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Wikipedia

Food

Food is any substance consumed by an organism for nutritional support. Food is usually of plant, animal, or fungal origin and contains essential nutrients such as carbohydrates, fats, proteins, vitamins, or minerals. The substance is ingested by an organism and assimilated by the organism's cells to provide energy, maintain life, or stimulate growth. Different species of animals have different feeding behaviours that satisfy the needs of their metabolisms and have evolved to fill a specific ecological niche within specific geographical contexts.

Display of various foods

Omnivorous humans are highly adaptable and have adapted to obtain food in many different ecosystems. Humans generally use cooking to prepare food for consumption. The majority of the food energy required is supplied by the industrial food industry, which produces food through intensive agriculture and distributes it through complex food processing and food distribution systems. This system of conventional agriculture relies heavily on fossil fuels, which means that the food and agricultural systems are one of the major contributors to climate change, accounting for as much as 37% of total greenhouse gas emissions.[1]

The food system has significant impacts on a wide range of other social and political issues, including sustainability, biological diversity, economics, population growth, water supply, and food security. Food safety and security are monitored by international agencies like the International Association for Food Protection, the World Resources Institute, the World Food Programme, the Food and Agriculture Organization, and the International Food Information Council.

Definition and classification

 
A typical aquatic food web

Food is any substance consumed to provide nutritional support and energy to an organism.[2][3] It can be raw, processed, or formulated and is consumed orally by animals for growth, health, or pleasure. Food is mainly composed of water, lipids, proteins, and carbohydrates. Minerals (e.g., salts) and organic substances (e.g., vitamins) can also be found in food.[4] Plants, algae, and some microorganisms use photosynthesis to make some of their own nutrients.[5] Water is found in many foods and has been defined as a food by itself.[6] Water and fiber have low energy densities, or calories, while fat is the most energy-dense component.[3] Some inorganic (non-food) elements are also essential for plant and animal functioning.[7]

Human food can be classified in various ways, either by related content or by how it is processed.[8] The number and composition of food groups can vary. Most systems include four basic groups that describe their origin and relative nutritional function: Vegetables and Fruit, Cereals and Bread, Dairy, and Meat.[9] Studies that look into diet quality group food into whole grains/cereals, refined grains/cereals, vegetables, fruits, nuts, legumes, eggs, dairy products, fish, red meat, processed meat, and sugar-sweetened beverages.[10][11][12] The Food and Agriculture Organization and World Health Organization use a system with nineteen food classifications: cereals, roots, pulses and nuts, milk, eggs, fish and shellfish, meat, insects, vegetables, fruits, fats and oils, sweets and sugars, spices and condiments, beverages, foods for nutritional uses, food additives, composite dishes and savoury snacks.[13]

Food sources

 
Haber-Bosch reactors like this produce most of the planet's fixed nitrogen, a requirement for life. primary reformer  air feed  secondary reformer  CO conversion  washing tower  ammonia reactor  heat exchanger  ammonia condenser

In a given ecosystem, food forms a web of interlocking chains with primary producers at the bottom and apex predators at the top.[14] Other aspects of the web include detrovores (that eat detritis) and decomposers (that break down dead organisms).[14] Primary producers include algae, plants, bacteria and protists that acquire their energy from sunlight.[15] Primary consumers are the herbivores that consume the plants, and secondary consumers are the carnivores that consume those herbivores. Some organisms, including most mammals and birds, diet consists of both animals and plants, and they are considered omnivores.[16] The chain ends with the apex predators, the animals that have no known predators in its ecosystem.[17] Humans are considered apex predators.[18]

Humans are omnivores, finding sustenance in vegetables, fruits, cooked meat, milk, eggs, mushrooms and seaweed.[16] Cereal grain is a staple food that provides more food energy worldwide than any other type of crop.[19] Corn (maize), wheat, and rice account for 87% of all grain production worldwide.[20][21][22] Just over half of the world's crops are used to feed humans (55 percent), with 36 percent grown as animal feed and 9 percent for biofuels.[23] Fungi and bacteria are also used in the preparation of fermented foods like bread, wine, cheese and yogurt.[24]

Bacteria

Without bacteria, life would scarcely exist because bacteria convert atmospheric nitrogen into nutritious ammonia. Ammonia is the precursor to proteins, nucleic acids, and most vitamins. Since the advent of industrial process for nitrogen fixation, the Haber-Bosch Process, the majority of ammonia in the world is human-made.[25]

Plants

 
Foods from plant sources

Photosynthesis is the source of most energy and food for nearly all life on earth.[26] Photosynthesis is one main source of biomass, the food for plants, algae and certain bacteria and, indirectly, organisms higher in the food chain.[27][28] Energy from the sun is absorbed and used to transform water and carbon dioxide in the air or soil into oxygen and glucose. The oxygen is then released, and the glucose stored as an energy reserve.[29]

Plants also absorb important nutrients and minerals from the air, natural waters, and soil.[30] Carbon, oxygen and hydrogen are absorbed from the air or water and are the basic nutrients needed for plant survival.[31] The three main nutrients absorbed from the soil for plant growth are nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium, with other important nutrients including calcium, sulfur, magnesium, iron boron, chlorine, manganese, zinc, copper molybdenum and nickel.[31]

Plants as a food source are divided into seeds, fruits, vegetables, legumes, grains and nuts.[32] Where plants fall within these categories can vary, with botanically described fruits such as the tomato, squash, pepper and eggplant or seeds like peas commonly considered vegetables.[33] Food is a fruit if the part eaten is derived from the reproductive tissue, so seeds, nuts and grains are technically fruit.[34][35] From a culinary perspective, fruits are generally considered the remains of botanically described fruits after grains, nuts, seeds and fruits used as vegetables are removed.[36] Grains can be defined as seeds that humans eat or harvest, with cereal grains (oats, wheat, rice, corn, barley, rye, sorghum and millet) belonging to the Poaceae (grass) family[37] and pulses coming from the Fabaceae (legume) family.[38] Whole grains are foods that contain all the elements of the original seed (bran, germ, and endosperm).[39] Nuts are dry fruits, distinguishable by their woody shell.[36]

Fleshy fruits (distinguishable from dry fruits like grain, seeds and nuts) can be further classified as stone fruits (cherries and peaches), pome fruits (apples, pears), berries (blackberry, strawberry), citrus (oranges, lemon), melons (watermelon, cantaloupe), Mediterranean fruits (grapes, fig), tropical fruits (banana, pineapple).[36] Vegetables refer to any other part of the plant that can be eaten, including roots, stems, leaves, flowers, bark or the entire plant itself.[40] These include root vegetables (potatoes and carrots), bulbs (onion family), flowers (cauliflower and broccoli), leaf vegetables (spinach and lettuce) and stem vegetables (celery and asparagus).[41][40]

The carbohydrate, protein and lipid content of plants is highly variable. Carbohydrates are mainly in the form of starch, fructose, glucose and other sugars.[32] Most vitamins are found from plant sources, with exceptions of vitamin D and vitamin B12. Minerals can also be plentiful or not. Fruit can consist of up to 90% water, contain high levels of simple sugars that contribute to their sweet taste, and have a high vitamin C content.[32][36] Compared to fleshy fruit (excepting Bananas) vegetables are high in starch,[42] potassium, dietary fiber, folate and vitamins and low in fat and calories.[43] Grains are more starch based[32] and nuts have a high protein, fibre, vitamin E and B content.[36] Seeds are a good source of food for animals because they are abundant and contain fibre and healthful fats, such as omega-3 fats.[44][45] Complicated chemical interactions can enhance or depress bioavailability of certain nutrients. Phytates can prevent the release of some sugars and vitamins.[32]

Animals that only eat plants are called herbivores, with those that mostly just eat fruits known as frugivores,[46] leaves, while shoot eaters are folivores (pandas) and wood eaters termed xylophages (termites).[47] Frugivores include a diverse range of species from annelids to elephants, chimpanzees and many birds.[48][49][50] About 182 fish consume seeds or fruit.[51] Animals (domesticated and wild) use as many types of grasses that have adapted to different locations as their main source of nutrients.[52]

Humans eat thousands of plant species; there may be as many as 75,000 edible species of angiosperms, of which perhaps 7,000 are often eaten.[53] Plants can be processed into breads, pasta, cereals, juices and jams or raw ingredients such as sugar, herbs, spices and oils can be extracted.[32] Oilseeds are pressed to produce rich oils – ⁣sunflower, flaxseed, rapeseed (including canola oil) and sesame.[54]

Many plants and animals have coevolved in such a way that the fruit is a good source of nutrition to the animal who then excretes the seeds some distance away, allowing greater dispersal.[55] Even seed predation can be mutually beneficial, as some seeds can survive the digestion process.[56][57] Insects are major eaters of seeds,[44] with ants being the only real seed dispersers.[58] Birds, although being major dispersers,[59] only rarely eat seeds as a source of food and can be identified by their thick beak that is used to crack open the seed coat.[60] Mammals eat a more diverse range of seeds, as they are able to crush harder and larger seeds with their teeth.[61]

Animals

 
Various raw meats

Animals are used as food either directly or indirectly. This includes meat, eggs, shellfish and dairy products like milk and cheese.[62] They are an important source of protein and are considered complete proteins for human consumption as they contain all the essential amino acids that the human body needs.[63] One 4-ounce (110 g) steak, chicken breast or pork chop contains about 30 grams of protein. One large egg has 7 grams of protein. A 4-ounce (110 g) serving of cheese has about 15 grams of protein. And 1 cup of milk has about 8 grams of protein.[63] Other nutrients found in animal products include calories, fat, essential vitamins (including B12) and minerals (including zinc, iron, calcium, magnesium).[63]

Food products produced by animals include milk produced by mammary glands, which in many cultures is drunk or processed into dairy products (cheese, butter, etc.). Eggs laid by birds and other animals are eaten and bees produce honey, a reduced nectar from flowers that is used as a popular sweetener in many cultures. Some cultures consume blood, such as in blood sausage, as a thickener for sauces, or in a cured, salted form for times of food scarcity, and others use blood in stews such as jugged hare.[64]

Taste

Animals, specifically humans, typically have five different types of tastes: sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and umami. The differing tastes are important for distinguishing between foods that are nutritionally beneficial and those which may contain harmful toxins.[65] As animals have evolved, the tastes that provide the most energy are the most pleasant to eat while others are not enjoyable,[66] although humans in particular can acquire a preference for some substances which are initially unenjoyable.[65] Water, while important for survival, has no taste.[67]

Sweetness is almost always caused by a type of simple sugar such as glucose or fructose, or disaccharides such as sucrose, a molecule combining glucose and fructose.[68] Sourness is caused by acids, such as vinegar in alcoholic beverages. Sour foods include citrus, specifically lemons and limes. Sour is evolutionarily significant as it can signal a food that may have gone rancid due to bacteria.[69] Saltiness is the taste of alkali metal ions such as sodium and potassium. It is found in almost every food in low to moderate proportions to enhance flavor. Bitter taste is a sensation considered unpleasant characterised by having a sharp, pungent taste. Unsweetened dark chocolate, caffeine, lemon rind, and some types of fruit are known to be bitter. Umami, commonly described as savory, is a marker of proteins and characteristic of broths and cooked meats.[70] Foods that have a strong umami flavor include cheese, meat and mushrooms.[71]

 
Catfish have millions of taste buds covering their entire body.

While most animals taste buds are located in their mouth, some insects taste receptors are located on their legs and some fish have taste buds along their entire body.[72][73] Dogs, cats and birds have relatively few taste buds (chickens have about 30),[74] adult humans have between 2000 and 4000,[75] while catfish can have more than a million.[73] Herbivores generally have more than carnivores as they need to tell which plants may be poisonous.[74] Not all mammals share the same tastes: some rodents can taste starch, cats cannot taste sweetness, and several carnivores (including hyenas, dolphins, and sea lions) have lost the ability to sense up to four of the five taste modalities found in humans.[76]

Digestion

Food is broken into nutrient components through digestive process.[77] Proper digestion consists of mechanical processes (chewing, peristalsis) and chemical processes (digestive enzymes and microorganisms).[78][79] The digestive systems of herbivores and carnivores are very different as plant matter is harder to digest. Carnivores mouths are designed for tearing and biting compared to the grinding action found in herbivores.[80] Herbivores however have comparatively longer digestive tracts and larger stomachs to aid in digesting the cellulose in plants.[81][82]

Food safety

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), about 600 million people worldwide get sick and 420,000 die each year from eating contaminated food.[83][84] Diarrhea is the most common illness caused by consuming contaminated food, with about 550 million cases and 230,000 deaths from diarrhea each year. Children under five years of age account for 40% of the burden of foodborne illness, with 125,000 deaths each year.[84][85]

A 2003 World Health Organization (WHO) report concluded that about 30% of reported food poisoning outbreaks in the WHO European Region occur in private homes.[86] According to the WHO and CDC, in the USA alone, annually, there are 76 million cases of foodborne illness leading to 325,000 hospitalizations and 5,000 deaths.[87]

From 2011 to 2016, on average, there were 668,673 cases of foodborne illness and 21 deaths each year.[88][89][90][91] In addition, during this period, 1,007 food poisoning outbreaks with 30,395 cases of food poisoning were reported.[84]

See also

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Further reading

  • Collingham, E.M. (2011). The Taste of War: World War Two and the Battle for Food
  • Katz, Solomon (2003). The Encyclopedia of Food and Culture, Scribner
  • Mobbs, Michael (2012). Sustainable Food Sydney: NewSouth Publishing, ISBN 978-1-920705-54-1
  • Nestle, Marion (2007). Food Politics: How the Food Industry Influences Nutrition and Health, University Presses of California, revised and expanded edition, ISBN 0-520-25403-1
  • The Future of Food (2015). A panel discussion at the 2015 Digital Life Design (DLD) Annual Conference. "How can we grow and enjoy food, closer to home, further into the future? MIT Media Lab's Kevin Slavin hosts a conversation with food artist, educator, and entrepreneur Emilie Baltz, professor Caleb Harper from MIT Media Lab's CityFarm project, the Barbarian Group's Benjamin Palmer, and Andras Forgacs, the co-founder and CEO of Modern Meadow, who is growing 'victimless' meat in a lab. The discussion addresses issues of sustainable urban farming, ecosystems, technology, food supply chains and their broad environmental and humanitarian implications, and how these changes in food production may change what people may find delicious ... and the other way around." Posted on the official YouTube Channel of DLD

External links

  •   Media related to food at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Food travel guide from Wikivoyage
  •   Works related to Food at Wikisource
  •   The dictionary definition of food at Wiktionary
  • Official website of Food Timeline
  • Food, BBC Radio 4 discussion with Rebecca Spang, Ivan Day and Felipe Fernandez-Armesto (In Our Time, 27 December 2001)

food, this, article, about, food, organisms, food, humans, human, food, other, uses, disambiguation, stuffs, redirects, here, zealand, grocery, company, stuffs, company, substance, consumed, organism, nutritional, support, usually, plant, animal, fungal, origi. This article is about food for all organisms For food for humans see Human food For other uses see Food disambiguation Foodstuffs redirects here For the New Zealand grocery company see Foodstuffs company Food is any substance consumed by an organism for nutritional support Food is usually of plant animal or fungal origin and contains essential nutrients such as carbohydrates fats proteins vitamins or minerals The substance is ingested by an organism and assimilated by the organism s cells to provide energy maintain life or stimulate growth Different species of animals have different feeding behaviours that satisfy the needs of their metabolisms and have evolved to fill a specific ecological niche within specific geographical contexts Display of various foods Omnivorous humans are highly adaptable and have adapted to obtain food in many different ecosystems Humans generally use cooking to prepare food for consumption The majority of the food energy required is supplied by the industrial food industry which produces food through intensive agriculture and distributes it through complex food processing and food distribution systems This system of conventional agriculture relies heavily on fossil fuels which means that the food and agricultural systems are one of the major contributors to climate change accounting for as much as 37 of total greenhouse gas emissions 1 The food system has significant impacts on a wide range of other social and political issues including sustainability biological diversity economics population growth water supply and food security Food safety and security are monitored by international agencies like the International Association for Food Protection the World Resources Institute the World Food Programme the Food and Agriculture Organization and the International Food Information Council Contents 1 Definition and classification 2 Food sources 2 1 Bacteria 2 2 Plants 2 3 Animals 3 Taste 4 Digestion 5 Food safety 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Further reading 8 External linksDefinition and classification nbsp A typical aquatic food web Food is any substance consumed to provide nutritional support and energy to an organism 2 3 It can be raw processed or formulated and is consumed orally by animals for growth health or pleasure Food is mainly composed of water lipids proteins and carbohydrates Minerals e g salts and organic substances e g vitamins can also be found in food 4 Plants algae and some microorganisms use photosynthesis to make some of their own nutrients 5 Water is found in many foods and has been defined as a food by itself 6 Water and fiber have low energy densities or calories while fat is the most energy dense component 3 Some inorganic non food elements are also essential for plant and animal functioning 7 Human food can be classified in various ways either by related content or by how it is processed 8 The number and composition of food groups can vary Most systems include four basic groups that describe their origin and relative nutritional function Vegetables and Fruit Cereals and Bread Dairy and Meat 9 Studies that look into diet quality group food into whole grains cereals refined grains cereals vegetables fruits nuts legumes eggs dairy products fish red meat processed meat and sugar sweetened beverages 10 11 12 The Food and Agriculture Organization and World Health Organization use a system with nineteen food classifications cereals roots pulses and nuts milk eggs fish and shellfish meat insects vegetables fruits fats and oils sweets and sugars spices and condiments beverages foods for nutritional uses food additives composite dishes and savoury snacks 13 Food sources nbsp Haber Bosch reactors like this produce most of the planet s fixed nitrogen a requirement for life primary reformer air feed secondary reformer CO conversion washing tower ammonia reactor heat exchanger ammonia condenser In a given ecosystem food forms a web of interlocking chains with primary producers at the bottom and apex predators at the top 14 Other aspects of the web include detrovores that eat detritis and decomposers that break down dead organisms 14 Primary producers include algae plants bacteria and protists that acquire their energy from sunlight 15 Primary consumers are the herbivores that consume the plants and secondary consumers are the carnivores that consume those herbivores Some organisms including most mammals and birds diet consists of both animals and plants and they are considered omnivores 16 The chain ends with the apex predators the animals that have no known predators in its ecosystem 17 Humans are considered apex predators 18 Humans are omnivores finding sustenance in vegetables fruits cooked meat milk eggs mushrooms and seaweed 16 Cereal grain is a staple food that provides more food energy worldwide than any other type of crop 19 Corn maize wheat and rice account for 87 of all grain production worldwide 20 21 22 Just over half of the world s crops are used to feed humans 55 percent with 36 percent grown as animal feed and 9 percent for biofuels 23 Fungi and bacteria are also used in the preparation of fermented foods like bread wine cheese and yogurt 24 Bacteria Without bacteria life would scarcely exist because bacteria convert atmospheric nitrogen into nutritious ammonia Ammonia is the precursor to proteins nucleic acids and most vitamins Since the advent of industrial process for nitrogen fixation the Haber Bosch Process the majority of ammonia in the world is human made 25 Plants nbsp Foods from plant sources Photosynthesis is the source of most energy and food for nearly all life on earth 26 Photosynthesis is one main source of biomass the food for plants algae and certain bacteria and indirectly organisms higher in the food chain 27 28 Energy from the sun is absorbed and used to transform water and carbon dioxide in the air or soil into oxygen and glucose The oxygen is then released and the glucose stored as an energy reserve 29 Plants also absorb important nutrients and minerals from the air natural waters and soil 30 Carbon oxygen and hydrogen are absorbed from the air or water and are the basic nutrients needed for plant survival 31 The three main nutrients absorbed from the soil for plant growth are nitrogen phosphorus and potassium with other important nutrients including calcium sulfur magnesium iron boron chlorine manganese zinc copper molybdenum and nickel 31 Plants as a food source are divided into seeds fruits vegetables legumes grains and nuts 32 Where plants fall within these categories can vary with botanically described fruits such as the tomato squash pepper and eggplant or seeds like peas commonly considered vegetables 33 Food is a fruit if the part eaten is derived from the reproductive tissue so seeds nuts and grains are technically fruit 34 35 From a culinary perspective fruits are generally considered the remains of botanically described fruits after grains nuts seeds and fruits used as vegetables are removed 36 Grains can be defined as seeds that humans eat or harvest with cereal grains oats wheat rice corn barley rye sorghum and millet belonging to the Poaceae grass family 37 and pulses coming from the Fabaceae legume family 38 Whole grains are foods that contain all the elements of the original seed bran germ and endosperm 39 Nuts are dry fruits distinguishable by their woody shell 36 Fleshy fruits distinguishable from dry fruits like grain seeds and nuts can be further classified as stone fruits cherries and peaches pome fruits apples pears berries blackberry strawberry citrus oranges lemon melons watermelon cantaloupe Mediterranean fruits grapes fig tropical fruits banana pineapple 36 Vegetables refer to any other part of the plant that can be eaten including roots stems leaves flowers bark or the entire plant itself 40 These include root vegetables potatoes and carrots bulbs onion family flowers cauliflower and broccoli leaf vegetables spinach and lettuce and stem vegetables celery and asparagus 41 40 The carbohydrate protein and lipid content of plants is highly variable Carbohydrates are mainly in the form of starch fructose glucose and other sugars 32 Most vitamins are found from plant sources with exceptions of vitamin D and vitamin B12 Minerals can also be plentiful or not Fruit can consist of up to 90 water contain high levels of simple sugars that contribute to their sweet taste and have a high vitamin C content 32 36 Compared to fleshy fruit excepting Bananas vegetables are high in starch 42 potassium dietary fiber folate and vitamins and low in fat and calories 43 Grains are more starch based 32 and nuts have a high protein fibre vitamin E and B content 36 Seeds are a good source of food for animals because they are abundant and contain fibre and healthful fats such as omega 3 fats 44 45 Complicated chemical interactions can enhance or depress bioavailability of certain nutrients Phytates can prevent the release of some sugars and vitamins 32 Animals that only eat plants are called herbivores with those that mostly just eat fruits known as frugivores 46 leaves while shoot eaters are folivores pandas and wood eaters termed xylophages termites 47 Frugivores include a diverse range of species from annelids to elephants chimpanzees and many birds 48 49 50 About 182 fish consume seeds or fruit 51 Animals domesticated and wild use as many types of grasses that have adapted to different locations as their main source of nutrients 52 Humans eat thousands of plant species there may be as many as 75 000 edible species of angiosperms of which perhaps 7 000 are often eaten 53 Plants can be processed into breads pasta cereals juices and jams or raw ingredients such as sugar herbs spices and oils can be extracted 32 Oilseeds are pressed to produce rich oils sunflower flaxseed rapeseed including canola oil and sesame 54 Many plants and animals have coevolved in such a way that the fruit is a good source of nutrition to the animal who then excretes the seeds some distance away allowing greater dispersal 55 Even seed predation can be mutually beneficial as some seeds can survive the digestion process 56 57 Insects are major eaters of seeds 44 with ants being the only real seed dispersers 58 Birds although being major dispersers 59 only rarely eat seeds as a source of food and can be identified by their thick beak that is used to crack open the seed coat 60 Mammals eat a more diverse range of seeds as they are able to crush harder and larger seeds with their teeth 61 Animals nbsp Various raw meats Animals are used as food either directly or indirectly This includes meat eggs shellfish and dairy products like milk and cheese 62 They are an important source of protein and are considered complete proteins for human consumption as they contain all the essential amino acids that the human body needs 63 One 4 ounce 110 g steak chicken breast or pork chop contains about 30 grams of protein One large egg has 7 grams of protein A 4 ounce 110 g serving of cheese has about 15 grams of protein And 1 cup of milk has about 8 grams of protein 63 Other nutrients found in animal products include calories fat essential vitamins including B12 and minerals including zinc iron calcium magnesium 63 Food products produced by animals include milk produced by mammary glands which in many cultures is drunk or processed into dairy products cheese butter etc Eggs laid by birds and other animals are eaten and bees produce honey a reduced nectar from flowers that is used as a popular sweetener in many cultures Some cultures consume blood such as in blood sausage as a thickener for sauces or in a cured salted form for times of food scarcity and others use blood in stews such as jugged hare 64 TasteMain article Taste Animals specifically humans typically have five different types of tastes sweet sour salty bitter and umami The differing tastes are important for distinguishing between foods that are nutritionally beneficial and those which may contain harmful toxins 65 As animals have evolved the tastes that provide the most energy are the most pleasant to eat while others are not enjoyable 66 although humans in particular can acquire a preference for some substances which are initially unenjoyable 65 Water while important for survival has no taste 67 Sweetness is almost always caused by a type of simple sugar such as glucose or fructose or disaccharides such as sucrose a molecule combining glucose and fructose 68 Sourness is caused by acids such as vinegar in alcoholic beverages Sour foods include citrus specifically lemons and limes Sour is evolutionarily significant as it can signal a food that may have gone rancid due to bacteria 69 Saltiness is the taste of alkali metal ions such as sodium and potassium It is found in almost every food in low to moderate proportions to enhance flavor Bitter taste is a sensation considered unpleasant characterised by having a sharp pungent taste Unsweetened dark chocolate caffeine lemon rind and some types of fruit are known to be bitter Umami commonly described as savory is a marker of proteins and characteristic of broths and cooked meats 70 Foods that have a strong umami flavor include cheese meat and mushrooms 71 nbsp Catfish have millions of taste buds covering their entire body While most animals taste buds are located in their mouth some insects taste receptors are located on their legs and some fish have taste buds along their entire body 72 73 Dogs cats and birds have relatively few taste buds chickens have about 30 74 adult humans have between 2000 and 4000 75 while catfish can have more than a million 73 Herbivores generally have more than carnivores as they need to tell which plants may be poisonous 74 Not all mammals share the same tastes some rodents can taste starch cats cannot taste sweetness and several carnivores including hyenas dolphins and sea lions have lost the ability to sense up to four of the five taste modalities found in humans 76 DigestionMain article Digestion Food is broken into nutrient components through digestive process 77 Proper digestion consists of mechanical processes chewing peristalsis and chemical processes digestive enzymes and microorganisms 78 79 The digestive systems of herbivores and carnivores are very different as plant matter is harder to digest Carnivores mouths are designed for tearing and biting compared to the grinding action found in herbivores 80 Herbivores however have comparatively longer digestive tracts and larger stomachs to aid in digesting the cellulose in plants 81 82 Food safetyMain article Food safety According to the World Health Organization WHO about 600 million people worldwide get sick and 420 000 die each year from eating contaminated food 83 84 Diarrhea is the most common illness caused by consuming contaminated food with about 550 million cases and 230 000 deaths from diarrhea each year Children under five years of age account for 40 of the burden of foodborne illness with 125 000 deaths each year 84 85 A 2003 World Health Organization WHO report concluded that about 30 of reported food poisoning outbreaks in the WHO European Region occur in private homes 86 According to the WHO and CDC in the USA alone annually there are 76 million cases of foodborne illness leading to 325 000 hospitalizations and 5 000 deaths 87 From 2011 to 2016 on average there were 668 673 cases of foodborne illness and 21 deaths each year 88 89 90 91 In addition during this period 1 007 food poisoning outbreaks with 30 395 cases of food poisoning were reported 84 See also nbsp Food portal Food pairing List of food and drink monumentsReferences SAPEA 2020 A sustainable food system for the European Union PDF Berlin Science Advice for Policy by European Academies p 39 doi 10 26356 sustainablefood ISBN 978 3 9820301 7 3 Archived from the original PDF on 18 April 2020 Retrieved 14 April 2020 Food definition and meaning Collins English Dictionary 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herbivores and carnivores Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A Molecular amp Integrative Physiology 243 110683 doi 10 1016 j cbpa 2020 110683 hdl 1854 LU 8656684 ISSN 1095 6433 PMID 32097716 Fujimori Shunji 7 December 2021 Humans have intestinal bacteria that degrade the plant cell walls in herbivores World Journal of Gastroenterology 27 45 7784 7791 doi 10 3748 wjg v27 i45 7784 ISSN 1007 9327 PMC 8661373 PMID 34963741 Hơn 600 triệu người mắc bệnh do ăn phải cac thực phẩm o nhiễm Chương trinh mục tieu quốc gia Cổng thong tin Bộ Y tế moh gov vn Retrieved 26 December 2023 a b c An toan Thực phẩm www who int in Vietnamese Retrieved 26 December 2023 WHO Cac bệnh do thực phẩm ở trẻ em dưới 5 tuổi chiếm gần một phần ba số ca tử vong Chương trinh mục tieu quốc gia Cổng thong tin Bộ Y tế moh gov vn Retrieved 26 December 2023 Several foodborne diseases are increasing in Europe World Health Organization 16 December 2003 Archived from the original on 16 April 2005 Retrieved 26 December 2023 Food safety and foodborne illness World Health Organization Archived from the original on 27 January 2013 Retrieved 10 December 2010 Hơn 5 000 người bị ngộ độc thực phẩm mỗi năm Bao Nhan Dan điện tử in Vietnamese 5 June 2017 Retrieved 26 December 2023 Chỉ 10 số người dan tin vao thực phẩm an toan laodong vn in Vietnamese 6 June 2017 Retrieved 26 December 2023 Tran Lanh Dịch vụ nhận đặc tiệc tại nha 24h yte nghean gov vn in Vietnamese Retrieved 26 December 2023 Cảnh giac ngộ độc thực phẩm từ bếp ăn tập thể Hoạt động của địa phương Cổng thong tin Bộ Y tế moh gov vn Retrieved 26 December 2023 Further reading Collingham E M 2011 The Taste of War World War Two and the Battle for Food Katz Solomon 2003 The Encyclopedia of Food and Culture Scribner Mobbs Michael 2012 Sustainable Food Sydney NewSouth Publishing ISBN 978 1 920705 54 1 Nestle Marion 2007 Food Politics How the Food Industry Influences Nutrition and Health University Presses of California revised and expanded edition ISBN 0 520 25403 1 The Future of Food 2015 A panel discussion at the 2015 Digital Life Design DLD Annual Conference How can we grow and enjoy food closer to home further into the future MIT Media Lab s Kevin Slavin hosts a conversation with food artist educator and entrepreneur Emilie Baltz professor Caleb Harper from MIT Media Lab s CityFarm project the Barbarian Group s Benjamin Palmer and Andras Forgacs the co founder and CEO of Modern Meadow who is growing victimless meat in a lab The discussion addresses issues of sustainable urban farming ecosystems technology food supply chains and their broad environmental and humanitarian implications and how these changes in food production may change what people may find delicious and the other way around Posted on the official YouTube Channel of DLDExternal links nbsp Wikibooks has a book on the topic of Cookbook nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Food nbsp Media related to food at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Food travel guide from Wikivoyage nbsp Works related to Food at Wikisource nbsp The dictionary definition of food at Wiktionary Official website of Food Timeline Food BBC Radio 4 discussion with Rebecca Spang Ivan Day and Felipe Fernandez Armesto In Our Time 27 December 2001 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Food amp oldid 1220404680, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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