Megan Kimble

Unprocessed: My City-Dwelling Year of Reclaiming Real Food

William Morrow, June 2015

In the tradition of Michael Pollan’s bestselling In Defense of Food comes this remarkable chronicle, from a founding editor of Edible Baja Arizona, of a young woman’s year-long journey of eating only whole, unprocessed foods—intertwined with a journalistic exploration of what “unprocessed” really means, why it matters, and how to afford it.

In January of 2012, Megan Kimble was a twenty-six-year-old living in a small apartment without even a garden plot to her name. But she cared about where food came from, how it was made, and what it did to her body: so she decided to go an entire year without eating processed foods. Unprocessed is the narrative of Megan’s extraordinary year, in which she milled wheat, extracted salt from the sea, milked a goat, slaughtered a sheep, and more—all while earning an income that fell well below the federal poverty line.

What makes a food processed? As Megan would soon realize, the answer to that question went far beyond cutting out snacks and sodas, and became a fascinating journey through America’s food system, past and present. She learned how wheat became white; how fresh produce was globalized and animals industrialized. But she also discovered that in daily life, as she attempted to balance her project with a normal social life—which included dating—the question of what made a food processed was inextricably tied to gender and economy, politics and money, work and play.

Backed by extensive research and wide-ranging interviews—and including tips on how to ditch processed food and transition to a real-food lifestyle—Unprocessed offers provocative insights not only on the process of food, but also the processes that shape our habits, communities, and day-to-day lives.

“I love how Megan effortlessly intertwines her story with all that she learned about the food we eat and how it’s processed … a refreshingly simple approach on where to draw the line.”

— Lisa Leake, #1 New York Times bestselling author of 100 Days of Real Food

“Megan Kimble is the freshest voice in literary food writing since Dan Barber and Tamar Adler have come on the scene. Unprocessed is a stunning debut by a perceptive observer of how our food systems actually work, but it also reveals the hidden faces, processes, and values hidden in our food supply chains in disarmingly graceful prose that will stay in your memory for years to come.”

— Gary Paul Nabhan, author of the award-winning Growing Food in a Hotter Drier Land and Coming Home to Eat