DB—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 19,1981 Fast food generation Do you ever get the feeling that the fast food industry is trying to replace the family dinner table? That its ultimate goal is to com pletely take over the feeding of America’s people? It hasn’t happened yet, but given enough time and the current trend,, there’s little doubt that mom’s cooking will be replaced by some fast food creation in a plastic box complete with napkins, salt and pepper, a packet of ketchup everything but the Alka Seltzer. I can see the time when youngsters will grow up not knowing the joys of good home cooking, and instead of bragging about their mother’s cooking they will debate the merits of the various fast food outlets. Fast food restaurants are very perceptive when it comes to un derstanding the American mind. They study the trends of working mothers, school kids and busy families that lack the time and the motivation to gather around the dinner table two or three times a day. And so they offer in foil and plastic a variety of food items ranging from your basic ham burger to make-believe spare ribs. There’s hardly a food entree that some fast food organization hasn’t at least experimented with to see if it can be sold in a ready-to-go Farm Talk Jerry Webb package. While hamburgers and cheeseburgers are still number one and number two, it’s in teresting to note that number three and number four are a ham and cheese sandwich and a plain ham sandwich. Then there are all of those other combinations like Canadian bacon, beef steak, chicken, fish, sizzle chops, and on and on. What was once a simple ham burger and french fry business has turned into a 24 hour a day operation providing all your daily needs from a cup of coffee to a full dinner. And it’s still ready in a hurry and packaged to go. I remember quite vividly my first visit to a McDonalds. That was back in the late 1950 s in Missouri and I was attending a wedding in the state capitol. Following a rehearsal, we went out for a quick bite and someone directed us to McDonalds. There it was, looking like a procelam gas station, with big yellow arches holding it up. As I recall, hamburgers were about 15 cents and french fries were a dime and they were made from real potatoes right on the premises. It wasn’t home cooking but it was quick and cheap, and it met a nr'ntiouai need .... habit. Now those fast food restaurants are everywhere, springing up like gas stations at busy intersections, touting their products on television and in the newspapers and offering all kinds of incentives including games, special glasses, cash prizes, comic books, and trick or treat coupons. It’s interesting to note that the generic name that is applied to these places has been and probably always will be fast food restaurants. I suppose that designation excuses a multitide of sms, including too much grease, not enough flavor, and more wrapping than content. I’ve often though at the con clusion of one of those gastronomic experiences that if possible I might be better off to eat the packaging and throw the food away. There would be more of it and it might even taste better. It’s not that I’m against fast food restaurants; they clearly have a place. But when I realize that somewhere in the future they may be the only place to eat, I get concerned. When the current generation grows up on McDonalds and Burger Kings and Roy Rogers and all of those others, and only oc casionally gets the rare treat of a PETERSHEIM'S STORE RDI Christiana, PA 1 mi. East of Nickel Mines Hours; Mon -Fn. 7-8: Sat. 7-6 home cooked meal, what will another generation do? Will our society become populated with people who won’t realize that beef also comes in roasts and steaks? Or that a whole „ham properly prepared and served with the right additions is much tastier and more nutritious ■ than a ham sandwich and fries. ’’M ...uid And will the job of eating home cooked foods with all of their ethnic and regional variations be replaced by the corporate ham burger, reconstituted and frozen french fries and a shake that contains no dairy products? Despite a recent study! that USDA announces CCC WASHINGTON, D.C. - Beginning Jan. 1, the interest rate on Commodity Credit Corporation loans will be set at the rate charged CCC by the U.S. Treasury during the month that the loan is issued, according to Secretary of Agriculture John R. Block. Loans disbursed since April 1, 1981, and which have interest rates subject to change, will have their interest rates adjusted Jan. 1. 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Z Phone 717-354-4341 T Daily market Report • Phone 717-354-7288 a Abe Diffenbach, Manager *•♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ your gas, oil, or eiectric fuel bill. • Effectively transfers heated air into your home. • Beautifully styled—blends with any decor. • Meets U/L Standards as tested by Arnold Greene Testing Laboratories, Inc. Burns wood or coal. 100 STOVER DRIVE CARLISLE, PA 17013 PHONE (717) 249-6720 supports the nutritional merits of fast food, I still hope for the con tinuation of home cooking. I hope that children boys and girls will still learn to cook and that a fast food dinner will be the ex ception rather than the rule reserved for - the occasional time when nobody in the family has time to cook. Maybe I long for a simpler time a bygone day with family gathered around a dinner table piled high with the best of agriculture’s abundance. Somehow I just can’t picture that table loaded up with, today’s fast food cardboard containers and foil wrappers. a 14.5 percent interest rate, will be adjusted to the interest rate charged CCC by the Treasury in January. Previously, CCC interest rates were set semi-annually ow April land Oct. 1. The interest rate paid by CCC has declined from a peak of 16.75 percent in October to 13,625 per cent mis month. Farmers should benefit from this downward trend in interest rates, Block said. Only s sB9°° IC. *1