Iceland review - 2014, Side 63

Iceland review - 2014, Side 63
ICELAND REVIEW 61 Sólveig Eiríksdóttir, or Solla as she’s known, head chef at the popular Gló restaurant and Iceland’s best-known health food guru—she’s been working in the business for more than 30 years and was voted Best Raw Chef at the Best of RAW awards 2011 and 2012—is among those to have noticed the trend. “After the crash, people took a good look at the things that actually make a difference in life. Some saw that all this money didn’t really make all that much difference. There are some things you just can’t buy, like good health,” Solla says, noting that there’s been an increase in people growing their own veg- gies again too. As far as Solla’s concerned, eating local and eating healthy are intertwined. “As soon as you start thinking about where your food comes from, you become a lot more aware of what you eat.” The trend towards a healthier lifestyle in Iceland, Solla says, is also in large part due to the ease at which information can be disseminated in a small country. Solla herself has been active in helping to raise awareness of the importance of healthy eating. While she acknowledges the critics’ argument that eating well in Iceland can be expensive, she maintains that for most it’s a choice. “It’s an investment in your future. Take myself as an example. I’m 54 years old and I don’t take any sort of medica- tion. I could choose to eat unhealthy food and put the money I may save aside but I don’t. I choose to eat healthy.” According to Solla, it’s also cheaper to buy some organic products in Iceland than in other countries because they are available in all super- markets, not just the high-end or health food stores. Solla isn’t exactly impartial here as she claims part of the credit for the development, having introduced her own line of cheaper organ- ic and health food products to supermarkets and having sold around 50,000 copies—close to 1 in 6 Icelanders own one—of her healthy eating cookbook Heilsuréttir Hagkaups, published in collaboration with the Hagkaup supermarket chain. “I remember back in 2004, there were just a couple of shelves in Hagkaup and no real health food section in the lower-cost supermarket chains. Now, health food products are available at all the stores and at a lower price,” she beams. A string of other health food restaurants and stores have also opened up in Reykjavík in recent years. Despite the positive trends, Solla is vocal about the need for continued improvement. At 239 grams per day, consumption of fruit and vegetables is still far below the recommended 400 grams, according to the aforementioned 2012 study by the Directorate of Health. The situation in schools and hospitals is particularly worrisome, Solla says. “I held a course at one of the schools a couple of years ago and one of the staff told me that they have just 186 krónur [uSD 1.50, EuR 1.20] per child per day to produce meals. What can you do with 186 krónur?” Solla is also keen to highlight Iceland’s potential to produce a great deal more fresh produce. “We’re the biggest producer of bananas in Europe. Yes, here in Iceland!” she says in reference to a university greenhouse in Hveragerði, South Iceland (the bananas are not available on the market). “We really can grow fruit and vegetables here. It could be a paradise for food produc- tion, if we want.”* heAlth “After the crash, people took a good look at the things that actually make a difference in life.”
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