Let me spend just a moment explaining how I look at inflation. As a policymaker, I pay attention to the "core" measures of consumer price inflation as well as the overall "headline" measure of consumer price inflation, because the headline number can be somewhat misleading.
In the simplest measure of core inflation, changes in food and energy prices are eliminated from the calculation. More complicated core inflation measures eliminate prices that are growing both very quickly and very slowly. In any case, the idea is to strip away the "noise" of volatile price changes, so that we can see the underlying inflation trend more clearly.
Of course, the FOMC's mandate is to control overall inflation: the average of all prices, including food and energy, as well as all the other things you buy. But we have found that measures of core inflation tend to be better predictors of future inflation than the headline rate, giving us a better picture of the true inflation trend.