Fresh Take: Drought, Extreme Heat And A European Vacation

Food & Drink

I ’m back from the Mediterranean, and I’m here to be your very own climate change canary. Spending time in Malta and Sicily was replenishing, but existing with enough water and shade was a challenge amid the worst heatwave Europe’s ever recorded. Temperatures soared well above 100 degrees many days, and while I could endure the heat, what stuck with me the most was the ramifications—on longtime residents, their businesses and their community infrastructure.

Blackouts were common—partially because so many people were using their air conditioning on full blast that the energy grids were overwhelmed beyond relief. While traveling around the Maltese island of Gozo, restaurants were closed due to the power issues, while stocked home freezers full of fish and meat defrosted with no recourse. Winemakers bemoaned the heat—for the businesses as well as their next vintage, from grapes that will be picked in a few weeks. Around Sicily’s olive capital of Castelvetrano, I visited an ancient grain mill and a pasta factory where managers had been worrying whether they would be able to secure enough energy for the next run. Then wildfires around Palermo and Catania killed at least three and shut down airports.

July was the hottest month ever recorded worldwide. Of course, the heat eventually broke—but I experienced a taste of what’s to come. Sure enough, once the heatwave ended in Europe, another major one broke out in America. Plus-100-degree temperatures are still ripping in the Pacific Northwest and around the Rocky Mountains. More heat is expected to hit the Great Plains in a few days, while drought persists in the Midwest. This makes the already excruciating work of farming and harvesting even more difficult—and dangerous—while hurting crop yields, from apples in Washington to soybeans in Kansas.

— Chloe Sorvino, Staff Writer


Order my book, Raw Deal: Hidden Corruption, Corporate Greed and the Fight for the Future of Meat, out now from Simon & Schuster’s Atria Books.


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Afresh is still a nascent business—Forbes estimates that its revenue last year was under $10 million—but it’s growing fast. And as AI-powered ordering gains wider adoption, the technology could help cut food waste at the store level in half by 2030, according to the Pacific Coast Collaborative, a multi-state governmental initiative to reduce greenhouse gasses.

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Field Notes

I’ve eaten more prawn heads than I could possibly count. I was lucky enough to travel during Sicily’s peak season for the delicious red shrimp, known there as gamberi rossi, that are mostly fished out of the western port town of Mazara. I ordered them pretty much whenever I could—marinated and raw, in pasta, with stracciatella or burrata, fried in a fritto misto, grilled. These raw beauties come from Da Vittorio, a beachside trattoria in Menfi on Sicily’s southern coast, which was recommended to me by author Katie Parla, who recently published a cookbook on the Food of the Italian Islands.

Thanks for reading the 81st edition of Forbes Fresh Take! Let me know what you think. Subscribe to Forbes Fresh Take here.


Chloe Sorvino leads coverage of food and agriculture as a staff writer on the enterprise team at Forbes. Her book, Raw Deal: Hidden Corruption, Corporate Greed and the Fight for the Future of Meat, published on December 6, 2022, with Simon & Schuster’s Atria Books. Her nearly nine years of reporting at Forbes has brought her to In-N-Out Burger’s secret test kitchen, drought-ridden farms in California’s Central Valley, burnt-out national forests logged by a timber billionaire, a century-old slaughterhouse in Omaha and even a chocolate croissant factory designed like a medieval castle in northern France.

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