BECOMING SHOPPERS: NC Food Consumption and Production
Farms of the Future
Lessons Learned From War
During WWII, state and federal governments worked closely with farmers to increase the productivity of the food industry and pump out as much food as possible—and they got pretty good at it. Both the government and industry leaders learned a great deal about how corporations and government could work together to increase food production and get more food to more people in less time. Thus, after the war, state and federal governments had a renewed mission to “modernize” the national food industry. NC State was the center of food research in North Carolina, and its industrial researchers imagined a future of food production in which efficiency and automation ruled:
Trends For Tomorrow
"Complete mechanization of food manufacture - Trends in the always progressive food industry are toward automation - the completely instrumented and mechanized food production line. Mechanization has progressed far but the task of taking the tedium and human error completely out of food manufacture is the challenging technical venture for men and women of tomorrow's world of industrial research."
NC Food Processor, 1 no. 4 (Sept-Oct 1959), 2
New food production techniques resulted in experiments with new "foods of the future," too. Flaked food experienced a brief but excited pitch during the 1960s:
Sweet Potato Flakes--Food Processing Research Story
'Where do you keep the flaked sweet potatoes?'
That's a phrase we'll soon be hearing in grocery stores and supermarkets. In fact, sweet potatoes could become as good a seller as flaked white potatoes. Flaking could be the answer to a problem which has long plagued the sweet potato industry--off grad-potatoes."
Food Processing Information, 1962
What About The Family Farm?
The modernization of farming was very exciting to many, but although it meant good things for large corporate farms, it also meant bad things for small family farms. Large farms had the extra funds to invest in new farming implements, more expensive seeds, and better chemicals and fertilizers. They could weather downturns in the economy better because of their size, and they could sell in bulk. The days of the small commercial family farm were ending, and many small commercial farmers were either forced from their land or forced into subsistence farming.