure, and full without being healthy.

When the meaning of food collapses, everything built on top of it becomes unstable.

The system behind the confusion

If you peel back the layers of the modern food system – and there are many – you find something that looks less like a chain and more like an onion. Each layer has its own priorities, its own incentives, and its own version of the truth.

Consumers sit at one end, often unaware of how little influence they actually have.

Farmers sit at the other, squeezed by contracts, pricing structures, and data‑driven demands that leave many earning less than the minimum wage.

Between them sit supermarkets, processors, manufacturers, financiers, corporations, lobbyists, and policymakers – each shaping what food becomes long before it reaches a plate.

The deeper you go, the clearer it becomes that the system isn’t designed around nourishment or resilience. It’s designed around profit, efficiency, and control. It rewards scale, not quality. It rewards processing, not simplicity. It rewards long supply chains, not local ones. It rewards products that can be standardised, preserved, transported, and marketed, not foods that come from soil, seasons, and skilled hands.

And because the system is so complex, so opaque, and so normalised, most people never question it. They assume that what’s available must be what’s best. They assume that if something is on a shelf, it must be safe. They assume that if it’s cheap, it must be efficient. They assume that if it’s everywhere, it must be food.

But assumptions are exactly what this system depends on.

A clearer way to understand what we eat

To reclaim the meaning of food, we need a way to talk about it that reflects reality rather than marketing. We need a simple, honest framework that anyone can understand – something that cuts through the confusion without judging or shaming.

Here is that framework.

1. Food

Food is something grown, raised, caught, or harvested. It resembles its original form when you eat it. It can be prepared in a home kitchen without needing industrial processes. It nourishes because it contains the nutrients nature intended. It comes from supply chains that can, in principle, be local, transparent, and accountable.

Food is vegetables, fruits, grains, pulses, fish, meat, eggs, milk, herbs, and the things made from them using traditional or minimally mechanised methods. It is bread made from flour, water, yeast, and salt. It is cheese made from milk and cultures. It is butter churned from cream. It is food that your great‑grandparents would recognise.

Food is the foundation of health, resilience, and vitality.

2. Food Products

Food products begin as food but go through processing that changes their form while still keeping them recognisable. They are the things that make everyday life easier: pasta, tinned tomatoes, yoghurt, cured meats, jams, pickles, and many baked goods.

They are processed, but in ways that could be done by hand, even if machines now do the work. They are not inherently harmful. They are part of a balanced, practical diet. They sit in the middle ground – not raw, not engineered, but still fundamentally food.

3. Edible Products

Edible products are not food in any meaningful sense, even though they are sold as if they are. They are engineered combinations of extracted ingredients, additives, preservatives, colourings, stabilisers, and chemicals that have been broken down, reassembled, and enhanced to create something that tastes good, lasts long, and maximises profit.

They are designed for shelf life, not health. For convenience, not nourishment. For addiction, not wellbeing.

They are the products that dominate the modern diet not because they are better, but because they are more profitable.

Once you see the difference between these three categories, you can’t unsee it. And once you understand it, you begin to understand why so many of the problems we face – from chronic disease to supply chain fragility – make perfect sense.

How edible products replaced food

This shift didn’t happen overnight. It happened slowly, through a series of small, seemingly harmless changes.

Supermarkets began to dominate the food landscape, offering convenience and choice while quietly reshaping the entire supply chain.

Processors and manufacturers expanded their influence, turning raw ingredients into products that could travel further and last longer.

Globalisation made it possible to source ingredients from anywhere, often at the expense of local producers.

Marketing convinced us that convenience was the same as value.

And as prices were squeezed, farmers were pushed into contracts that left them with little control over what they grew or how they grew it.

At the same time, the rise of ultra‑processing introduced a new kind of “food” – one that didn’t need seasons, soil, or skilled hands. One that could be made anywhere, from anything, as long as the final product tasted good and cost little.

The result is a food system where the most profitable products are the least nourishing, and the most nourishing foods are often the hardest to access.

This isn’t a conspiracy. It’s a consequence of incentives. But the effect is the same: edible products have crowded out food, and most people haven’t noticed.

The consequences we can no longer ignore

When a population eats mostly edible products, the consequences show up everywhere.

They show up in rising rates of obesity, diabetes, heart disease, inflammation, and chronic illness.

They show up in the strain on the NHS.

They show up in the loss of local farms, the decline of rural communities, and the erosion of food skills.

They show up in the fragility of supply chains that depend on global stability in a world that is anything but stable.

They show up in the growing number of people who rely on foodbanks, not because they mismanage money, but because wages no longer match the cost of living.

And they show up in the quiet, creeping loss of control over something as fundamental as what we eat – and therefore over our health, our independence, and our future.

A country that cannot feed itself is not secure.

A population that cannot access nourishing food is not healthy.

A society that cannot distinguish food from edible products is not informed.

And a system that treats food as a commodity rather than a necessity is not sustainable.

These are not abstract concerns. They are immediate, personal, and deeply human.

Reclaiming food: where change begins

Reclaiming food doesn’t mean rejecting modern life or romanticising the past. It means restoring clarity to a word that has been stretched beyond recognition. It means understanding the difference between food, food products, and edible products so that we can make informed choices. It means supporting local producers not out of nostalgia, but because they are essential to resilience. It means recognising that food security is not just about calories, but about nourishment, access, affordability, and independence.

It means asking better questions.

Where did this come from?

Who made it?

Could I make it myself?

Does it resemble its original form?

Is it nourishing?

Is it part of a resilient system, or a fragile one?

And it means accepting that the power to change the food system doesn’t lie only with governments or corporations.

It lies with communities, with growers, with families, with individuals who choose to understand what they are eating and why.

Reclaiming food is not a campaign. It’s a shift in perspective. Once you see the difference, you can’t go back.

The future we choose

We don’t need a new word for good food. We need to reclaim the word “food” and stop using it to describe edible products that undermine our health, our communities, and our future.

Food should mean nourishment.

Food should mean trust.

Food should mean resilience.

Food should mean independence.

Food should mean the flavour of life.

Once we reclaim the meaning, everything else becomes possible.

Understanding Foods We Can Trust: A Blueprint for Food Security and Community Resilience in the UK

Have you ever stood in the supermarket and wondered, “Where does my food really come from?” Or maybe you’ve asked yourself, “What would I do if those shelves were suddenly empty?”

If these questions have crossed your mind, you’re in good company. Food security is something we all depend on, but it’s easy to overlook – until a crisis makes us pay attention.

So, what does it actually mean to have food we can trust? How can we make sure our families and communities have access to nourishing, reliable food – no matter what’s happening in the world? And, perhaps most importantly, what role can each of us play in building a stronger, more resilient food system?

That’s why I’m excited to share some insights from my new Kindle book, Understanding Foods We Can Trust: A Blueprint for Food Security and Community Resilience in the UK, published on December 13, 2025.

This book brings together practical ideas and lessons from the Foods We Can Trust project and the website, www.foodswecantrust.org.

As you read on, I invite you to think about your own relationship with food:

  • Have you ever tried growing your own vegetables, even just a few herbs on the windowsill?
  • Do you know what’s actually in the food you eat every day?
  • Are there ways you could get involved in your local community to support food resilience?

Whether you’re a seasoned gardener, a community organiser, or simply someone who wants to make better choices at the shop, there’s something here for you.

So, let’s explore together how we can all help create a future where everyone has access to food they can trust.

Ready? Let’s dive in.

Introduction: Why Food Security Matters

Food is fundamental to survival, yet recent global events – pandemics, wars, climate extremes, and economic shocks – have exposed the fragility of our food systems.

Foods We Can Trust: A Blueprint for Food Security and Community Resilience in the UK is a call to action, urging individuals, families, and communities to rethink their relationship with food and reclaim power over what they eat and how it is produced.

The book emphasises that food security is not just a matter of policy or trade, but a deeply personal and urgent issue that affects everyone.

Part 1: What is Food Security?

Multiple Perspectives and Definitions

Food security is a complex concept, shaped by the perspectives of government, farmers, food producers, and the public.

The government often defines food security narrowly – if people can eat, they are food secure – focusing on the mere availability of food, regardless of its quality or origin.

Farmers, meanwhile, stress the importance of producing food within the UK and reducing reliance on imports.

The public’s view is more nuanced, encompassing concerns about nutrition, affordability, and trustworthiness.

Risks and Vulnerabilities

The UK is highly dependent on imported food, with only around 58% of food consumed or rather its equivalent produced domestically (and possibly less, depending on how statistics are calculated).

This reliance on global supply chains makes the UK vulnerable to disruptions, and the actual availability of UK-grown food for immediate consumption is much lower than official figures suggest.

If borders were closed, food shortages would quickly become a reality.

What True Food Security Should Mean

True food security goes beyond mere availability.

It should ensure that everyone can choose to eat enough foods that are good for them, meeting genuine nutritional needs at every mealtime, without fear of going without or uncertainty about the next meal.

Key ingredients of food security include reliability, availability, accessibility, nutrition, and affordability.

Barriers to Food Security

Factors such as cost, supply chain issues, ideological or religious restrictions, greed and profiteering, and insufficient income all contribute to food insecurity.

Many people in the UK do not earn enough to afford a healthy diet without assistance, and foodbanks have become a necessary but uncomfortable reality.

Manipulation and Partial Truths

Both government and farming industry narratives about food security contain elements of truth but are often incomplete or manipulated to serve particular interests.

This can lead to public misunderstanding and ineffective policy, even within the food producing sector itself.

Part 2: What Our Bodies Need Every Day

Nutrition is for Everyone

Understanding nutrition isn’t just for experts. Everyone who eats benefits from knowing the basics of what our bodies require to thrive, not just survive.

Nutrition is built on two main categories: macronutrients (carbohydrates, proteins, fats, fibre, and sugars) and micronutrients (vitamins and minerals like Vitamin A, B, C, D, calcium, iron, etc.).

Individual Needs Vary

Every person’s body and nutritional requirements are different, influenced by factors such as age, gender, activity level, and health status.

There is no one-size-fits-all approach to nutrition.

Critical Thinking About Nutrition Advice

Readers are encouraged to approach dietary information with a critical eye – questioning sources, understanding the difference between fact and opinion, and being wary of advice that serves commercial or ideological interests.

Empowerment Through Knowledge

By becoming more conscious of what we eat and understanding our nutritional needs, we can take greater control over our health and wellbeing, making food choices that support a secure and nourishing future.

Part 3: Foods We Can Farm, Catch, Harvest and Grow Locally in and around the UK

Rediscovering Local Abundance

The UK has a wide variety of fruits, vegetables, crops, livestock, fish, and dairy that can be farmed, caught, harvested, or grown locally.

This diversity is often underestimated compared to the convenience and variety of supermarket offerings.

Vulnerability of Global Supply Chains

Reliance on distant supply chains and imported ingredients leaves the UK food system exposed to risks and disruptions.

Local food production is a practical response to these vulnerabilities, offering greater resilience and sustainability.

Practical Lists and Insights

Foods We Can Trust: A Blueprint for Food Security and Community Resilience in the UK provides tables and lists of UK-grown produce, farmed and wild foods, and ideas for what can be cultivated in gardens, allotments, and community spaces.

These resources help readers understand what is possible when focusing on local food sources.

Empowering Individuals and Communities

By highlighting what can be grown or sourced locally, Foods We Can Trust: A Blueprint for Food Security and Community Resilience in the UK encourages readers to make more informed choices about the food they eat and support.

Whether as home growers, community organisers, or consumers, everyone can play a role in strengthening local food systems.

Part 4: Grow Your Own or ‘Home Growing’

Food Security Begins at Home and in the Community

While national policies matter, the most powerful solutions often start close to home.

Growing your own food, joining community initiatives, or working together as “citizen farmers” can help build a more secure, resilient, and nourishing food system for all.

The Fragility of the Current Food System

The UK’s food supply is more vulnerable than many realise.

Relying solely on supermarkets and long supply chains leaves communities at risk of shortages and disruptions.

Taking action before a crisis is now essential.

Practical Ways to Get Involved

There are many accessible methods for growing food, regardless of space or resources – that include window boxes, containers, grow bags, greenhouses, gardens, allotments, and hydroponics.

Foods We Can Trust: A Blueprint for Food Security and Community Resilience in the UK provides lists of vegetables, fruits, herbs, and even animals that can be grown or kept at home, as well as guidance on collaborative approaches like community gardens and cooperative farming.

Benefits Beyond Food

Growing your own food and participating in community initiatives offer more than just sustenance.

These activities can improve mental and physical wellbeing, foster social connection, and build local resilience.

Collaboration and Citizen Farming

Community gardens, share farming, and cooperative projects enable people to pool resources, share knowledge, and produce food collectively.

The “citizen farmer” model encourages everyone – regardless of background or resources – to contribute to local food production and security.

Overcoming Barriers

The section addresses challenges such as start-up costs, limited space, and the need for local support.

It offers suggestions for finding gardening clubs, sharing resources, and seeking guidance from local councils or organisations.

Conclusion: Building a Resilient Food Future

Adam Tugwell’s blueprint is both a practical guide and an invitation to question, learn, act, and share.

The future of food in the UK depends on our willingness to rethink, reconnect, and take responsibility for what we eat and how it is produced.

Food security begins with each of us, but its impact reaches far beyond our own plates.

By working together – as individuals, families, communities, and citizens – we can ensure that everyone has access to foods they can trust, and that our food system serves the needs of all.

Key Takeaways

  • Food security is multifaceted, involving availability, reliability, accessibility, nutrition, and affordability.
  • The UK is vulnerable due to reliance on global supply chains and insufficient domestic production.
  • True food security means everyone can access nutritious, trustworthy food without fear or uncertainty.
  • Local food production and home growing are vital for resilience and sustainability.
  • Community action and collaboration empower individuals and strengthen food systems.
  • Critical thinking and personal responsibility are essential for making informed food choices.
  • Everyone can contribute—whether by growing a few herbs, joining a community garden, or supporting local farmers.

Resources and Further Reading

The book provides extensive links to organisations, guides, and further reading for those interested in deepening their understanding or taking practical steps toward food security and resilience.

Buy the Book for Kindle

If you would like to read Foods We Can Trust: A Blueprint for Food Security and Community Resilience in the UK, it is available for Kindle on Amazon at the link immediately below.