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OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: tuqqer
Date: December 04, 2007 03:15PM
Fascinating quick look at what we eat around the globe:













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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: n-fin-it n-tro-p
Date: December 04, 2007 03:20PM
Notice how the amount of food gets smaller (along with $$), and the food is less 'processed', and the families are larger, as you go down the list. Very interesting.

Thanks
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: pinkoos
Date: December 04, 2007 03:27PM
Wow, amazing and a bit sad. Look at the abundance of food (and junk food) in the Western nations vs. Chad!

This has totally blown my mind.



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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: IronMac
Date: December 04, 2007 03:27PM
The American family is the one with the most number of processed foods, in fact, I can barely discern any fresh fruits or veggies.
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: Paul F.
Date: December 04, 2007 03:31PM
Germans have the most beer...
Italians the most bread...

(and I refuse to be manipulated into feeling bad for the family in Chad...).



Paul F.
-----
Good is the enemy of Excellent. Talent is not necessary for Excellence.
Persistence is necessary for Excellence. And Persistence is a Decision.
-----
"The world makes a lot more sense when you realize most people are stupid." - Zoidberg
.
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: tuqqer
Date: December 04, 2007 03:34PM
I'd love to have a meal with all of these families. Good eats and interesting stories I'm sure.



________________________________
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: 3d
Date: December 04, 2007 03:47PM
Credit: From the book, Hungry Planet: What the World Eats by Peter Menzel
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: Paul F.
Date: December 04, 2007 03:50PM
<I'd love to have a meal with all of these families. Good eats and interesting stories I'm sure.

That's for sure! :-)



Paul F.
-----
Good is the enemy of Excellent. Talent is not necessary for Excellence.
Persistence is necessary for Excellence. And Persistence is a Decision.
-----
"The world makes a lot more sense when you realize most people are stupid." - Zoidberg
.
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: 3d
Date: December 04, 2007 03:55PM
Re: The German family.
That's quite a bit of beer and wine for a family of four with two adults to drink in a week.
20 bottles of beer and 4 bottles of wine. PLUS 6 cartons of what looks like juice. And 12 cartons of something in the back row (milk?).
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: davester
Date: December 04, 2007 03:57PM
Quote
IronMac
The American family is the one with the most number of processed foods, in fact, I can barely discern any fresh fruits or veggies.

That was my thought too. The american one looks the worst of all...those people hava an absolutely awful diet if that is really what they eat. Every other picture looks like the basis for a relatively healthy diet. I'm wondering if they sought out the american family with the most unhealthy diet they could find for that photo. If not, then no wonder obesity and diabetes are rampant in the US.



"Man is a little germ that lives on an unimportant rock ball that revolves about a small star at the outskirts of an ordinary galaxy... ...I am absolutely amazed to discover myself on this rock ball rotating around a spherical fire. It’s a very odd situation. And the more I look at things I cannot get rid of the feeling that existence is quite weird." - Alan W. Watts



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 12/04/2007 04:00PM by davester.
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: hal
Date: December 04, 2007 04:06PM
Quote
n-fin-it n-tro-p
Notice how the amount of food gets smaller (along with $$), and the food is less 'processed', and the families are larger, as you go down the list. Very interesting.

Thanks

Actually I was impressed with the volume of food that $68 bought in Egypt

and I thought that much food in japan was much more expensive...

I would like to see a USA version - rural alabama, midtown manhattan etc...

VERY interesting bit of photo journalism - where'd you find it?
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: 3d
Date: December 04, 2007 04:06PM
Quote
davester
Quote
IronMac
The American family is the one with the most number of processed foods, in fact, I can barely discern any fresh fruits or veggies.

That was my thought too. The american one looks the worst of all...those people hava an absolutely awful diet if that is really what they eat. Every other picture looks like the basis for a relatively healthy diet. I'm wondering if they sought out the american family with the most unhealthy diet they could find for that photo. If not, then no wonder obesity and diabetes are rampant in the US.

The Japanese family diet to me looks the worst. Look at the way the daughter is lovingly cradling that bag of chips in her lap. MSG withdrawal.
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: tuqqer
Date: December 04, 2007 04:16PM
Quote
3d
Credit: From the book, Hungry Planet: What the World Eats by Peter Menzel

Thanks for that, 3d. I'd looked around for the source; it came to me in an email.



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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: AlphaDog
Date: December 04, 2007 04:19PM
Quote
IronMac
The American family is the one with the most number of processed foods, in fact, I can barely discern any fresh fruits or veggies.

It would be interesting to know just how typical those families and their spread of foods are. The kind of stuff spread out representing the family from the U. S. doesn't look close to what would have been found in my house. Even allowing for inflation, I know I never spent that much to feed two adults and two teenage boys, either.
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: Ombligo
Date: December 04, 2007 04:23PM
Makes me wonder how I get my family of three by on $70 a week (averaged over a year) for groceries. We eat primarily at home (I bet we spend less than $20 a month eating out).

Guess it's all the Coke, chips, frozen dinners, prepackaged meals and stuff I don't buy.

I also would like to have a dinner with each of these families.



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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: 3d
Date: December 04, 2007 04:31PM
Quote
Ombligo
Makes me wonder how I get my family of three by on $70 a week (averaged over a year) for groceries. We eat primarily at home (I bet we spend less than $20 a month eating out).

Guess it's all the Coke, chips, frozen dinners, prepackaged meals and stuff I don't buy.

$70 on groceries to feed a family of three for a week? That's 10bucks a day.
Are you counting breakfast, lunch and dinner?!
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: 3d
Date: December 04, 2007 04:39PM
Quote
tuqqer
Quote
3d
Credit: From the book, Hungry Planet: What the World Eats by Peter Menzel

Thanks for that, 3d. I'd looked around for the source; it came to me in an email.

No prob. I'm in publishing. I recognized it immediately. It won a James Beard award in 2006 for best cookbook. Which is kinda wierd because this really isn't a cookbook. It's a great coffee table book. Very nice quality printing.
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: billb
Date: December 04, 2007 05:44PM
Hats appear to be popular in Ecuador.

The Polish or Egypt diplay might be closest to the contents of my fridge, without the soda and candy bars. No spicy sausage.
Guilty of chicken pot pies in the freezer in the Winter.
Or Dinty Moore stew in a can (Winter). Quick home late no time to cook better than nothing meal.
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: Mike V
Date: December 04, 2007 05:48PM
Very cool.

Thanks for posting this.



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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: Psurfer
Date: December 04, 2007 05:50PM
Thanks for posting this. I've been thinking a lot about what I eat lately, and it's interesting to see (graphically, even) the foodstuffs of others. Makes me want to lay out all my week's ingredients on the floor, too. Just because.

re the American family- I'd bet that mass of pre-made and pre-packaged over-sugared and salted goods is Awful close to the national average menu. (not mine!)

re the Japanese family- 3d, their diet is probably pretty healthy. Lots of fish, rice and soy product, little fats. I'd guess the reason for so few fresh fruits and vegs is the sky-high cost for them there. A good portion of their greens would be dried sources in many of those pkgs, they're mostly not junk food.

re the Germans- Wow, those guys can sure pack it away!



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 12/04/2007 06:11PM by Psurfer.
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: jdc
Date: December 04, 2007 06:40PM
the family from mexico looked the heaviest...



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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Date: December 04, 2007 06:54PM
Time has more photos from the series. [www.time.com]



"FACTOSE INTOLERANT"
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: blooz
Date: December 04, 2007 07:02PM
Is that a Bela Lugosi imitation selling something on the Japanese family's TV?



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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: Drew
Date: December 04, 2007 07:32PM
Quote
blooz
Is that a Bela Lugosi imitation selling something on the Japanese family's TV?

He's selling ant killer. Thus the scary face.
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: kj
Date: December 04, 2007 07:50PM
Biggest smiles in the place they eat the most bananas, obviously. kj.
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: Rick-o
Date: December 04, 2007 08:12PM
That was really interesting! Thanks for sharing. I'm appalled if that's the average American family weeks worth of groceries.

The family from Equador seem to be very happy!



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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: mrbigstuff
Date: December 04, 2007 08:39PM
Hey, that Ahmed baby is NOT going hungry tongue sticking out smiley

oh, and that Polish blond.... :-+



Anti-wrinkle Cream There May Be, but Anti-fat Bastard Cream There Is Not



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 12/04/2007 08:40PM by mrbigstuff.
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: Lux Interior
Date: December 04, 2007 08:55PM
United States: The Interior family of Intoxication, Virginia
"Food" expenditure for the week: $186.33
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: davester
Date: December 04, 2007 09:49PM
Weren't you actually thinking this: ($2.75/day):





"Man is a little germ that lives on an unimportant rock ball that revolves about a small star at the outskirts of an ordinary galaxy... ...I am absolutely amazed to discover myself on this rock ball rotating around a spherical fire. It’s a very odd situation. And the more I look at things I cannot get rid of the feeling that existence is quite weird." - Alan W. Watts
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: Lux Interior
Date: December 04, 2007 10:38PM
Quote
davester
Weren't you actually thinking this: ($2.75/day):

Oh yeah!

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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: Lux Interior
Date: December 04, 2007 10:43PM
Now that I take a closer look at those pics, the Mexican family is drinking a hell of a lot of Coke. They are quite pudgy, too, despite the abundance of veggies
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: mikebw
Date: December 05, 2007 06:19AM
I'm just glad that Coke isn't in every photo.
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: Lux Interior
Date: December 05, 2007 12:30PM
Quote
Paul F.
and I refuse to be manipulated into feeling bad for the family in Chad.

Where's the manipulation?

You are the only one to bring up "feeling bad".
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Re: OT: A look at a week's worth of food, from around the globe
Posted by: bfd
Date: December 06, 2007 09:08PM
Interesting how the farther down the industrialized ladder you go, the more the calories have to count.
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