Contents
Sustainability
Producing Food
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Op-ed: Saving Heirloom Seeds Can Protect Crop Diversity (Civil Eats, January 2022)
Food Policy
- The Washington Post: How a national food policy could save millions of American lives
- Food Policy (Peer-reviewed journal): Special Issue on GMOs: July 2018:
- McClukskey J, Wesseler JH, Winfree JA. (2018). The economics and politics GM food labeling: An introduction to the special issue. Food Policy, 78(3), 1-5.
- Bovay J and Alston J. (2018). GMO food labels in the United States: Economic implications of the new law. Food Policy, 78(3), 14-25.
- Lusk J, McFadden B, Wilson N. (2018. Do consumers care how a genetically engineered food was created or who created it? Food Policy, 78(3), 81-90.
Food Justice
- Longo, P. (2016). Food justice and sustainability: a new revolution. Agriculture and Agricultural Science Procedia, 8, 31 – 36.
- Ferguson, R. (2019). Why We Can’t Separate Justice and Sustainability in the Food System.The Equation; Union of Concerned Scientists.
- Penniman L. (2017). 4 Not-So-Easy Ways to Dismantle Racism in the Food System. Yes Magazine.
- Leland J. (2023). Politics, Police, Pozole: The Battle for Sunset Park. New York Times.
Food Waste
- The World Wastes Tons of Food. A Grocery ‘Happy Hour’ Is One Answer. – NY Times, September 8, 2019
- Chandler A (2016). Why Americans Lead the World in Food Waste. The Atlantic.
Recipes
- Applesauce (Canned)
- Candied Citrus Peel and Lemon-Lime Curd with Rosemary Sables
- Peach Jam (Canned)
- Pickled Green Beans (Canned)
- Plum Conserve (Canned)
- Red Pepper Marmalade (Canned)
- Roasted Carrots with Carrot-Top Pesto
- Spicy Hot Sauce (Canned)
- Strawberry-Basil Jam (Canned)
- Sweet Cherry Ketchup (Canned)
- Zucchini Salsa (Canned)
- Cranberry Sauce with Ridges
- Jalapeno Pepper Jelly
- Bread and Butter Pickles
- Grape jam
- Tomato Ketchup
- Green Sauce No. 4

Kate Gardner Burt, PhD, RD is an assistant professor at Lehman College and a registered dietitian and culinary nutritionist. She teaches courses in community and public health nutrition and cultural food and sustainability. Dr. Burt’s research broadly aims to reduce racial and ethnic inequities in community food systems in the Bronx and NYC as a whole. She does this by exploring strategies to strengthen efforts to grow food locally and improve community cohesion and social connectedness to build a more just food system. She also aims to reduce inequities in food systems by increasing opportunities for low-income people of color to excel in dietetics and food-focused careers. She takes a mixed methods, community-based approach to research and currently works with several New York City based non-profit organizations. Dr. Burt received her BS in film and television from Boston University and her MS in exercise physiology and nutrition, RD and PhD in food and nutrition policy from Teachers College, Columbia University. Her first cookbook was published in 2015 by Sterling Publishers, a subsidiary of Barnes and Noble.
