Showing posts with label restaurants nearby. Show all posts
Showing posts with label restaurants nearby. Show all posts

Monday, July 19, 2021

Do Americans Eat Only Fast Food..? - FOOD ARTICLE

People who come to the United States for the first time think that fast-food defines American food. However, fast-food is only part of American food culture.

Although fast-food restaurants are common, fast-food does not make up most of what Americans usually eat. Many Americans cook food at home. Sometimes that means just heating up processed food in a microwave, but some people still cook from scratch, using multiple ingredients and whole foods. Some Americans follow the idea of the five basic food groups: protein, such as meat, legumes, and nuts; dairy (ex., milk, eggs and cheese); grains (ex., rice and wheat); fruits; and vegetables. Health professionals and the government recommend that everyone eat food from each food group every day.

While the food in fast-food restaurants is often high in calories, cholesterol, and trans fats, fast-food restaurants are starting to offer healthier choices. For example, at McDonald’s, Wendy’s, Burger King, Subway, and Starbucks, you can get salads, fruit and yogurt, or oatmeal. Most sit-down restaurants, like Applebee’s or Denny’s, offer healthy meal options too. These are sometimes found in a special section of the menu, labeled as light, or there may be a picture of a heart next to a menu item. American restaurants also like to serve large portions of food. If Americans leave a restaurant still feeling hungry, they don’t think they got what they paid for and may not recommend the restaurant to others.

Healthy food options are available at supermarkets or grocery stores. You just have to look for them. Grocery stores have lots of fresh produce (fruits and vegetables), grains, and meats year-round. Furthermore, it is common to find special aisles for organic foods, or food that is grown without the use of toxic chemicals such as fertilizers and pesticides. Many people feel that organic food is healthier because it is more natural.

Although conventional grocery stores now sell healthier choices, there are specialty grocery stores that sell mostly organic food. Examples of these stores are Whole Foods, Sprouts, and Trader Joe’s. In addition to supermarkets and grocery stores, farmer’s markets offer a variety of healthy food choices. A farmer’s market is an area of a town or city where locally grown and produced fruits, vegetables, meat, grains, and homemade items such as jams, breads, soaps, and more are sold. Many farmer’s markets are only open on Saturday, and most only operate during late spring, summer, and early fall.

So “What is American food?” It might best be described as a collection of different kinds of food that originated from other parts of the world, but that has been adapted. As American culture is made up of a wide variety of individual, original cultures, American food is made up of a wide variety of dishes that come from those cultures. For example, restaurants featuring Mexican, Italian, and Chinese cuisine are very common in the U.S., even in small towns. It is important to understand that although these kinds of cuisines are called Mexican, Italian, Chinese, etc., the flavors, ingredients, and kinds of dishes may be quite different from what is found in Mexico, Italy, or China.

All in all, while there are a lot of fast-food restaurants in the U.S., and Americans eat a lot of fast-food, it is incorrect to think of American food as being only something that comes from McDonald’s or Pizza Hut. Just as the English language has borrowed words from many different languages and cultures, American food has borrowed from the great and wonderful flavors of the world, adapted them, and created unique dishes which can only be described as one thing: American food.

Thursday, July 15, 2021

how to Reduce Waste Food At Home..? - FOOD ARTICLE

Here are some simple ways to reduce household food waste

Planning Tips

shopping cart with colorful fruits and vegetables in it By simply making a list with weekly meals in mind, you can save money and time and eat healthier food. If you buy no more than what you expect to use, you will be more likely to keep it fresh and use it all. eep a running list of meals and their ingredients that your household already enjoys. That way, you can easily choose, shop for and prepare meals.Make your shopping list based on how many meals you’ll eat at home. 

Will you eat out this week? How often?Plan your meals for the week before you go shopping and buy only the things needed for those meals.Include quantities on your shopping list noting how many meals you’ll make with each item to avoid overbuying. For example: salad greens - enough for two lunches in your refrigerator and cupboards first to avoid buying food you already have, make a list each week of what needs to be used up and plan upcoming meals around it.Buy only what you need and will use. Buying in bulk only saves money if you are able to use the food before it spoils

Storage Tips

It is easy to overbuy or forget about fresh fruits and vegetables. Store fruits and vegetables for maximum freshness; they’ll taste better and last longer, helping you to eat more of them.

Find out how to store fruits and vegetables so they stay fresh longer inside or outside your refrigerator.

Freeze, preserve, or can surplus fruits and vegetables - especially abundant seasonal produce.

Many fruits give off natural gases as they ripen, making other nearby produce spoil faster. Store bananas, apples, and tomatoes by themselves, and store fruits and vegetables in different bins.

Wait to wash berries until you want to eat them to prevent mold.

If you like to eat fruit at room temperature, but it should be stored in the refrigerator for maximum freshness, take what you’ll eat for the day out of the refrigerator in the morning.

Prepare Tips

fruits and vegetablesPrepare perishable foods soon after shopping. It will be easier to whip up meals or snacks later in the week, saving time, effort, and money.

When you get home from the store, take the time to wash, dry, chop, dice, slice, and place your fresh food items in clear storage containers for snacks and easy cooking.

Befriend your freezer and visit it often. For example,

Freeze food such as bread, sliced fruit, or meat that you know you won’t be able to eat in time.

Cut your time in the kitchen by preparing and freezing meals ahead of time.

Prepare and cook perishable items, then freeze them for use throughout the month.

For example, bake and freeze chicken breasts or fry and freeze taco meat.

Thriftiness Tips

Be mindful of old ingredients and leftovers you need to use up. You’ll waste less and may even find a new favorite dish.

Shop in your refrigerator first! Cook or eat what you already have at home before buying more.

Have produce that’s past its prime? It may still be fine for cooking. Think soups, casseroles, stir fries, sauces, baked goods, pancakes or smoothies.

If safe and healthy, use the edible parts of food that you normally do not eat. For example, stale bread can be used to make croutons, beet tops can be sautéed for a delicious side dish, and vegetable scraps can be made into stock.

Learn the difference between “sell-by,” “use-by,” “best-by,” and expiration dates.

Are you likely to have leftovers from any of your meals? Plan an “eat the leftovers” night each week.

Casseroles, stir-fries, frittatas, soups, and smoothies are great ways to use leftovers too. Search for websites that provide suggestions for using leftover ingredients.

At restaurants, order only what you can finish by asking about portion sizes and be aware of side dishes included with entrees. Take home the leftovers and keep them for or to make your next meal.

At all-you-can-eat buffets, take only what you can eat.