Theme: “Food”
Student: Sophy (IX form)
Teacher: Smirnova T. V.
Kostanai, 2002
P L A N:
1. Food celebrates life.
2. Food nourishes language.
3. Food for different cultures:
a. From land and sea
b. From high in the mountains
c. Meals in Britain
d. American food and drink
e. Kazakh traditional dishes
4. Food is symbolic.
5. Food as a fad or cult.
6. Plan a healthful diet.
7. Food is the staff of life.
“Every man is the builder of a temple called his body (1817-1862)
”
Thoreau, Henry Davia
English will have become an important tool for communication and
discovery rather than just another class to attend. And we would
like to look at the all-important topic, Food.
Food Celebrates Life.[1]
Have you ever noticed how much of our life is centered on food?
Look at all the meetings held, decisions made, and mergers
consummated over a meal: power breakfast, power lunch, dinners,
banquets, receptions, and those endless toasts. Consider all the
celebrations where food is all-important: weddings, birthdays,
religious feast days, national holidays, etc. Food is the great
icebreaker when people meet for pleasure or business. Food is at
the center of many of our important activities.
Food Nourishes Language.[2]
Because of this importance, much of our language (regardless of the
language) contains references to food. These references conjure up
images worth a thousand words each. The idiom page contains several
references to food and shows how these are used in a
non-food-related discussion. Think about the idioms and expressions
in your native language related to food and how and when you use
them. Do you use food expressions to describe someone’s physical
characteristics (e.g., He’s as skinny as a string bean; his belly
shakes like a bowl full of jelly.); or, to describe someone’s
personality (e.g., Harry is a cre3am puff; she’s as sweet as
sugar.) or, to describe a situation or activity (e.g., Something is
fishy here; That crossword puzzle is a piece of cake.). How we use
food expressions depends on how we perceive the food, or the
culture associated with the food.
Food For Different Cultures.[3]
Have you ever stopped to really think about what you and your
family eat
everyday and why? Have you ever stopped to think what other people
eat? In the movie Indiana Jones and Temple of Doom, there are two
scenes in which the two characters are offered meals from a
different culture. One meal, meant to break the ice, consisted of
insects. The second meal was a lavish banquet that featured such
delicacies as roasted beetles, live snakes, eyeball soup, and
chilled monkey brains for dessert. Some cultures eat such things as
vipers and rattlesnakes, bush rats, dog meat, horsemeat, bats,
animal heart, liver, eyes, and insects of all sorts.
Often the differences among cultures in the foods they eat are
related to the differences in geography and local resources. People
who live near water ( the sea, lakes, and rivers) tend to eat more
fish and crustaceans. People who live in colder climates tend to
eat heavier, fatty foods. However, with the development of a global
economy, food boundaries and differences are beginning to
dissipate: McDonalds is now on every continent expect Antarctica,
and tofu and yogurt are served all over the world.
Mexico: Beans and rice[4] Corn tortillas (2 servings) Black beans
(2 servings) Rice (2 servings) Salsa
Morocco: Couscous4 Couscous (wheat pasta) Carrots Zucchini Peppers
Chickpeas Lamb
India: Sag paneer4
Indian cheese (2 servings) Spinach Peppers Oil Onion Rice (2
servings) Chapati (wheat bread)
Italy: Spaghetti[5] Spaghetti (2 servings) Tomato sauce (2
servings) Parmesan cheese Chicken breasts, baked
Japan: Tempura5 Shrimp Eggplant Peppers Mushrooms Flour Oil Egg
white Rice (2 servings)
USA: Barbecue chicken and potato salad5 Chicken breast, barbecue
Potatoes Mayonnaise Onion Peppers Corn (1 ear)
What do people eat?
Many factors determine the foods that people eat. Geography and
climate, tradition and history: They all go into our meals. In
European country of Spain and the Asian country of Nepal, different
cultures and customs affect what people eat.
From Land and Sea.[6]
Spain occupies most of the Iberian Peninsula, on the western edge
of Europe. It is nearly surrounded by the Atlantic Ocean and the
Mediterranean Sea.
Spain’s dry climate and poor soil make farming difficult. Extensive
irrigation allows farmers to raise strawberries and rice in dry
areas. Vegetables and citrus trees grow on the coastal plains, and
olives and grapes grow in the river valleys.
The grasslands of the large dry central plateau are used for
grazing sheep, goats, and cattle. People in this region eat roasted
and boiled meats. They also raise pigs for ham and spicy sausage
called chorizo. And people all over the country eat lots of seafood
from the Atlantic and the Mediterranean.
One classic Spanish dish, paella, includes sausage, mussels,
lobster, or chicken, plus red pepper, peas, tomatoes, and saffron
rice. Peasants were the first to make paella, using whatever food
was available. But this dish and others also reflect Spain’s
history of traders, conquerors, and explorers who brought a variety
of food by land and by sea.
Phoenicians from the Middle East introduced grapes to Spain in
about 1100B.C. Hundreds of years later, Romans brought olives from
what is now Italy. In the 8th century A.D., Moors (Muslim Arabs and
Berbers from Africa) introduced shortgrain rice and za faran, or
saffron – the spice that colors rice yellow. And in the 1400s,
1500s, and 1600s, Spanish explorers and traders returned home with
nutmeg and cloves from the East Indies: and peppers, tomatoes,
potatoes, and chocolate from the Americas.
From High in the Mountains.[7]
Nepal is a landlocked country in the Himalayas, the highest
mountain range in the world. Nepal has three distinct geographical
zones – lowlands; hills, mountains, and valleys; and the Great
Himalayan Range – with subtropical to alpine-arctic temperatures
and wide variations in vegetation and animal life.
Most people in Nepal are farmers. They grow fruits, fruits, and
other crops in the lowlands, where temperatures are the warmest.
Rice and corn grow in terraced, or stairlike, fields in the cooler
hill regions. And potatoes and barley are the staple, or chief,
crops at higher elevations, where temperatures are the coolest.
The Nepal raise goats, cattle, and yaks for dairy products. Meat is
eaten mostly on special occasions. Religious rules affect which
meats people in Nepal eat: Hindus, who make up almost 90 percent of
the population, do not eat beef, and Muslims do not eat pork. The
Buddhist religion prohibits the killing of any animals but allows
the eating of meat, so Buddhists hire butchers to slaughter animals
for food.
A typical family meal in Nepal might include daal bhat (rice with
lentil gravy) or chapati (a flatbread), steamed vegetables, and
achaar (a paste of spiced pickled fruits). About 90 percent of the
Nepalese people live in rural areas. They often lack electricity
for refrigerators or for cooking, so they rely on dried foods such
as grains, lentils, and beans.
People carry traditions and foods with them when they move from one
place to another. You might recognize examples when you look at
your classmates’ special family foods or at specialty restaurants
in your community.
Meals in Great Britain.[8]
The two features of life in England that possibly give visitors
their worst impressions are the English weather and English
cooking.
A traditional English breakfast is a very big meal – sausages,
bacon, eggs, tomatoes, and mushrooms. People who do have a full
breakfast say that it is
quite good. The writer Somerset Maugham once gave the following
advice: “If you want to eat well in England, eat three breakfasts
daily.” But nowadays it is often a rather hurried and informal
meal. Many people just have cereal with milk and sugar, or toast
with marmalade, jam, or honey. Marmalade and jam are not the same!
Marmalade is made from oranges and jam is made from other fruits.
The traditional breakfast drink is tea, which people have with cold
milk. Some people have coffee, often instant coffee, which is made
with just hot water. Many visitors to Britain find this coffee
disgusting!
For many people lunch is a quite meal. In cities there are lot of
sandwich bars, where office workers can choose the kind of bread
they want – brown, white, or a roll – and then all sorts of salad
and meat or fish to go in the sandwich. Pubs often serve good,
cheap food both hot and cold. School-children can have a hot meal
at school, but many just take a snack from home – a sandwich, a
drink, some fruit and perhaps some crisps. British kids eat more
sweets than any other nationality.
“Tea” means two things. It is a drink and a meal! Some people have
afternoon tea, with sandwiches, cakes, and, of course, a cup of
tea. Cream teas are popular. You have scones (a kind of cake) with
cream and jam.
The evening meal is the main meal of the day for many people. They
usually have it quite early, between 6.00 and 8.00, and often the
whole family eats together.
On Sundays many families have a traditional lunch. They have roast
meat, either beef, lamb, chicken, or pork, with potatoes,
vegetables, and gravy. Gravy is a sauce made from the meat
juice.
The British like food from other countries, too, especially
Italian, French, Chinese, and Indian. The British have in fact
always imported food from abroad. From the time of the Roman
invasion foreign trade was a major influence on British cooking.
Another important influence on British cooking was of course
the weather. The good old British rain gives us rich soil and green
grass, and means that we are able to produce some of the finest
varieties of meat, fruit and vegetables, which don’t need fancy
sauces or complicated recipes to disguise their taste. People often
get take-away meals – you buy the food at the restaurant and than
bring it home to eat. Eating in Britain is quite international!
British Cuisine.[9]
Some people criticize English food. They say it’s unimaginable,
boring, tasteless, it’s chips with everything and totally
overcooked vegetables.
The basic ingredients, when fresh, are so full of flavour that
British haven’t had to invent sauces to disguise their natural
taste. What can compare with fresh pees or new potatoes just boiled
and served with butter? Why drown spring lamb in wine or cream and
spices, when with just one or two herbs it is absolutely
delicious?
If you ask foreigners to name some typically English dishes, they
will probably say “Fish and chips” then stop. It is disappointing,
but true that, there is no tradition in England of eating in
restaurants, because the food doesn’t lend itself to such
preparations. English cooking is found at home so it is difficult
to find a good English restaurant with a reasonable prices.
In most cities in Britain you’ll find Indian, Chinese, French and
Italian restaurants. in London you’ll also find Indonesian,
Mexican, Greek… Cynics will say that this is because English have
no “cuisine” themselves, but this is not quite the true.
English breakfast.[10]
All people in the world have breakfast, and most people eat and
drink the same things for breakfast. They may eat different things
for all the other meals in the day, but at breakfast time, most
people have the same things to eat and drink – Tea or Coffee, Bread
and butter, Fruit.
Some people eat meat for breakfast. English people usually eat meat
at
breakfast time, but England is a cold country. It is bad to eat
meat for breakfast in hot country. It is bad to eat too much meat;
if you eat meat for breakfast, you eat meat three times a day; and
that is bad in a hot country. It is also bad to eat meat and drink
tea at the same time, for tea makes meat hard so that the stomach
cannot deal with it
The best breakfast is Tea or Coffee, bread and Butter, fruit. That
is the usual breakfast of most people in the world.
How tea was first drunk in Britain.11
By the time tea was first introduced into this country (1660),
coffee had already been drunk for several years.
By 1750 tea had become the most popular beverage for all types and
classes of people – even though a pound of tea cost a skilled
worker perhaps a third of his weekly wage!
Tea ware.
Early tea cups had no handles, because they were originally
imported from China. Chinese cups didn’t (and still don’t) have
handles.
As tea drinking grew in popularity, it led to a demand for more and
more tea ware. This resulted in the rapid growth of the English
pottery and porcelain industry, which not long after became world
famous for its products.
The tea break.
Nowadays, tea drinking is no longer a proper, formal, «social»
occasion. We don't dress up to “go out to tea” anymore. But one tea
ceremony is still very important in Britain – the Tea Break!
Millions of people in factories and offices look forward to their
tea breaks in the morning and afternoon Things to do. 1) Make a
display of as many pictures, cut from magazines. As you can showing
different kinds of tea pots and tea cups. 2) Design your own kind
of tea pots and tea cups.
American food and drink.[11]
The popular view outside the U.S.A. that Americans survive on
cheeseburgers, Cokes and French fries is as accurate as the
American popular view that the British live on tea and
fish’n’chips, the Germans only on beer, bratwurst, and sauerkraut,
and the French on red wine and garlic.
This view comes from the fact that much of what is advertised
abroad as “American food” is a very pretty flat, tasteless
imitation. American beef, for example, comes from specially
grain-fed cattle, not from cows that are raised mainly for milk
production. As a result, American beef is more tender and tasted
better than what is usually offered as an “American steak” in
Europe. When sold abroad, the simple baked potato that comes hot
and whole in foil often lacks the most important element, the
famous Idaho potato. This has different texture and skin that comes
from the climate and soil in Idaho.
Even sometimes as basic as barbecue sauces shows difference from
many of the types found on supermarket shelves overseas. A fine
barbecue sauce from the Southside of Chicago has its own fire and
soul. The Texas have a competition each year for the hottest
barbecue sauce (the recipes are kept secret).
America has two strong advantages when it comes to food. The first
is that as the leading agriculture nation, she has always been well
supplied with fresh meats, fruits, and vegetables in great variety
at relatively low prices. This is one reason why steak or beef
roast is probably the most “typical” American food; it has always
been more available. But good Southern-fried chicken also has
champions, as do hickory-smoked or sugar- cured hams, turkey, fresh
lobster, and other seafood such as crabs or clams.
In a country with widely different climates and many fruit and
vegetable growing regions, such items as fresh grapefruit, oranges,
lemons, melons, cherries, peaches, or broccoli, iceberg lettuce,
avocados, and cranberries do not have to be imported. This is one
reason why fruit dishes and salads are so
common. Family vegetable gardens have been very popular, both as a
hobby and as a way to save money, from the days when most Americans
were farmers. They also help to keep fresh food on the table.
The second advantage America has enjoyed is that immigrants have
brought with them, and continue to bring, the traditional foods of
their countries and cultures. The variety of foods and styles is
simply amazing. Whether Armenian, Basque, Catalonian, Creole,
Danish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Italian, traditional
Jewish, Latvian, Mexican, Vietnamese or what have you, these
traditions are now also at home in the U.S.A.
There seem to be four trends in America at present which are
connected with foods and dining. First, there has been a notable
increase in the number of reasonably priced restaurants which offer
specialty foods. These include those that specialize in many
varieties and types of pancakes, those that offer only fresh, baked
breakfast foods, and the many that are buffets or salad bars.
Secondly, growing numbers of Americans are more regularly going out
to eat in restaurants. One reason is that they are not many
American women do not feel that their lives are best spent in the
kitchen. They would rather pay a professional chef and also enjoy a
good meal. At the same time, there is an increase in fine cooking
as a hobby for both men and women. For some two decades now, these
have been popular television series on all types and styles of
cooking, and the increasing popularity can easily be seen in the
number of best-selling specialty cookbooks and the number of stores
that specialize in often exotic cooking devices and spices.
A third is that as a result of nationwide health campaigns,
Americans in general are eating a much light diet. Cereals and
grain foods, fruit and vegetables, fish and salads are emphasized
instead of heavy and sweet foods. Finally, there is the
international trend to “fast food” chains which sell pizza,
hamburgers, Mexican foods, chicken, salads and sandwiches, seafoods
and
various ice creams. While many Americans and many other people
resent this trend and while, as many be expected, restaurants also
dislike it, many young, middle-aged, and old people, both rich and
poor, continue to buy and eat fast foods.
Hot Dogs.[12]
Tad Dorgan, a sports cartoonist, gave the frankfurter its nickname
in 1906. Munching on a frank at a baseball game, he concluded that
it resembled a dachshund’s body and put that whimsy into a drawing,
which he captioned “Hot dog”.
Sausages go all the way back to ancient Babylon, but the hot dog
was brought to the U.S.A. shortly before the Civil War by a real
Frankfurter – Charles Feltman, a native of Frankfurt, Germany, who
opened a stand in New York and sold grilled sausages on warmed
rolls – first for a dime apiece, later, a nickel.
The frank appealed to busy Americans, who – as an early 19th
century comment put it – tend to live by the maxim of “gobble, gulp
and go”. Nowadays Americans consume more than 12 billion
frankfurters a year.
Hamburgers.
12
Modern hamburgers on a bun were first served at the St. Louis Fair
in 1904, but Americans really began eating them in quantity in the
1920s, when the White Castle snack bar chain featured a small,
square patty at a very low price. Chopped beef, tasty and easily
prepared, quickly caught on as family fare, and today hamburger
stands, drive-ins, and burger chains offer Americans their favorite
hot sandwich at every turn.
The history of the hamburger dates back to medieval Europe. A
Tartar dish of shredded raw beef seasoned with salt and onion juice
was brought from Russia to Germany by early German sailors. The
lightly broiled German chopped-beef cake, with pickles and
pumpernickel on the side, was introduced to America in the early
1800s by German immigrants in the Midwest.
Doughnuts.12
It was early Dutch settlers and the Pennsylvania Germans who
introduced the yeasty, deep-fried doughnut to America. To the Dutch
it was a festive food, eaten for breakfast on Shrove Sunday.
Legend has it that doughnut got its hole in 1847 when Hanson
Gregory, a lad later to become a sea captain, complained to his
mother that her fried cakes were raw in the center and poked hole4s
in the next batch before they were cooked.
During World War I, when the Salvation Army served them to the
troops, doughnuts really took off as popular fare. Since then,
coffee and doughnuts become a national institution. Stores sell
them plain, sugared, frosted, honey-dipped, or jam-filled.
Apple pie[13]
At its best, with a savory filling and crisp, light-brown crust,
apple pie has long been favorite on American tables.
Apples and apple seems were among the precious supplies the early
colonists brought to the New World. The first large apple orchards
were planted near Boston by William Blaxton in the 1600s. When he
moved to Rhode Island in 1635, he developed the tart Rhode Island
Greening, still considered one of America’s finest apple pies.
As the fruit became abundant, many settlers ate apple pie at every
meal. Garnished with a chunk of cheese, it was a favorite colonial
breakfast dish. By the 18th century apple pie became so popular
that Yale College in New Haven served it every night at supper for
more than 100 years.
America’s love affair with apple pie has remained constant. Today’s
housewives, pressed for time, can shortcut the tradition by buying
the pastry ready-made at bakeries and supermarkets. Many variation
on the good old original are available, but the classical apple
pie, irresistible when topped with a slice of rat-trap cheese or
slathered with vanilla ice cream, is still America’s favorite.
Potato chips.13
George Crumb, an American Indian who was the chef at Moon’s Lake
House in Saratoga Springs, New York, in the mid-19th century, was
irked when a
finicky dinner guest kept sending back his French fried potatoes,
complaining they were too thick. In exasperation, Crumb shaved the
potatoes into tissue-thin slice and deep-fried them in oil. He had
a dishful of crisp “Saratoga chips” presented to the guest, who was
delighted with the new treat.
Potato chips became the specialty of Moon’s Lake House and, later,
America’s crunchiest between-meal snack.
Coca-Cola.14
America’s best known soft drink was first concocted by an Atlanta
pharmacist in 1886. The syrup was cooked up by John S. Pemberton
from extracts of coca leaves and the kola nut. He then organized
the Pemberton Chemical Company, and Coca-Cola syrup mixed with
plain water was sold in a local drug-store for 5 cents a glass.
Sales were slow until in 1887 a prosperous Atlanta druggist, Asa G.
Candler, bought the Coca-Cola formula – then as now a carefully
guarded secret – and added carbonate water to the syrup instead of
plain water.
Advertisement stressing the words “delicious” and “refreshing” and
carry coupons for free Coca-Cola added to the increase in
consumption. A system of independent local bottling companies was
developed, and the flared bottle, familiar worldwide and said to
resemble the hobble skirt, was designed in 1916.
In 1919 the company was sold out for $25 million to a group headed
by Ernest Woodruff. Under his son, Robert W. Woodruff, Coca-Cola
rapidly expanded its market. By the mid-1970s more than 150 million
Cokes a day were sold in country all over the world.
Today Coca-Cola has to compete with many other soft drinks, but it
is still one of the symbols of the United States.
Kazakh traditional dishes.15
The mode of life of people, traditional craft, interrelations.
Customs and traditions are, perhaps, well comprehended through
traditional dishes. The
methods of cooking, which the Kazakh people used were closely
linked with the culture and mode of life. The table manners of
nomads, filled with so many customs, rituals, special behavior find
its place in our time. The strict nomadic life laws have created
moral and ethic norm. The whole clan and tribe shared the joys and
sorrows of life, any unexpected traveler was an honored guest. Any
steppe inhabitant knew, that he was a welcome guest and had a right
to his share. This steppe tradition was strictly observed and is
still observed today by the host. Some time later this violation
merited a sort of punishment. That explains why every host regarded
the ritual of hospitality as sacred rule and welcomed guests warmly
and with all attention and kindly saw them off with good
wishes.
The main traditional dish of Kazakh is besbarmak. It is mostly
served for the guests and eaten by hands (bes barmak – means five
finger). Besbarmak is usually cooked of fat mutton and parts of
smoked horse meat and horse delicacies like kazy and shyzhyk. The
meat is boiled and separately is boiled thin paste. Boiled parts of
meat are put on the paste and spiced with a special flavoring
called tuzduk. As the custom demands the host serves the meal in
special crockey – tabak. The bas-tabak, which is placed before the
most honourable guests is used to serve the mutton head, zhambas,
horse meat delicacy and other fatty parts. The esteemed guest
(usually the oldest one) cuts bit and part from the head and offers
them to the other guests at the table. The secret of distribution
of parts of the meat from the head lies in traditional wishes. When
given the palate, it expresses the wish – “be wise and eloquent”,
the larynx – a gift to sing, skin of forehead – “be the first among
equals”. Meanwhile one or two dzhigits (young man), sitting next to
the esteemed guest start cutting the boiled parts of meat to pieces
and the dish is again spiced with tuzdyk. The guests are offered to
help themselves to the dish. The youth and children usually sit at
sides of the table dastarkhan. They receive meat directly
from the elders. The custom is called asatu and symbolized the
desire of the youth to experience the long and good life the elders
have experienced. When all the meat and sorpa ( soup with large fat
content) have been eaten and drank, the most respected guest thanks
the hostess on behalf of all the guests and blesses the hosts of
that house.
In our days the main features of this old ritual and table
etiquette exist, are carefully kept, followed and passes to their
traditions.
Food is Symbolic.16
Throughout history, food has been used as a symbol of wealth or
gratitude, or to demonstrate position and power. In some cultures,
eating lavish and exotic meals is a sign of wealth and power,
whereas eating only the basic foods is a of sign belonging to a
more common class. In some cultures, the offer of a glass of cool,
clean water is the greatest compliment or honor one can receive. In
some cultures, whenever you receive s guest, whether for business
or pleasure, you must offer them something to eat or drink: the
more lavish the offering signifies the amount of respect or honor
you give that person. Diet is not a consideration.
For centuries, food has been a key element in religious rituals.
Food was used as offering to the gods and their high priests and
priestesses. Food has been considered a form of tithing to a church
or religious sect. Certain foods such as lamp, bread, and bitter
herbs are religious symbols in some ceremonies.
The sharing of food demonstrates acceptance, friendship, family,
and love. To be invited to “break bread” with a family, in many
cultures shows respect and is a sign of friendship and acceptance.
Literature is full of examples of lovers using food to show their
devotion and respect foe each other: one of the most famous being
the line from the Rubaiyal of Omar Khayyam, “ A Jug of Wine, a Loaf
of Bread – and Thou…” in the West, chocolate and sweets have long
been a symbolic exchange of affection between lovers. So, why do we
eat the things we do? First, let’s established that not everything
we like to meat is all that good for us, unfortunately. For
example, there is much debate over the value of chocolate – yes, it
does have some redeeming qualities aside from just tasting
wonderful.
Food as a Fad or Cult.17
Food has often found a niche for itself in popular culture. Eating
or entertaining with certain foods has often been a fad or cult.
Whichever group you associate with or aspire to be like will
dictate which fad you follow. For example, in the late “70s and 80s
in the U.S., salads were the “in” food for the yuppie crowd (the
young, upwardly-mobile group). Salad bars (restaurants where salad
is the primary food) sprang up everywhere. There were so many types
of salads, garnishes, and salad dressings that were invented, it
was impossible to keep up with them all.
Of course many people ate salads because they were on diets. Thin
was “in” and so everyone who was “in” or aspiring to be “in” wanted
to lose weight. Actually, throughout most of the ’80s and 90s there
has been an obsession with dieting. Now, however, dieting is not a
politically correct word. There are so many schemes and foods out
in the stores for people to use lose weight; there are even
substances that promise if you take them you can eat all you want
and still lose weight.
Aside form diets and salads, there are the foods that people eat
because their favorite athlete, musician, or actor eats that brand
or kind for food. The cultural icons over the last several years
have been exploited to promote the sale of different foods or food
substitutes. Whatever Michael Jordan, Mel Gibson, or Oprah Winfrey
drink and eat, the ardent fans, wannabes and admirers worldwide try
to eat and drink. People don’t always pay attention to how truly
nutritious something is; if the in-crowed or the cultural icon they
aspire to be like eat it, they will get it. Pop culture is a
powerful force.
Food is the Staff of life.18
Regardless of how you view food, you need it to live. You need the
right kinds of food in the right amounts to have a healthy life.
Your needs for different kinds of food change as grow and mature.
Everyone needs the three key nutrients that provide the body with
energy and the necessary building blocks: carbohydrates (sugar and
starch), fat, and protein. Unfortunately, in our world today, not
every one has access to all of these all the time. World hanger is
a global problem that needs to be addressed by all nations.
The right type and kind of foods the body needs to grow, develop,
and stay healthy are not known by everyone. A good, daily, balanced
diet is key to a healthy life. Do you have a balanced diet? Do you
know what you eat every
day? Why do you think you eat the foods you eat? Eating the right
food everyday not only nourishes our bodies, but it also nourishes
our spirits, our creativity and thinking, and our language and
interaction with other people.
What Counts as a serving?19
The amount of food that counts as a serving is listed. If you eat a
large portion, count it as more than one serving. For example, Ѕ
cup of cooked pasta counts as one serving in the bread, cereal,
rice, and pasta group. If you eat 1 cup of pasta that would be 2
servings. If you eat less than Ѕ cup, count it as part of a
serving.
For mixed foods, do the best you can to decide the food groups and
to estimate the servings of the main ingredients. Pizza would count
in the Bread Group (crust), the Milk Group (cheese), and the
Vegetable Group (tomato). Beef stew would count in the Meat Group
and Vegetable Group.
|Bread, Cereal, | | |Natural cheddar |1 Ѕ oz | |Rice, and Pasta | |
|cheese | | |Group | | |Processed cheese|2 oz | |Bread |1 slice |1
| |1 Ѕ oz | |Hamburger roll, |1 |2 |Mozzarella, part| | |bagel,
English | | |skim |Ѕ cup | |muffin | | |Ricotta, part |Ѕ cup |
|Tortilla |1 |1 |skim | | |Rice, pasta, |Ѕ cup |1 |Cottage cheese,
|Ѕ cup | |cooked |3-4 |1 |4 % fat |Ѕ cup | |Pain crackers, |1oz |1
|Ice cream |Ѕ cup | |small |2 |2 |Ice milk | | |Breakfast cereal| |
|Frozen yogurt | | | |1 large(2oz)|2 |Meat, Poultry, | | |Pancakes,
4-in | |2 |Fish, Dry Beans,| | |diameter |1medium |2 |Eggs, and
Nuts |3 oz | |Croissant |(2oz) |1 |Group | | |Doughnut |1medium |1
|Lean meat, |3 oz | |Danish |(2oz) |2 |poultry, fish, | | |Cake,
Frosted |1 average | |cooked |3 oz | |Cookies |slice |1 |Ground
beef, |2 slices (1 oz)| |Pie, fruit, |2 medium |1 |cooked | |
|2-crust |1 average | |Chicken, with |1 (1 oz) | |Vegetable Group
|slice |1 |skin | | |Vegetables, | |1 |Bologna |2 Tbsp (1 oz) |
|cooked |2 medium | |Dry beans and |1/3 cup (1 oz) | |Vegetables,
|Ѕ cup |1 |peas, cooked | | |leafy, raw | |1 |Peanut butter | |
|Vegetables, |1cup |1 |Nuts |1 tsp | |nonleafy raw, |Ѕ cup | |Fats,
oils, and |1 Tbsp | |chopped | |1 |Sweets |1 Tbsp | |Potatoes, |Ѕ
cup | |Butter, |1 Tbsp | |scalloped |Ѕ cup |1 |margarine | |
|Potato salad |10 |1 |Mayonnaise |2 Tbsp | |French fries | | |Salad
dressing |1 tsp | |Fruit Group |1 medium |1 |Reduced calorie |12 fl
oz | |Whole fruit: | | |salad dressing |12 fl oz | |apple, orange.
|Ѕ cup | |Sour cream |1 tsp | |Banana |ѕ cup |1 |Sugar, jam, |Ѕ cup
| |Fruit, raw or | |1 |jelly |1 tsp | |canned |ј whole |1 |Cola |1
tsp | |Fruit juice, | |1 |Fruit drink, ade| | |unsweetened | | | |
| |Avocado |1 cup |1 |Chocolate bar | | |Milk, yogurt, |1 cup |
|Sherbet | | |and cheese Group|1 cup |1 |Fruit sorbet | | | |1 cup
| |Gelatin dessert | | |Skim milk | | | | | |Lowfat milk 2 % |8 oz
| | | | |Whole milk | | | | | |Chocolate milk, |8oz | | | | | | | |
| | |2 % | | | | | |Lowfat yogurt, | | | | | |plain | | | | |
|Lowfat yogurt, | | | | | |fruit | | | |1 | | | | | |1 | | | | | |
| | | | | |1 | | | | | |ј | | | | | | | | | | | |1/3 | | | | | |1/3
| | | | | |Ѕ | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | |1 | | | | | | | | | | | |1 | | | | | | | | | | | |1 | | | | |
|1/3 | | | | | |1/3 | | | | | | | | | | | |1/3 | | | | | |1/3 | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | |1 | | | | | |1 | | | | | |1 | | | | |
|1 | | | | | | | | | | | |1 | | | | | |1 | | | | | |1 | | | | | |1
| | | | | |1 | | | | | |1 | | | | | |1 | | | | | |1 | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Plan a healthy Diet
Using the food Guide Pyramid and “What Counts as a Serving?” plan a
full day’s diet that contains the recommended number of servings
for each food group. Be sure that the meals you create are ones you
would actually eat.
Food Items How Number of Total number
Much servings of serving
|Bread Group | | | | | |Vegetable Group | | | | | |Fruit Group | |
| | | |Milk Group | | | | | |Meat Group | | | | | |Fats, Oils, and
| | | | | |Sweets | | | | |
Food Guide Pyramid.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture Food Guide Pyramid is an outline
for making daily food choices for a healthful diet. Researchers now
know that eating a healthful diet reduces the risk of heart
disease, high blood pressure, stroke, certain cancers, and the most
common type of diabetes.
The pyramid shape is related to the recommended daily amounts of
food from each of five major groups and from a sixth grouping of
“extras”. Most people should eat more servings of foods from groups
closer to the base and fewer servings of food from groups closer to
the trip.
For good health you need foods from the five major food groups
shown in the Food Guide Pyramid. At the base of the Pyramid is the
Bread Group, which includes bread, cereal, rice, and paste. On the
next level are the Vegetable Group – including yellow, root, and
green leafy vegetables – and the Fruit Group. On the third level
are the Milk Group – which includes milk, yogurt, and cheese – and
the Meat Group, which includes meat, poultry, fish, dry beans,
eggs, and nuts. The sixth grouping – Fats, Oils, and Sweets – is
shown at the tip of the Pyramid; these extras are grouped together
because they each should be used sparingly.
The knowledge of this theme “Food” makes these practical and
theoretical valuable for those who wanted to grow thin or to grow
fat.
Also material of this report is incased knowledge and enriched this
theme. It is the help for English teachers and students who want to
know more than they have in their books.
Bibliography
. The magazine “Forum” volume 36 number 4 Oct-Dec 1998 . The book
“Brush your English” E.D. Mihailova and A.Y. Romanovich,
Moscow.
2001 . The book “ 1000 English topics” V. Kaverina and V. Boiko,
Moscow, 2000 . The book “ Happy English reader” . The book
“American Studies” V.M. Pavlotskei, St. Peterburg, 1997 . The book
“The USA history and the present” L. Khalilova, 1999 . The book
“Kazakh in brief” G.H. Molkha, Astana . The book “English for
students” I.A. Klapalchenko, Mpscow, 1997 .
----------------------- [1] From the magazine “Forum”.
[2] From the magazine “Forum”.
[3] From the magazine “Forum”. [4] From the magazine “Forum”.
[5] From the magazine “Forum”.
[6] From the magazine “Forum”.
[7] From the magazine “English”. [8] From the book “Brush up your
English” E. D. Mihailova and A. Y. Romanovich [9] From the book
“100 English topics” Kaverina V. And Boiko V.
[10] From the site “www. English for everyone.ru”
11 From the book “Happy English reader”
12 From the book “ American Studies” Pavlotskei V. M. , St.
Petersburg, 1997 [11] From the book “ The USA history and the
present” L. Khalilova
[12] From the book “The USA history and the present” L.
Khalilova
14 From the book “The USA history and the present” L.
Khalilova.
15 From the book “Kazakhstan in brief” G. H. Molkha, Astana, 2002.
16 From the magazine “English”.
17 From the magazine “forum”. 18 From the book “English for
students” I. A. Klepalchenko.
19 From the magazine “Forum”
Food
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Для автора это очень важно, это стимулирует его на новое творчество!