fbpx
Wikipedia

Human food

Human food is that food which is fit for human consumption, and which humans willingly eat. Not all things that are edible constitute human food. Food is a basic necessity of life, and humans typically seek food out as an instinctual response to hunger.

Display of various foods

Humans eat various substances for energy, enjoyment and nutritional support. These are usually of plant, animal, or fungal origin, and contain essential nutrients, such as carbohydrates, fats, proteins, vitamins, and minerals. Humans are highly adaptable omnivores, and have adapted to obtain food in many different ecosystems. Historically, humans secured food through two main methods: hunting and gathering and agriculture. As agricultural technologies improved, humans settled into agriculture lifestyles with diets shaped by the agriculture opportunities in their region of the world. Geographic and cultural differences have led to the creation of numerous cuisines and culinary arts, including a wide array of ingredients, herbs, spices, techniques, and dishes. As cultures have mixed through forces like international trade and globalization, ingredients have become more widely available beyond their geographic and cultural origins, creating a cosmopolitan exchange of different food traditions and practices.

Today, the majority of the food energy required by the ever-increasing population of the world is supplied by the industrial food industry, which produces food with 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 system is one of the major contributors to climate change, accountable for as much as 37% of the total greenhouse gas emissions.[1] Addressing the carbon intensity of the food system and food waste are important mitigation measures in the global response to climate change.[citation needed]

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 access to food. The right to food is a "human right" derived from the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), recognizing the "right to an adequate standard of living, including adequate food", as well as the "fundamental right to be free from hunger". Because of these fundamental rights, food security is often a priority international policy activity; for example Sustainable Development Goal 2 "Zero hunger" is meant to eliminate hunger by 2030. Food safety and food security are monitored by international agencies like the International Association for Food Protection, World Resources Institute, World Food Programme, Food and Agriculture Organization, and International Food Information Council, and are often subject to national regulation by institutions, such as the Food and Drug Administration in the United States.

Food sources edit

Humans are omnivores finding sustenance in vegetables, fruits, cooked meat, milk, eggs, mushrooms and seaweed.[2] Cereal grain is a staple food that provides more food energy worldwide than any other type of crop.[3] Corn (maize), wheat, and rice account for 87% of all grain production worldwide.[4][5][6] 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.[7] Fungi and bacteria are also used in the preparation of fermented foods like bread, wine, cheese and yogurt.[8]

 
Yogurt in a steel vessel

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.[9] Most human plant-based food comes from maize, rice, and wheat.[citation needed] Plants can be processed into bread, pasta, cereals, juices and jams, or raw ingredients such as sugar, herbs, spices and oils can be extracted.[10] Oilseeds are often pressed to produce rich oils: sunflower, flaxseed, rapeseed (including canola oil) and sesame.[11]

Animals may be used as food either directly or indirectly. This includes meat, eggs, shellfish and dairy products like milk and cheese.[12] They are an important source of protein and are considered complete proteins for human consumption, as (unlike plant proteins) they contain all the amino acids essential for the human body.[13] Some cultures and people do not consume meat or animal food products for cultural, dietary, health, ethical, or ideological reasons. Vegetarians choose to forgo food from animal sources to varying degrees. Vegans do not consume any foods that are or contain ingredients from an animal source.

Fish and other marine animals are harvested from lakes, rivers, wetlands, inland waters, coasts, estuaries, mangroves, near-shore areas, and marine and ocean waters. Although aquatic foods contribute significantly to the health of billions of people around the world, they tend to be undervalued nutritionally, primarily because their diversity is framed in a monolithic way as "seafood or fish." Worldwide, aquatic foods are available every season and are produced in a wide variety. Over 2,370 species are harvested from wild fisheries, and about 624 are farmed in aquaculture. Fish powder for infants, fish wafers for snacks, and fish chutneys have all been developed because marine foods are nutrient-dense.[14]

Taste perception edit

Some animals, specifically humans, have five different types of tastes: sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and umami. As such animals have evolved, the tastes that provide the most energy (sugar and fats) are the most pleasant to eat while others, such as bitter, are not enjoyable.[15] Water, while important for survival, has no taste.[16] Fats, on the other hand, especially saturated fats, are thicker and rich and are thus considered more enjoyable to eat.

Sweet edit

 
Structure of sucrose

Generally regarded as the most pleasant taste, sweetness is almost always provided by a type of simple sugar such as glucose or fructose, or disaccharides such as sucrose, a molecule combining glucose and fructose.[17] Complex carbohydrates are long chains and do not have a sweet taste. Artificial sweeteners such as sucralose are used to mimic the sugar molecule, creating the sensation of sweetness, without the energy. Other types of sugar include raw sugar, which is known for its amber colour, as it is unprocessed. As sugar is vital for energy and survival[citation needed], the taste of sugar is pleasant.

The stevia plant contains a compound known as steviol which, when extracted, has 300 times the sweetness of sugar while having minimal impact on blood sugar.[18]

Sour edit

Sourness is caused by the taste of acids, such as vinegar in alcoholic beverages. Sour foods include citrus, specifically lemons, limes, and to a lesser degree oranges. Sour is evolutionarily significant as it is a sign of food that may have gone rancid due to bacteria.[19] Many foods, however, are slightly acidic and help stimulate the taste buds and enhance flavour.

Salty edit

 
Salt mounds in Bolivia

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 flavour, although eating pure salt is regarded as highly unpleasant. There are many different types of salt, with each having a different degree of saltiness, including sea salt, fleur de sel, kosher salt, mined salt, and grey salt. Other than enhancing flavour, its significance is that the body needs and maintains a delicate electrolyte balance, which is the kidney's function. Salt may be iodized, meaning iodine has been added to it, a necessary nutrient that promotes thyroid function. Some canned foods, notably soups or packaged broths, tend to be high in salt as a means of preserving the food longer. Historically salt has long been used as a meat preservative as salt promotes water excretion. Similarly, dried foods also promote food safety.

Bitter edit

Bitterness is a sensation often considered unpleasant and characterized by having a sharp, pungent taste. Unsweetened dark chocolate, caffeine, lemon rind, and some types of fruit are known to be bitter.

Umami edit

Umami has been described as savoury and is characteristic of broths and cooked meats.[20][21][22][23]: 35–36  Foods that have a strong umami flavor include meats, shellfish, fish (including fish sauce and preserved fish such as Maldives fish, sardines, and anchovies), tomatoes, mushrooms, hydrolyzed vegetable protein, meat extract, yeast extract, cheeses, and soy sauce.

Cuisine edit

 
Typical Balinese cuisine in Indonesia

Many scholars claim that the rhetorical function of food is to represent the culture of a country and that it can be used as a form of communication. According to Goode, Curtis and Theophano, food "is the last aspect of an ethnic culture to be lost".[24]

Many cultures have a recognizable cuisine, a specific set of cooking traditions using various spices or a combination of flavours unique to that culture, which evolves. Other differences include preferences (hot or cold, spicy, etc.) and practices, the study of which is known as gastronomy. Many cultures have diversified their foods by utilizing preparation, cooking methods, and manufacturing. This also includes a complex food trade which helps the cultures to economically survive by way of food, not just by consumption.

Some popular types of ethnic foods include Italian, French, Japanese, Chinese, American, Cajun, Thai, African, Indian and Nepalese. Various cultures throughout the world study the dietary analysis of food habits. While evolutionarily speaking, as opposed to culturally, humans are omnivores, religion and social constructs such as morality, activism, or environmentalism will often affect which foods they will consume. Food is eaten and typically enjoyed through the sense of taste, the perception of flavour from eating and drinking. Certain tastes are more enjoyable than others, for evolutionary purposes.

Presentation edit

 
A French basil salmon terrine, with eye-appealing garnishes

Aesthetically pleasing and eye-appealing food presentations can encourage people to consume food. A common saying is that people "eat with their eyes". Food presented in a clean and appetizing way will encourage a good flavour, even if unsatisfactory.[25][26]

Texture plays a crucial role in the enjoyment of eating foods. Contrasts in textures, such as something crunchy in an otherwise smooth dish, may increase the appeal of eating it. Common examples include adding granola to yoghurt, adding croutons to a salad or soup, and toasting bread to enhance its crunchiness for a smooth topping, such as jam or butter.[27]

Another universal phenomenon regarding food is the appeal of contrast in taste and presentation. For example, such opposite flavours as sweetness and saltiness tend to go well together, as in kettle corn and nuts.

Food preparation edit

While many foods can be eaten raw, many also undergo some form of preparation for reasons of safety, palatability, texture, or flavour. At the simplest level, this may involve washing, cutting, trimming, or adding other foods or ingredients, such as spices. It may also involve mixing, heating or cooling, pressure cooking, fermentation, or combination with other food. In a home, most food preparation takes place in a kitchen. Some preparation is done to enhance the taste or aesthetic appeal; other preparation may help to preserve the food; others may be involved in cultural identity. A meal is made up of food which is prepared to be eaten at a specific time and place.[28]

 
A refrigerator helps to keep foods fresh.

Animal preparation edit

The preparation of animal-based food usually involves slaughter, evisceration, hanging, portioning, and rendering. In developed countries, this is usually done outside the home in slaughterhouses, which are used to process animals en masse for meat production. Many countries regulate their slaughterhouses by law. For example, the United States established the Humane Slaughter Act of 1958, which requires that an animal be stunned before killing. This act, like those in many countries, exempts slaughter following religious law, such as kosher, shechita, and dhabīḥah halal. Strict interpretations of kashrut require the animal to be fully aware when its carotid artery is cut.[29]

On the local level, a butcher may commonly break down larger animal meat into smaller manageable cuts, and pre-wrap them for commercial sale or wrap them to order in butcher paper. In addition, fish and seafood may be fabricated into smaller cuts by a fishmonger. However, fish butchery may be done on board a fishing vessel and quick-frozen for the preservation of the quality.[30]

Raw food preparation edit

 
Many types of fish ready to be eaten, including salmon and tuna

Certain cultures highlight animal and vegetable foods in a raw state. Salads consisting of raw vegetables or fruits are common in many cuisines. Sashimi in Japanese cuisine consists of raw sliced fish or other meat, and sushi often incorporates raw fish or seafood. Steak tartare and salmon tartare are dishes made from diced or ground raw beef or salmon, mixed with various ingredients and served with baguettes, brioche, or frites.[31] In Italy, carpaccio is a dish of very thinly sliced raw beef, drizzled with a vinaigrette made with olive oil.[32] The health food movement known as raw foodism promotes a mostly vegan diet of raw fruits, vegetables, and grains prepared in various ways, including juicing, food dehydration, sprouting, and other methods of preparation that do not heat the food above 118 °F (47.8 °C).[33] An example of a raw meat dish is ceviche, a Latin American dish made with raw meat that is "cooked" from the highly acidic citric juice from lemons and limes along with other aromatics such as garlic.

Cooking edit

 
Cooking with a wok in China

The term "cooking" encompasses a vast range of methods, tools, and combinations of ingredients to improve the flavour or digestibility of food. Cooking technique, known as culinary art, generally requires the selection, measurement, and combining of ingredients in an ordered procedure to achieve the desired result. Constraints on success include the variability of ingredients, ambient conditions, tools, and the skill of the individual cook.[34] The diversity of cooking worldwide is a reflection of the myriad nutritional, aesthetic, agricultural, economic, cultural, and religious considerations that affect it.[35]

Cooking requires applying heat to a food which usually, though not always, chemically changes the molecules, thus changing its flavour, texture, appearance, and nutritional properties.[36] Cooking certain proteins, such as egg whites, meats, and fish, denatures the protein, causing it to become firm. There is archaeological evidence of roasted foodstuffs at Homo erectus campsites dating from 420,000 years ago.[37] Boiling as a means of cooking requires a container, and has been practised at least since the 10th millennium BC with the introduction of pottery.[38]

Cooking equipment edit
 
A stainless steel frying pan
 
A traditional asado (barbecue)

There are many different types of equipment used for cooking.

Ovens are mostly hollow devices that get very hot, up to 500 °F (260 °C), and are used for baking or roasting and offer a dry-heat cooking method. Different cuisines will use different types of ovens. For example, Indian culture uses a tandoor oven, which is a cylindrical clay oven which operates at a single high temperature.[39] Western kitchens use variable temperature convection ovens, conventional ovens, toaster ovens, or non-radiant heat ovens like the microwave oven. Classic Italian cuisine includes the use of a brick oven containing burning wood. Ovens may be wood-fired, coal-fired, gas, electric, or oil-fired.[40]

Various types of cooktops are used as well. They carry the same variations of fuel types as the ovens mentioned above. Cook-tops are used to heat vessels placed on top of the heat source, such as a sauté pan, sauce pot, frying pan, or pressure cooker. These pieces of equipment can use either a moist or dry cooking method and include methods such as steaming, simmering, boiling, and poaching for moist methods, while the dry methods include sautéing, pan frying, and deep-frying.[41]

In addition, many cultures use grills for cooking. A grill operates with a radiant heat source from below, usually covered with a metal grid and sometimes a cover. An open-pit barbecue in the American south is one example along with the American-style outdoor grill fueled by wood, liquid propane, or charcoal along with soaked wood chips for smoking.[42] A Mexican style of barbecue is called barbacoa, which involves the cooking of meats such as whole sheep over an open fire. In Argentina, an asado (Spanish for "grilled") is prepared on a grill held over an open pit or fire made upon the ground, on which a whole animal or smaller cuts are grilled.[43]

Restaurants edit

 
Café Procope in Paris was founded in 1686.
 
The Allyn House restaurant menu (5 March 1859)

Restaurants employ chefs to prepare the food, and waiters to serve customers at the table.[44] The term restaurant comes from an old term for a restorative meat broth; this broth (or bouillon) was served in elegant outlets in Paris from the mid 18th century.[45][46] These refined "restaurants" were a marked change from the usual basic eateries such as inns and taverns,[46] and some had developed from early Parisian cafés, such as Café Procope, by first serving bouillon, then adding other cooked food to their menus.[47]

Commercial eateries existed during the Roman period, with evidence of 150 "thermopolia", a form of fast food restaurant, found in Pompeii,[48] and urban sales of prepared foods may have existed in China during the Song dynasty.[49]

In 2005, the population of the United States spent $496 billion on out-of-home dining. Expenditures by type of out-of-home dining were as follows: 40% in full-service restaurants, 37.2% in limited-service restaurants (fast food), 6.6% in schools or colleges, 5.4% in bars and vending machines, 4.7% in hotels and motels, 4.0% in recreational places, and 2.2% in others, which includes military bases.[50][better source needed][relevant?]

Economy edit

 
SeaWiFS image for the global biosphere
 
Global average daily calorie consumption in 1995
 
Food imports in 2005
 
Population density by country

Food systems have complex economic and social value chains that effect many parts of the global economy.

Production edit

 
A tractor pulling a chaser bin

Most food has always been obtained through agriculture. With increasing concern over both the methods and products of modern industrial agriculture, there has been a growing trend toward sustainable agricultural practices. This approach, partly fueled by consumer demand, encourages biodiversity, local self-reliance and organic farming methods.[51] Major influences on food production include international organizations (e.g. the World Trade Organization and Common Agricultural Policy), national government policy (or law), and war.[52]

Several organisations have begun calling for a new kind of agriculture in which agroecosystems provide food but also support vital ecosystem services so that soil fertility and biodiversity are maintained rather than compromised. According to the International Water Management Institute and UNEP, well-managed agroecosystems not only provide food, fibre and animal products, they also provide services such as flood mitigation, groundwater recharge, erosion control and habitats for plants, birds, fish and other animals.[53]

Food manufacturing edit

 
Packaged household food items

Packaged foods are manufactured outside the home for purchase. This can be as simple as a butcher preparing meat or as complex as a modern international food industry. Early food processing techniques were limited by available food preservation, packaging, and transportation. This mainly involved salting, curing, curdling, drying, pickling, fermenting, and smoking.[54] Food manufacturing arose during the industrial revolution in the 19th century.[55] This development took advantage of new mass markets and emerging technology, such as milling, preservation, packaging and labeling, and transportation. It brought the advantages of pre-prepared time-saving food to the bulk of ordinary people who did not employ domestic servants.[56]

At the start of the 21st century, a two-tier structure has arisen, with a few international food processing giants controlling a wide range of well-known food brands. There also exists a wide array of small local or national food processing companies.[57] Advanced technologies have also come to change food manufacturing. Computer-based control systems, sophisticated processing and packaging methods, and logistics and distribution advances can enhance product quality, improve food safety, and reduce costs.[56]

International food imports and exports edit

The World Bank reported that the European Union was the top food importer in 2005, followed at a distance by the US and Japan. Britain's need for food was especially well-illustrated in World War II. Despite the implementation of food rationing, Britain remained dependent on food imports and the result was a long-term engagement in the Battle of the Atlantic.

Food is traded and marketed on a global basis. The variety and availability of food is no longer restricted by the diversity of locally grown food or the limitations of the local growing season.[58] Between 1961 and 1999, there was a 400% increase in worldwide food exports.[59] Some countries are now economically dependent on food exports, which in some cases account for over 80% of all exports.[60]

In 1994, over 100 countries became signatories to the Uruguay Round of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade in a dramatic increase in trade liberalization. This included an agreement to reduce subsidies paid to farmers, underpinned by the WTO enforcement of agricultural subsidy, tariffs, import quotas, and settlement of trade disputes that cannot be bilaterally resolved.[61] Where trade barriers are raised on the disputed grounds of public health and safety, the WTO refer the dispute to the Codex Alimentarius Commission, which was founded in 1962 by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization and the World Health Organization. Trade liberalization has greatly affected world food trade.[62]

Marketing and retailing edit

 
Packaged food aisles of supermarket in Portland, Oregon, United States

Food marketing brings together the producer and the consumer. The marketing of even a single food product can be a complicated process involving many producers and companies. For example, 56 companies are involved in making one can of chicken noodle soup. These businesses include not only chicken and vegetable processors but also the companies that transport the ingredients and those that print labels and manufacture cans.[63] The food marketing system is the largest direct and indirect non-government employer in the United States.

In the pre-modern era, the sale of surplus food took place once a week when farmers took their wares on market day into the local village marketplace. Here food was sold to grocers for sale in their local shops for purchase by local consumers.[35][56] With the onset of industrialization and the development of the food processing industry, a wider range of food could be sold and distributed in distant locations. Typically early grocery shops would be counter-based shops, in which purchasers told the shop-keeper what they wanted so that the shop-keeper could get it for them.[35][64]

In the 20th century, supermarkets were born. Supermarkets brought with them a self service approach to shopping using shopping carts and were able to offer quality food at lower cost through economies of scale and reduced staffing costs. In the latter part of the 20th century, this has been further revolutionized by the development of vast warehouse-sized, out-of-town supermarkets, selling a wide range of food from around the world.[65]

Unlike food processors, food retailing is a two-tier market in which a small number of very large companies control a large proportion of supermarkets. The supermarket giants wield great purchasing power over farmers and processors, and strong influence over consumers. Nevertheless, less than 10% of consumer spending on food goes to farmers, with larger percentages going to advertising, transportation, and intermediate corporations.[66]

Access edit

Access to food is an economical and a sociological issue. Disadvantaged people typically live further away from providers of healthy food than the middle class. A study of 94 million visits to food retailers showed that Americans travel a median distance of 5.95 km (3.7 miles) each time they buy food.[67]

Prices edit

Food prices refer to the average price level for food across countries, regions and on a global scale.[68] Food prices affect producers and consumers of food.

 
Food pricing for tomatoes given in US dollars per pound
 
The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) Food Price Index 1961–2021 in nominal and real terms. The Real Price Index is the Nominal Price Index deflated by the World Bank Manufactures Unit Value Index (MUV). Years 2014–2016 is 100.

Price levels depend on the food production process, including food marketing and food distribution. Fluctuation in food prices is determined by a number of compounding factors.[69] Geopolitical events, global demand, exchange rates,[70] government policy, diseases and crop yield, energy costs, availability of natural resources for agriculture,[71] food speculation,[72][73][74] changes in the use of soil and weather events directly affect food prices.[75]

The consequences of food price fluctuation are multiple. Increases in food prices, or agflation, endangers food security, particularly for developing countries, and can cause social unrest.[76][77][78] Increases in food prices is related to disparities in diet quality and health,[79] particularly among vulnerable populations, such as women and children.[80]

Food prices will on average continue to rise due to a variety of reasons. Growing world population will put more pressure on the supply and demand. Climate change will increase extreme weather events, including droughts, storms and heavy rain, and overall increases in temperature will affect food production.[81]

To a certain extent, adverse price trends can be counteracted by food politics.

An intervention to reduce food loss or waste, if sufficiently large, will affect prices upstream and downstream in the supply chain relative to where the intervention occurred.[82] "The CPI (Consumer Price Index) for all food increased 0.8% from July 2022 to August 2022, and food prices were 11.4% higher than in August 2021."[83]
 
Some essential food products including bread, rice and pasta

As investment edit

Food speculation refers to the buying and selling of futures contracts by traders with the aim of profiting from changes in food prices. Food speculation can be both positive and negative for food producers and buyers. It is betting on food prices (unregulated) financial markets. Food speculation by global players like banks, hedge funds or pension funds is alleged to cause price swings in staple foods such as wheat, maize and soy – even though too large price swings in an idealized economy are theoretically ruled out: Adam Smith in 1776 reasoned that the only way to make money from commodities trading is by buying low and selling high, which has the effect of smoothing out price swings and mitigating shortages.[84][85] For the actors, the apparently random swings are predictable, which means potential huge profits. For the global poor, food speculation and resulting price peaks may result in increased poverty or even famine.[86]

In contrast to food hoarding, speculation does not mean that real food shortages or scarcity need to be evoked, the price changes are only due to trading activity.[87]

Food speculation may be a reason for agflation.[88] The 2007–08 world food price crisis is thought to have been be partially caused by speculation.[87][89][90]

Problems edit

 
MyPlate replaced MyPyramid as the USDA nutrition guide.

Because of its centrality to human life, problems related to access, quality and production of food effect every aspect of human life.

Nutrition and dietary problems edit

Between the extremes of optimal health and death from starvation or malnutrition, there is an array of disease states that can be caused or alleviated by changes in diet. Deficiencies, excesses, and imbalances in diet can produce negative impacts on health, which may lead to various health problems such as scurvy, obesity, or osteoporosis, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases as well as psychological and behavioral problems. The science of nutrition attempts to understand how and why specific dietary aspects influence health.

Nutrients in food are grouped into several categories. Macronutrients are fat, protein, and carbohydrates. Micronutrients are the minerals and vitamins. Additionally, food contains water and dietary fiber.

As previously discussed, the body is designed by natural selection to enjoy sweet and fattening foods for evolutionary diets, ideal for hunters and gatherers. Thus, sweet and fattening foods in nature are typically rare and are very pleasurable to eat. In modern times these foods are easily available to consumers, which promotes obesity in adults and children alike.

Hunger and starvation edit

Food deprivation leads to malnutrition and ultimately starvation. This is often connected with famine, which involves the absence of food in entire communities. This can have a devastating and widespread effect on human health and mortality. Rationing is sometimes used to distribute food in times of shortage, most notably during times of war.[52]

Starvation is a significant international problem. Approximately 815 million people are undernourished, and over 16,000 children die per day from hunger-related causes.[91] Food deprivation is regarded as a deficit need in Maslow's hierarchy of needs and is measured using famine scales.[92]

Food waste edit

 
Fruit and vegetables in a dumpster, discarded uneaten
 
Food recovered by food waste critic Rob Greenfield in Madison, Wisconsin, from two days of recovery from dumpsters[93]

Food loss and waste is food that is not eaten. The causes of food waste or loss are numerous and occur throughout the food system, during production, processing, distribution, retail and food service sales, and consumption. Overall, about one-third of the world's food is thrown away.[94][95] A 2021 meta-analysis that did not include food lost during production, by the United Nations Environment Programme found that food waste was a challenge in all countries at all levels of economic development.[96] The analysis estimated that global food waste was 931 million tonnes of food waste (about 121 kg per capita) across three sectors: 61 percent from households, 26 percent from food service and 13 percent from retail.[96]

Food loss and waste is a major part of the impact of agriculture on climate change (it amounts to 3.3 billion tons of CO2e emissions annually[97][98]) and other environmental issues, such as land use, water use and loss of biodiversity. Prevention of food waste is the highest priority, and when prevention is not possible, the food waste hierarchy ranks the food waste treatment options from preferred to least preferred based on their negative environmental impacts.[99] Reuse pathways of surplus food intended for human consumption, such as food donation, is the next best strategy after prevention, followed by animal feed, recycling of nutrients and energy followed by the least preferred option, landfill, which is a major source of the greenhouse gas methane.[100] Other considerations include unreclaimed phosphorus in food waste leading to further phosphate mining. Moreover, reducing food waste in all parts of the food system is an important part of reducing the environmental impact of agriculture, by reducing the total amount of water, land, and other resources used.

The UN's Sustainable Development Goal Target 12.3 seeks to "halve global per capita food waste at the retail and consumer levels and reduce food losses along production and supply chains, including post-harvest losses" by 2030.[101] Climate change mitigation strategies prominently feature reducing food waste.[102] In the 2022 United Nations Biodiversity Conference nations agree to reduce food waste by 50% by the year 2030.[103] According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), plastics help to prevent about 1 billion tonnes of food waste each year. This is equivalent to about one-third of all food produced for human consumption.

Therefore, plastics help to reduce food waste by about 33%.

Policy edit

Food policy is the area of public policy concerning how food is produced, processed, distributed, purchased, or provided. Food policies are designed to influence the operation of the food and agriculture system balanced with ensuring human health needs. This often includes decision-making around production and processing techniques, marketing, availability, utilization, and consumption of food, in the interest of meeting or furthering social objectives. Food policy can be promulgated on any level, from local to global, and by a government agency, business, or organization. Food policymakers engage in activities such as regulation of food-related industries, establishing eligibility standards for food assistance programs for the poor, ensuring safety of the food supply, food labeling, and even the qualifications of a product to be considered organic.[104]

 
Rice

Most food policy is initiated at the domestic level for purposes of ensuring a safe and adequate food supply for the citizenry.[105] In a developing nation, there are three main objectives for food policy: to protect the poor from crises, to develop long-run markets that enhance efficient resource use, and to increase food production that will in turn promote an increase in income.[106]

Food policy comprises the mechanisms by which food-related matters are addressed or administered by governments, including international bodies or networks, and by public institutions or private organizations. Agricultural producers often bear the burden of governments' desire to keep food prices sufficiently low for growing urban populations. Low prices for consumers can be a disincentive for farmers to produce more food, often resulting in hunger, poor trade prospects, and an increased need for food imports.[105]

In a more developed country such as the United States, food and nutrition policy must be viewed in context with regional and national economic concerns, environmental pressures, maintenance of a social safety net, health, encouragement of private enterprise and innovation, and an agrarian landscape dominated by fewer, larger mechanized farms.[107] Industrialized countries strive to ensure that farmers earn relatively stable incomes despite price and supply fluctuations and adverse weather events. The cost of subsidizing farm incomes is passed along to consumers in the form of higher food prices.[105]

Legal definition edit

Some countries list a legal definition of food, often referring them with the word foodstuff. These countries list food as any item that is to be processed, partially processed, or unprocessed for consumption. The listing of items included as food includes any substance intended to be, or reasonably expected to be, ingested by humans. In addition to these foodstuffs, drink, chewing gum, water, or other items processed into said food items are part of the legal definition of food. Items not included in the legal definition of food include animal feed, live animals (unless being prepared for sale in a market), plants before harvesting, medicinal products, cosmetics, tobacco and tobacco products, narcotic or psychotropic substances, and residues and contaminants.[108]

Right to food edit

 
Right to food around the world (as of 2011–2012):[109][110][111]
  Adopted or drafting a framework law (19)
  Constitutional, explicit as a right (23)
  Constitutional, implicit in broader rights or as directive principle (41)
  Direct applicability via international treaties (103)
  No known right to food
Note: The same country can fall in multiple categories; the colour given to a country corresponds to the highest listed category in which a country falls.

The right to food, and its variations, is a human right protecting the right of people to feed themselves in dignity, implying that sufficient food is available, that people have the means to access it, and that it adequately meets the individual's dietary needs. The right to food protects the right of all human beings to be free from hunger, food insecurity, and malnutrition.[112] The right to food implies that governments only have an obligation to hand out enough free food to starving recipients to ensure subsistence, it does not imply a universal right to be fed. Also, if people are deprived of access to food for reasons beyond their control, for example, because they are in detention, in times of war or after natural disasters, the right requires the government to provide food directly.[113]

The right is derived from the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights[113] which has 170 state parties as of April 2020.[110] States that sign the covenant agree to take steps to the maximum of their available resources to achieve progressively the full realization of the right to adequate food, both nationally and internationally.[114][112] In a total of 106 countries the right to food is applicable either via constitutional arrangements of various forms or via direct applicability in law of various international treaties in which the right to food is protected.[115]

At the 1996 World Food Summit, governments reaffirmed the right to food and committed themselves to halve the number of hungry and malnourished from 840 to 420 million by 2015. However, the number has increased over the past years, reaching an infamous record in 2009 of more than 1 billion undernourished people worldwide.[112] Furthermore, the number who suffer from hidden hunger – micronutrient deficiences that may cause stunted bodily and intellectual growth in children – amounts to over 2 billion people worldwide.[116]

Whilst under international law states are obliged to respect, protect and fulfill the right to food, the practical difficulties in achieving this human right are demonstrated by prevalent food insecurity across the world, and ongoing litigation in countries such as India.[117][118] In the continents with the biggest food-related problems – Africa, Asia and South America – not only is there shortage of food and lack of infrastructure but also maldistribution and inadequate access to food.[119]

The Human Rights Measurement Initiative[120] measures the right to food for countries around the world, based on their level of income.[121]

Food security edit

 
A woman selling produce at a market in Lilongwe, Malawi
 
A farmer holding up onions he has grown on his farm near Gilgil, Kenya

Food security is the availability of food in a country (or a geographic region) and the ability of individuals within that country (region) to access, afford, and source adequate foodstuff. According to the United Nations Committee on World Food Security, food security is defined as meaning that all people, at all times, have physical, social, and economic access to sufficient, safe, and nutritious food that meets their food preferences and dietary needs for an active and healthy life.[122] The availability of food irrespective of class, gender or region is another element of food security. There is evidence of food security being a concern many thousands of years ago, with central authorities in ancient China and ancient Egypt being known to release food from storage in times of famine. At the 1974 World Food Conference, the term "food security" was defined with an emphasis on supply; food security is defined as the "availability at all times of adequate, nourishing, diverse, balanced and moderate world food supplies of basic foodstuff to sustain a steady expansion of food consumption and to offset the fluctuations in production and prices".[123] Later definitions added demand and access issues to the definition. The first World Food Summit, held in 1996, stated that food security "exists when all people, at all times, have physical and economic access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food to meet their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life."[124][125]

Similarly, household food security is considered to exist when all the members of a family, at all times, have access to enough food for an active, healthy life.[126] Individuals who are food secure do not live in hunger or fear of starvation.[127] Food insecurity, on the other hand, is defined by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) as a situation of " limited or uncertain availability of nutritionally adequate and safe foods or limited or uncertain ability to acquire acceptable foods in socially acceptable ways".[128] Food security incorporates a measure of resilience to future disruption or unavailability of critical food supply due to various risk factors including droughts, shipping disruptions, fuel shortages, economic instability, and wars.[129]

The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, or FAO, identified the four pillars of food security as availability, access, utilization, and stability.[130] The United Nations (UN) recognized the Right to Food in the Declaration of Human Rights in 1948,[127] and has since said that it is vital for the enjoyment of all other rights.[131]

The concept of food security has evolved to recognize the centrality of agency and sustainability, along with the four other dimensions of availability, access, utilization, and stability. These six dimensions of food security are reinforced in conceptual and legal understandings of the right to food.[132][133]

The 1996 World Summit on Food Security[134] declared that "food should not be used as an instrument for political and economic pressure".[125] Multiple different international agreements and mechanisms have been developed to address food security. The main global policy to reduce hunger and poverty is in the Sustainable Development Goals. In particular Goal 2: Zero Hunger sets globally agreed targets to end hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition, and promote sustainable agriculture by 2030.[135]

The International Monetary Fund cautioned in September 2022 that "the impact of increasing import costs for food and fertilizer for those extremely vulnerable to food insecurity will add $9 billion to their balance of payments pressures – in 2022 and 2023." This would deplete countries' foreign reserves as well as their capacity to pay for food and fertilizer imports."[136][137]

International aid edit

Food aid can benefit people suffering from a shortage of food. It can be used to improve peoples' lives in the short term, so that a society can increase its standard of living to the point that food aid is no longer required.[138] Conversely, badly managed food aid can create problems by disrupting local markets, depressing crop prices, and discouraging food production. Sometimes a cycle of food aid dependence can develop.[139] Its provision, or threatened withdrawal, is sometimes used as a political tool to influence the policies of the destination country, a strategy known as food politics. Sometimes, food aid provisions will require certain types of food be purchased from certain sellers, and food aid can be misused to enhance the markets of donor countries.[140] International efforts to distribute food to the neediest countries are often coordinated by the World Food Programme.[141]

Safety edit

 
Salmonella bacteria is a common cause of foodborne illness, particularly in undercooked chicken and chicken eggs.

Foodborne illness, commonly called "food poisoning", is caused by bacteria, toxins, viruses, parasites, and prions. Roughly 7 million people die of food poisoning each year, with about 10 times as many suffering from a non-fatal version.[142] The two most common factors leading to cases of bacterial foodborne illness are cross-contamination of ready-to-eat food from other uncooked foods and improper temperature control. Less commonly, acute adverse reactions can also occur if chemical contamination of food occurs, for example from improper storage, or use of non-food grade soaps and disinfectants. Food can also be adulterated by a very wide range of articles (known as "foreign bodies") during farming, manufacture, cooking, packaging, distribution, or sale. These foreign bodies can include pests or their droppings, hairs, cigarette butts, wood chips, and all manner of other contaminants. Certain types of food can become contaminated if stored or presented in an unsafe container, such as a ceramic pot with lead-based glaze.[142]

Food poisoning has been recognized as a disease since as early as Hippocrates.[143] The sale of rancid, contaminated, or adulterated food was commonplace until the introduction of hygiene, refrigeration, and vermin controls in the 19th century. Discovery of techniques for killing bacteria using heat, and other microbiological studies by scientists such as Louis Pasteur, contributed to the modern sanitation standards that are ubiquitous in developed nations today. This was further underpinned by the work of Justus von Liebig, which led to the development of modern food storage and food preservation methods.[144] In more recent years, a greater understanding of the causes of food-borne illnesses has led to the development of more systematic approaches such as the Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points (HACCP), which can identify and eliminate many risks.[145]

Recommended measures for ensuring food safety include maintaining a clean preparation area with foods of different types kept separate, ensuring an adequate cooking temperature, and refrigerating foods promptly after cooking.[146]

Foods that spoil easily, such as meats, dairy, and seafood, must be prepared a certain way to avoid contaminating the people for whom they are prepared. As such, the rule of thumb is that cold foods (such as dairy products) should be kept cold and hot foods (such as soup) should be kept hot until storage. Cold meats, such as chicken, that are to be cooked should not be placed at room temperature for thawing, at the risk of dangerous bacterial growth, such as Salmonella or E. coli.[147]

Allergies edit

Some people have allergies or sensitivities to foods that are not problematic to most people. This occurs when a person's immune system mistakes a certain food protein for a harmful foreign agent and attacks it. About 2% of adults and 8% of children have a food allergy.[148] The amount of the food substance required to provoke a reaction in a particularly susceptible individual can be quite small. In some instances, traces of food in the air, too minute to be perceived through smell, have been known to provoke lethal reactions in extremely sensitive individuals. Common food allergens are gluten, corn, shellfish (mollusks), peanuts, and soy.[148] Allergens frequently produce symptoms such as diarrhea, rashes, bloating, vomiting, and regurgitation. The digestive complaints usually develop within half an hour of ingesting the allergen.[148]

Rarely, food allergies can lead to a medical emergency, such as anaphylactic shock, hypotension (low blood pressure), and loss of consciousness. An allergen associated with this type of reaction is peanut, although latex products can induce similar reactions.[148] Initial treatment is with epinephrine (adrenaline), often carried by known patients in the form of an Epi-pen or Twinject.[149][150]

Other health issues edit

Human diet was estimated to cause perhaps around 35% of cancers in a human epidemiological analysis by Richard Doll and Richard Peto in 1981.[151] These cancer may be caused by carcinogens that are present in food naturally or as contaminants. Food contaminated with fungal growth may contain mycotoxins such as aflatoxins which may be found in contaminated corn and peanuts. Other carcinogens identified in food include heterocyclic amines generated in meat when cooked at high temperature, polyaromatic hydrocarbons in charred meat and smoked fish, and nitrosamines generated from nitrites used as food preservatives in cured meat such as bacon.[152]

Anticarcinogens that may help prevent cancer can also be found in many food especially fruit and vegetables. Antioxidants are important groups of compounds that may help remove potentially harmful chemicals. It is however often difficult to identify the specific components in diet that serve to increase or decrease cancer risk since many food, such as beef steak and broccoli, contain low concentrations of both carcinogens and anticarcinogens.[152] There are many international certifications in the cooking field, such as Monde Selection, A.A. Certification, iTQi. They use high-quality evaluation methods to make the food safer.

Diet edit

 
Changes of food supply (by energy)[153][154]
Other area (Yr 2010)[155] * Africa, sub-Sahara - 2170 kcal/capita/day * N.E. and N. Africa - 3120 kcal/capita/day * South Asia - 2450 kcal/capita/day * East Asia - 3040 kcal/capita/day * Latin America / Caribbean - 2950 kcal/capita/day * Developed countries - 3470 kcal/capita/day

Cultural and religious diets edit

Many cultures hold some food preferences and some food taboos. Dietary choices can also define cultures and play a role in religion. For example, only kosher foods are permitted by Judaism, halal foods by Islam, and in Hinduism beef is restricted.[156] In addition, the dietary choices of different countries or regions have different characteristics. This is highly related to a culture's cuisine.

Diet deficiencies edit

Dietary habits play a significant role in the health and mortality of all humans. Imbalances between the consumed fuels and expended energy results in either starvation or excessive reserves of adipose tissue, known as body fat.[157] Poor intake of various vitamins and minerals can lead to diseases that can have far-reaching effects on health. For instance, 30% of the world's population either has, or is at risk for developing, iodine deficiency.[158] It is estimated that at least 3 million children are blind due to vitamin A deficiency.[159] Vitamin C deficiency results in scurvy.[160] Calcium, vitamin D, and phosphorus are inter-related; the consumption of each may affect the absorption of the others. Kwashiorkor and marasmus are childhood disorders caused by lack of dietary protein.[161]

Moral, ethical, and health-conscious diets edit

Many individuals limit what foods they eat for reasons of morality or other habits. For instance, vegetarians choose to forgo food from animal sources to varying degrees. Others choose a healthier diet, avoiding sugars or animal fats and increasing consumption of dietary fiber and antioxidants.[162] Obesity, a serious problem in the western world, leads to higher chances of developing heart disease, diabetes, cancer and many other diseases.[163] More recently, dietary habits have been influenced by the concerns that some people have about possible impacts on health or the environment from genetically modified food.[164] Further concerns about the impact of industrial farming (grains) on animal welfare, human health, and the environment are also affecting contemporary human dietary habits. This has led to the emergence of a movement with a preference for organic and local food.[165]

History edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ SAPEA (2020). (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.
  2. ^ Society, National Geographic (2011-01-21). "omnivore". National Geographic Society. from the original on 2021-12-15. Retrieved 2021-12-15.
  3. ^ "food". National Geographic Society. 1 March 2011. from the original on 22 March 2017. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  4. ^ "ProdSTAT". FAOSTAT. from the original on 10 February 2012.
  5. ^ Favour, Eboh. "Design and Fabrication of a Mill Pulverizer". Academia. from the original on 26 December 2017.
  6. ^ Engineers, NIIR Board of Consultants & (2006). The Complete Book on Spices & Condiments (with Cultivation, Processing & Uses) 2nd Revised Edition: With Cultivation, Processing & Uses. Asia Pacific Business Press Inc. ISBN 978-81-7833-038-9. from the original on 26 December 2017.
  7. ^ Plumer, Brad (2014-08-21). "How much of the world's cropland is actually used to grow food?". Vox. from the original on 2022-04-12. Retrieved 2022-04-11.
  8. ^ Palombo, Enzo (21 April 2016). "Kitchen Science: bacteria and fungi are your foody friends". The Conversation. from the original on 2022-04-11. Retrieved 2022-04-11.
  9. ^ Şerban, Procheş; Wilson, John R. U.; Vamosi, Jana C.; Richardson, David M. (1 February 2008). "Plant Diversity in the Human Diet: Weak Phylogenetic Signal Indicates Breadth". BioScience. 58 (2): 151–159. doi:10.1641/B580209. S2CID 86483332.
  10. ^ Fardet, Anthony (2017), "New Concepts and Paradigms for the Protective Effects of Plant-Based Food Components In Relation To Food Complexity", Vegetarian and Plant-Based Diets in Health and Disease Prevention, Elsevier, pp. 293–312, doi:10.1016/b978-0-12-803968-7.00016-2, ISBN 978-0-12-803968-7, from the original on 2022-06-15, retrieved 2022-04-12
  11. ^ McGee, Chapter 9.
  12. ^ "Animal Products". www.ksre.k-state.edu. from the original on 2022-03-20. Retrieved 2022-05-12.
  13. ^ Marcus, Jacqueline B. (2013), "Protein Basics: Animal and Vegetable Proteins in Food and Health", Culinary Nutrition, Elsevier, pp. 189–230, doi:10.1016/b978-0-12-391882-6.00005-4, ISBN 978-0-12-391882-6, from the original on 2018-06-26, retrieved 2022-05-13
  14. ^ Boston, 677 Huntington Avenue; Ma 02115 +1495‑1000 (2021-09-15). "Aquatic Foods". The Nutrition Source. Retrieved 2023-01-11.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ "Evolution of taste receptor may have shaped human sensitivity to toxic compounds". Medical News Today. from the original on 27 September 2010. Retrieved 29 May 2015.
  16. ^ "Why does pure water have no taste or colour?". The Times Of India. 3 April 2004. from the original on 30 December 2015.
  17. ^ New Oxford American Dictionary
  18. ^ The sweetness multiplier "300 times" comes from subjective evaluations by a panel of test subjects 23 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine tasting various dilutions compared to a standard dilution of sucrose. Sources referenced in this article say stevioside has up to 250 times the sweetness of sucrose, but others, including stevioside brands such as SweetLeaf, claim 300 times. 13 to 12 teaspoon (1.6–2.5 ml) of stevioside powder is claimed to have equivalent sweetening power to 1 US cup (237 ml) of sugar.
  19. ^ States "having an acid taste like lemon or vinegar: she sampled the wine and found it was sour. (of food, esp. milk) spoiled because of fermentation." New Oxford American Dictionary
  20. ^ Fleming A (9 April 2013). "Umami: why the fifth taste is so important". The Guardian. London, UK. Retrieved 18 February 2017.
  21. ^ Blake H (9 February 2010). "Umami in a tube: 'fifth taste' goes on sale in supermarkets". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 11 January 2022. Retrieved 10 February 2011.
  22. ^ Jufresa L (February 16, 2015). Umami (Mapa de las lenguas) (Ebook) (in Spanish). Spain: Penguin Random House Grupo Editorial México. ISBN 978-607-31-2817-9.
  23. ^ Mouritsen JD, Drotner J, Styrbæk K, Mouritsen OG (April 2014). Umami: Unlocking the Secrets of the Fifth Taste (Ebook). United States: Columbia University Press. pp. 35–36. doi:10.7312/mour16890. ISBN 978-0-231-53758-2. JSTOR 10.7312/mour16890.
  24. ^ Shugart, Helene A. (2008). "Sumptuous Texts: Consuming "Otherness" in the Food Film Genre". Critical Studies in Media Communication. 25 (1): 68–90. doi:10.1080/15295030701849928. S2CID 145672719.
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 May 2015. Retrieved 29 May 2015.
  26. ^ Food Texture, Andrew J. Rosenthal
  27. ^ Rosenthal, Andrew J (1999). Food Texture: Measurement and Perception. Springer. ISBN 978-0-8342-1238-1. from the original on 2021-09-22. Retrieved 2020-11-11.
  28. ^ Mead, 11–19
  29. ^ McGee, 142–43.
  30. ^ McGee, 202–06
  31. ^ Davidson, 786–87.
  32. ^ Robuchon, 224.
  33. ^ Davidson, 656
  34. ^ McGee Chapter 14.
  35. ^ a b c Mead, 11–19.
  36. ^ McGee
  37. ^ Campbell, 312.
  38. ^ McGee, 784.
  39. ^ Davidson, 782–83
  40. ^ McGee, 539,784.
  41. ^ McGee, 771–91
  42. ^ Davidson, 356.
  43. ^ Asado Argentina
  44. ^ "Definition of 'restaurant'". collinsdictionary.com. from the original on 2018-10-06. Retrieved 2018-10-06.
  45. ^ "restaurant (n.)". etymonline.com. from the original on 2018-10-06. Retrieved 2018-10-06.
  46. ^ a b "The History of the Restaurant". digital.library.unlv.edu. from the original on 2018-10-06. Retrieved 2018-10-06.
  47. ^ Davidson, 660–61.
  48. ^ Bee Wilson (3 March 2013). . telegraph.co.uk. Archived from the original on 27 March 2013.
  49. ^ "A Culinary Legacy from the Song Dynasty". Shanghai Daily. 11 September 2014 – via ProQuest.
  50. ^ United States Department of Agriculture
  51. ^ Mason
  52. ^ a b Messer, 53–91.
  53. ^ Boelee, E. (Ed) Ecosystems for water and food security 23 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine, 2011, IWMI, UNEP
  54. ^ Aguilera, 1–3.
  55. ^ Miguel, 3.
  56. ^ a b c Jango-Cohen
  57. ^ Hannaford
  58. ^ The Economic Research Service of the USDA
  59. ^ Regmi
  60. ^ CIA World Factbook
  61. ^ World Trade Organization, The Uruguay Round
  62. ^ Van den Bossche
  63. ^ Smith, 501–03.
  64. ^ Benson
  65. ^ Humphery
  66. ^ Magdoff, Fred (Ed.) "[T]he farmer's share of the food dollar (after paying for input costs) has steadily declined from about 40 percent in 1910 to less than 10 percent in 1990."
  67. ^ Xu, Ran; Huang, Xiao; Zhang, Kai; Lyu, Weixuan; Ghosh, Debarchana; Li, Zhenlong; Chen, Xiang (2023-11-13). "Integrating human activity into food environments can better predict cardiometabolic diseases in the United States". Nature Communications. 14 (1): 7326. doi:10.1038/s41467-023-42667-8. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 10643374. PMID 37957191.
  68. ^ Roser, Max; Ritchie, Hannah (2013-10-08). "Food Prices". Our World in Data.
  69. ^ Amadeo, Kimberly. "5 Causes of High Food Prices". The Balance. Retrieved 2020-09-19.
  70. ^ Abbott, Philip C.; Hurt, Christopher; Tyner, Wallace E., eds. (2008). What's Driving Food Prices?. Issue Report.
  71. ^ Savary, Serge; Ficke, Andrea; Aubertot, Jean-Noël; Hollier, Clayton (2012-12-01). "Crop losses due to diseases and their implications for global food production losses and food security". Food Security. 4 (4): 519–537. doi:10.1007/s12571-012-0200-5. ISSN 1876-4525. S2CID 3335739.
  72. ^ "Hedge funds accused of gambling with lives of the poorest as food prices soar". The Guardian. 2010-07-18. Retrieved 2020-09-19.
  73. ^ "Food speculation". Global Justice Now. 2014-12-09. Retrieved 2020-09-19.
  74. ^ Spratt, S. (2013). "Food price volatility and financial speculation". FAC Working Paper 47. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.304.5228.
  75. ^ "Food Price Explained". Futures Fundamentals. Retrieved 2020-09-19.
  76. ^ Bellemare, Marc F. (2015). "Rising Food Prices, Food Price Volatility, and Social Unrest". American Journal of Agricultural Economics. 97 (1): 1–21. doi:10.1093/ajae/aau038. hdl:10.1093/ajae/aau038. ISSN 1467-8276. S2CID 34238445.
  77. ^ Perez, Ines. "Climate Change and Rising Food Prices Heightened Arab Spring". Scientific American. Retrieved 2020-09-19.
  78. ^ Winecoff, Ore Koren, W. Kindred (20 May 2020). "Food Price Spikes and Social Unrest: The Dark Side of the Fed's Crisis-Fighting". Foreign Policy. Retrieved 2020-09-19.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  79. ^ Darmon, Nicole; Drewnowski, Adam (2015-10-01). "Contribution of food prices and diet cost to socioeconomic disparities in diet quality and health: a systematic review and analysis". Nutrition Reviews. 73 (10): 643–660. doi:10.1093/nutrit/nuv027. ISSN 0029-6643. PMC 4586446. PMID 26307238.
  80. ^ Darnton-Hill, Ian; Cogill, Bruce (2010-01-01). "Maternal and Young Child Nutrition Adversely Affected by External Shocks Such As Increasing Global Food Prices". The Journal of Nutrition. 140 (1): 162S–169S. doi:10.3945/jn.109.111682. ISSN 0022-3166. PMID 19939995.
  81. ^ . World Watch Institute. 2013. Archived from the original on 17 July 2018. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
  82. ^ The State of Food and Agriculture 2019. Moving forward on food loss and waste reduction, In brief. Rome: FAO. 2019. p. 18.
  83. ^ "Summary Findings Food Price Outlook, 2022 and 2023". USDA.
  84. ^ Gunther Capelle-Blancard,Dramane Coulibaly (2011). "Index trading and agricultural commodity prices: A panel Granger causality analysis". Économie Internationale. 2–3 (126): 51–72.
  85. ^ Smith, Adam (1977) [1776]. An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-76374-9.
  86. ^ "Food speculation". Global Justice Now. 2014-12-09. Retrieved 2019-08-21.
  87. ^ a b Vidal, John (2011-01-23). "Food speculation: aFood speculation: 'People die from hunger while banks make a killing on food'". the Guardian. Retrieved 2019-08-21.
  88. ^ Islam, M. Shahidul. "Of Agflation and Agriculture: Time to Fix the Structural Problems" (PDF). National University of Singapore. Retrieved 23 June 2021.
  89. ^ Anna Chadwick (2015). Food Commodity Speculation, Hunger, and the Global Food Crisis: Whither Regulation (Thesis). London School of Economics and Political Science. S2CID 155654460.
  90. ^ GHOSH, JAYATI (2010). "The Unnatural Coupling: Food and Global Finance". Journal of Agrarian Change. Wiley. 10 (1): 72–86. doi:10.1111/j.1471-0366.2009.00249.x. ISSN 1471-0358.
  91. ^ World Health Organization
  92. ^ Howe, 353–72
  93. ^ "The Food Waste Fiasco: You Have to See it to Believe it!". 2014-10-06.
  94. ^ Jenny Gustavsson. Global food losses and food waste : extent, causes and prevention : study conducted for the International Congress "Save Food!" at Interpack 2011 Düsseldorf, Germany. OCLC 1126211917.
  95. ^ "UN Calls for Action to End Food Waste Culture". Daily News Brief. 2021-10-04. from the original on 2021-10-04. Retrieved 2021-10-04.
  96. ^ a b UNEP Food Waste Index Report 2021 (Report). United Nations Environment Programme. 2021-03-04. ISBN 9789280738513. from the original on 2022-02-01. Retrieved 2022-02-01.
  97. ^ "FAO - News Article: Food wastage: Key facts and figures". www.fao.org. from the original on 2021-06-07. Retrieved 2021-06-07.
  98. ^ "A third of food is wasted, making it third-biggest carbon emitter, U.N. says". Reuters. 2013-09-11. from the original on 2021-06-07. Retrieved 2021-06-07.
  99. ^ "Brief on food waste in the European Union". European Commission. 2020-08-25. from the original on 2022-11-15. Retrieved 2022-11-15.
  100. ^ US EPA, OLEM (2015-08-12). "Food Recovery Hierarchy". www.epa.gov. from the original on 2019-05-23. Retrieved 2022-05-15.
  101. ^ United Nations (2017) Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 6 July 2017, Work of the Statistical Commission pertaining to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development (A/RES/71/313 2020-10-23 at the Wayback Machine)
  102. ^ "Reduced Food Waste". Project Drawdown. 2020-02-12. from the original on 2020-09-24. Retrieved 2020-09-19.
  103. ^ "COP15: NATIONS ADOPT FOUR GOALS, 23 TARGETS FOR 2030 IN LANDMARK UN BIODIVERSITY AGREEMENT". Convention on Biological Diversity. United Nations. from the original on 2022-12-20. Retrieved 9 January 2023.
  104. ^ Drake University. . State and Local Food Policy Councils. Iowa Food Policy Councils. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 28 February 2011.
  105. ^ a b c Fischer, G.; Frohberg, K.; Keyzer, M.A.; Parikh, K.S. (1988). Linked National Models: A Tool for International Policy Analysis. The Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers. ISBN 978-9024737345.
  106. ^ Byerlee, Derek; Jayne, T.S.; Myers, Robert J. (2006). "Managing food price risks and instability in a liberalizing market environment: Overview and policy options". Food Policy. 31 (4): 275–287. doi:10.1016/j.foodpol.2006.02.002.
  107. ^ Wilde, Parke (2013). Food Policy in the United States: An Introduction. London and New York: Routledge Taylor & Francis Group. ISBN 978-1-84971-428-0.
  108. ^ United Kingdom Office of Public Sector Information
  109. ^ Knuth 2011.
  110. ^ a b United Nations Treaty Collection 2012a
  111. ^ United Nations Treaty Collection 2012b
  112. ^ a b c Ziegler 2012: "What is the right to food?"
  113. ^ a b Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food 2012a: "Right to Food."
  114. ^ International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights 1966: article 2(1), 11(1) and 23.
  115. ^ Knuth 2011: 32.
  116. ^ Ahluwalia 2004: 12.
  117. ^ Westcott, Catherine and Nadia Khoury and CMS Cameron McKenna,The Right to Food, (Advocates for International Development, October 2011)http://a4id.org/sites/default/files/user/Right%20to%20Food%20Legal%20Guide.pdf.
  118. ^ "Aadhaar vs. Right to food".
  119. ^ Ahluwalia 2004: iii.
  120. ^ "Human Rights Measurement Initiative – The first global initiative to track the human rights performance of countries". humanrightsmeasurement.org. Retrieved 2022-03-09.
  121. ^ "Right to food - HRMI Rights Tracker". rightstracker.org. Retrieved 2022-03-09.
  122. ^ "Food Security". ifpri.org. from the original on 2021-04-28. Retrieved 2020-11-30.
  123. ^ Trade Reforms and Food Security: Conceptualizing the Linkages. FAO, UN. 2003. from the original on 2010-08-26. Retrieved 2015-02-14.
  124. ^ Patel, Raj (20 November 2013). "Raj Patel: 'Food sovereignty' is next big idea". Financial Times. from the original on 15 January 2023. Retrieved 17 January 2014.
  125. ^ a b Food and Agriculture Organization (November 1996). "Rome Declaration on Food Security and World Food Summit Plan of Action". from the original on 8 February 2019. Retrieved 26 October 2013.
  126. ^ "Food Security in the United States: Measuring Household Food Security". USDA. from the original on 2019-11-22. Retrieved 2008-02-23.
  127. ^ a b "Food Security". FAO Agricultural and Development Economics Division. June 2006. from the original on May 15, 2012. Retrieved June 8, 2012.
  128. ^ Gary Bickel; Mark Nord; Cristofer Price; William Hamilton; John Cook (2000). (PDF). USDA Food and Nutrition Service. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 November 2013. Retrieved 1 November 2013.
  129. ^ "The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2013. The multiple dimensions of food security" (PDF). FAO. (PDF) from the original on 22 December 2018. Retrieved 26 November 2013.
  130. ^ FAO (2009). Declaration of the World Food Summit on Food Security (PDF). Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. (PDF) from the original on 2018-10-19. Retrieved 2013-10-15.
  131. ^ Nations, United. "Food". United Nations. from the original on 2022-06-17. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  132. ^ The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World 2021: Transforming food systems for food security, improved nutrition and affordable healthy diets for all. In brief (2021 ed.). Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. 2021. p. 5. doi:10.4060/cb5409en. ISBN 978-92-5-134634-1.
  133. ^ "Food security and nutrition: building a global narrative towards 2030" (PDF). High Level Panel of Experts Report 15: 7–11. 2020. (PDF) from the original on 2022-12-20. Retrieved 2023-01-15.
  134. ^ "1996 Summit on World Food Security Report". 1996 Summit on World Food Security Report.
  135. ^ "Goal 2: Zero Hunger". from the original on 2019-12-10. Retrieved 2017-06-28.
  136. ^ "Global Health Is the Best Investment We Can Make". European Investment Bank. from the original on 2023-01-27. Retrieved 2023-01-27.
  137. ^ "Global Food Crisis Demands Support for People, Open Trade, Bigger Local Harvests". IMF. 30 September 2022. from the original on 2023-01-27. Retrieved 2023-01-27.
  138. ^ World Food Programme
  139. ^ Shah
  140. ^ Kripke
  141. ^ United Nations World Food program
  142. ^ a b National Institute of Health, MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia
  143. ^ Hippocrates, On Acute Diseases.
  144. ^ Magner, 243–498
  145. ^ USDA
  146. ^ "Check Your Steps". from the original on 21 May 2015. Retrieved 29 May 2015.
  147. ^ . Archived from the original on 19 May 2004.
  148. ^ a b c d National Institute of Health
  149. ^ About Epipen, Epipen.com 6 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  150. ^ About Twinject 2009-01-07 at the Wayback Machine, Twinject.com
  151. ^ Doll, R.; Peto, R. (1981). "The causes of cancer: Quantitative estimates of avoidable risks of cancer in the United States today". Journal of the National Cancer Institute. 66 (6): 1191–1308. doi:10.1093/jnci/66.6.1192. PMID 7017215.
  152. ^ a b Carcinogens and Anticarcinogens in the Human Diet. National Academy Press. 1996. ISBN 978-0-309-05391-4.
  153. ^ FAO FAOSTAT 2 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  154. ^ These are supplied energy, intake energy are about 60-80% of supply.
  155. ^ FAO Food Security 31 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  156. ^ Simoons
  157. ^ Nicklas
  158. ^ Merson, 245
  159. ^ Merson, 231.
  160. ^ Merson, 464.
  161. ^ Merson, 224.
  162. ^ Carpenter
  163. ^ Merson, 266–68.
  164. ^ Parekh, 187–206.
  165. ^ Schor

Sources edit

  • Aguilera, Jose Miguel and David W. Stanley. Microstructural Principles of Food Processing and Engineering. Springer, 1999. ISBN 0-8342-1256-0.
  • Ahluwalia, Pooja (2004), (PDF), Centre for Human Rights and Global Justice Working Paper No. 8, 2004., New York: NYU School of Law, archived from the original (PDF) on 16 October 2011.
  • Asado Argentina. About Asado Argentina. Retrieved from http://www.asadoargentina.com/about-asado-argentina/ 2007-07-30 at the Wayback Machine on 2007-05-28.
  • Campbell, Bernard Grant. Human Evolution: An Introduction to Man's Adaptations. Aldine Transaction: 1998. ISBN 0-202-02042-8.
  • Carpenter, Ruth Ann; Finley, Carrie E. Healthy Eating Every Day. Human Kinetics, 2005. ISBN 0-7360-5186-4.
  • Davidson, Alan. The Oxford Companion to Food. 2nd ed. UK: Oxford University Press, 2006.
  • Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2005. . Retrieved from http://www.fao.org/docrep/008/a0200e/a0200e00.htm 2010-11-04 at the Wayback Machine on 2006-09-29.
  • Hannaford, Steve. Oligopoly Watch: Top 20 world food companies. Retrieved from on 2006-09-23.
  • Howe, P. and S. Devereux. Famine Intensity and Magnitude Scales: A Proposal for an Instrumental Definition of Famine. 2004.
  • Humphery, Kim. Shelf Life: Supermarkets and the Changing Cultures of Consumption. Cambridge University Press, 1998. ISBN 0-521-62630-7.
  • International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, United Nations, 1966.
  • Jango-Cohen, Judith. The History Of Food. Twenty-First Century Books, 2005. ISBN 0-8225-2484-8.
  • Jurgens, Marshall H. Animal Feeding and Nutrition. Kendall Hunt, 2001. ISBN 0-7872-7839-4.
  • Knuth, Lidija (2011), Constitutional and Legal Protection of the Right to Food around the World, Margret Vidar, Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, (PDF) from the original on 14 May 2012.
  • Kripke, Gawain. Food aid or hidden dumping?. Oxfam International, March 2005. Retrieved from on 2007-05-26.
  • Lawrie, Stephen; R.A. Lawrie. Lawrie's Meat Science. Woodhead Publishing: 1998. ISBN 1-85573-395-1.
  • Magdoff, Fred; Foster, John Bellamy; and Buttel, Frederick H. Hungry for Profit: The Agribusiness Threat to Farmers, Food, and the Environment. September 2000. ISBN 1-58367-016-5.
  • Mason, John. Sustainable Agriculture. Landlinks Press: 2003. ISBN 0-643-06876-7.
  • Merson, Michael H.; Black, Robert E.; Mills, Anne J. International Public Health: Disease, Programs, Systems, and Policies. Jones and Bartlett Publishers, 2005.
  • McGee, Harold. On Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2004. ISBN 0-684-80001-2.
  • Mead, Margaret. The Changing Significance of Food. In Carole Counihan and Penny Van Esterik (Ed.), Food and Culture: A Reader. UK: Routledge, 1997. ISBN 0-415-91710-7.
  • Messer, Ellen; Derose, Laurie Fields and Sara Millman. Who's Hungry? and How Do We Know?: Food Shortage, Poverty, and Deprivation. United Nations University Press, 1998. ISBN 92-808-0985-7.
  • National Institute of Health. Food poisoning. MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia F. 11 May 2006. Retrieved from on 2006-09-29.
  • Nicklas, Barbara J. Endurance Exercise and Adipose Tissue. CRC Press, 2002. ISBN 0-8493-0460-1.
  • Parekh, Sarad R. The Gmo Handbook: Genetically Modified Animals, Microbes, and Plants in Biotechnology. Humana Press,2004. ISBN 1-58829-307-6.
  • Regmi, Anita (editor).Changing Structure of Global Food Consumption and Trade. Market and Trade Economics Division, Economic Research Service, USDA, 30 May 2001. stock #ERSWRS01-1.
  • Schor, Juliet; Taylor, Betsy (editors). Sustainable Planet: Roadmaps for the Twenty-First Century. Beacon Press, 2003. ISBN 0-8070-0455-3.
  • Shah, Anup. Food Dumping (Aid) Maintains Poverty. Causes of Poverty. Retrieved from http://www.globalissues.org/TradeRelated/Poverty/FoodDumping.asp 2006-10-03 at the Wayback Machine on 2006-09-29.
  • Simoons, Frederick J. Eat Not This Flesh: Food Avoidances from Prehistory to the Present. ISBN 0-299-14250-7.
  • Smith, Andrew (Editor). "Food Marketing," in Oxford Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink, New York: Oxford University Press, 2007.
  • Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food (2012a), Website of the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, Olivier De Schutter, from the original on 25 May 2012, retrieved 24 May 2012.
  • The Economic Research Service of the USDA. Global Food Markets: Briefing Rooms. Retrieved from on 2006-09-29.
  • United Kingdom Office of Public Sector Information. Food Safety Act 1990 (c. 16). Retrieved from http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts1990/Ukpga_19900016_en_2.htm#mdiv1 2006-10-25 at the Wayback Machine on 2006-11-08.
  • United Nations Treaty Collection (2012a), International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, United Nations, from the original on 11 June 2012.
  • United Nations Treaty Collection (2012b), Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, United Nations, from the original on 18 July 2012.
  • United States Department of Agriculture, USDA Economic Research Service: The Economics of Food, Farming, Natural Resources, and Rural America. "Briefing Rooms, Food CPI, Prices and Expenditures: Food Expenditure Tables". Retrieved from http://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/food-price-outlook.aspx 2015-04-29 at the Wayback Machine on 2007-06-06.
  • Van den Bossche, Peter. The Law and Policy of the bosanac Trade Organization: Text, Cases and Materials. UK: Cambridge University Press, 2005. ISBN 0-521-82290-4.
  • World Food Programme. Breaking out of the Poverty Trap: How We Use Food Aid. Retrieved from on 2006-09-29.
  • World Health Organization. WHO Global Database on Child Growth and Malnutrition. Retrieved from on 2006-09-29.
  • World Trade Organization. The Uruguay Round. Retrieved from on 2006-09-29.
  • Ziegler, Jean (2012), , archived from the original on 18 January 2012.

Further reading edit

  • 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
  • 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
  • Mobbs, Michael (2012). Sustainable Food Sydney: NewSouth Publishing, ISBN 978-1-920705-54-1
  • 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 edit

  •   The dictionary definition of human food at Wiktionary
  •   Media related to food at Wikimedia Commons
  • Food Timeline
  • Wikibooks Cookbook
  • Food, BBC Radio 4 discussion with Rebecca Spang, Ivan Day and Felipe Fernandez-Armesto (In Our Time, 27 December 2001)

human, food, this, article, about, food, human, beings, food, general, food, that, food, which, human, consumption, which, humans, willingly, things, that, edible, constitute, human, food, food, basic, necessity, life, humans, typically, seek, food, instinctua. This article is about food for human beings For food in general see food Human food is that food which is fit for human consumption and which humans willingly eat Not all things that are edible constitute human food Food is a basic necessity of life and humans typically seek food out as an instinctual response to hunger Display of various foodsHumans eat various substances for energy enjoyment and nutritional support These are usually of plant animal or fungal origin and contain essential nutrients such as carbohydrates fats proteins vitamins and minerals Humans are highly adaptable omnivores and have adapted to obtain food in many different ecosystems Historically humans secured food through two main methods hunting and gathering and agriculture As agricultural technologies improved humans settled into agriculture lifestyles with diets shaped by the agriculture opportunities in their region of the world Geographic and cultural differences have led to the creation of numerous cuisines and culinary arts including a wide array of ingredients herbs spices techniques and dishes As cultures have mixed through forces like international trade and globalization ingredients have become more widely available beyond their geographic and cultural origins creating a cosmopolitan exchange of different food traditions and practices Today the majority of the food energy required by the ever increasing population of the world is supplied by the industrial food industry which produces food with 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 system is one of the major contributors to climate change accountable for as much as 37 of the total greenhouse gas emissions 1 Addressing the carbon intensity of the food system and food waste are important mitigation measures in the global response to climate change citation needed 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 access to food The right to food is a human right derived from the International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights ICESCR recognizing the right to an adequate standard of living including adequate food as well as the fundamental right to be free from hunger Because of these fundamental rights food security is often a priority international policy activity for example Sustainable Development Goal 2 Zero hunger is meant to eliminate hunger by 2030 Food safety and food security are monitored by international agencies like the International Association for Food Protection World Resources Institute World Food Programme Food and Agriculture Organization and International Food Information Council and are often subject to national regulation by institutions such as the Food and Drug Administration in the United States Contents 1 Food sources 2 Taste perception 2 1 Sweet 2 2 Sour 2 3 Salty 2 4 Bitter 2 5 Umami 3 Cuisine 3 1 Presentation 3 2 Food preparation 3 2 1 Animal preparation 3 2 2 Raw food preparation 3 2 3 Cooking 3 2 3 1 Cooking equipment 3 3 Restaurants 4 Economy 4 1 Production 4 2 Food manufacturing 4 3 International food imports and exports 4 4 Marketing and retailing 4 5 Access 4 6 Prices 4 7 As investment 5 Problems 5 1 Nutrition and dietary problems 5 2 Hunger and starvation 5 3 Food waste 6 Policy 6 1 Legal definition 6 2 Right to food 6 3 Food security 6 4 International aid 7 Safety 7 1 Allergies 7 2 Other health issues 8 Diet 8 1 Cultural and religious diets 8 2 Diet deficiencies 8 3 Moral ethical and health conscious diets 9 History 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksFood sources editHumans are omnivores finding sustenance in vegetables fruits cooked meat milk eggs mushrooms and seaweed 2 Cereal grain is a staple food that provides more food energy worldwide than any other type of crop 3 Corn maize wheat and rice account for 87 of all grain production worldwide 4 5 6 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 7 Fungi and bacteria are also used in the preparation of fermented foods like bread wine cheese and yogurt 8 nbsp Yogurt in a steel vesselHumans 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 9 Most human plant based food comes from maize rice and wheat citation needed Plants can be processed into bread pasta cereals juices and jams or raw ingredients such as sugar herbs spices and oils can be extracted 10 Oilseeds are often pressed to produce rich oils sunflower flaxseed rapeseed including canola oil and sesame 11 Animals may be used as food either directly or indirectly This includes meat eggs shellfish and dairy products like milk and cheese 12 They are an important source of protein and are considered complete proteins for human consumption as unlike plant proteins they contain all the amino acids essential for the human body 13 Some cultures and people do not consume meat or animal food products for cultural dietary health ethical or ideological reasons Vegetarians choose to forgo food from animal sources to varying degrees Vegans do not consume any foods that are or contain ingredients from an animal source Fish and other marine animals are harvested from lakes rivers wetlands inland waters coasts estuaries mangroves near shore areas and marine and ocean waters Although aquatic foods contribute significantly to the health of billions of people around the world they tend to be undervalued nutritionally primarily because their diversity is framed in a monolithic way as seafood or fish Worldwide aquatic foods are available every season and are produced in a wide variety Over 2 370 species are harvested from wild fisheries and about 624 are farmed in aquaculture Fish powder for infants fish wafers for snacks and fish chutneys have all been developed because marine foods are nutrient dense 14 Taste perception editMain article Taste Some animals specifically humans have five different types of tastes sweet sour salty bitter and umami As such animals have evolved the tastes that provide the most energy sugar and fats are the most pleasant to eat while others such as bitter are not enjoyable 15 Water while important for survival has no taste 16 Fats on the other hand especially saturated fats are thicker and rich and are thus considered more enjoyable to eat Sweet edit nbsp Structure of sucroseGenerally regarded as the most pleasant taste sweetness is almost always provided by a type of simple sugar such as glucose or fructose or disaccharides such as sucrose a molecule combining glucose and fructose 17 Complex carbohydrates are long chains and do not have a sweet taste Artificial sweeteners such as sucralose are used to mimic the sugar molecule creating the sensation of sweetness without the energy Other types of sugar include raw sugar which is known for its amber colour as it is unprocessed As sugar is vital for energy and survival citation needed the taste of sugar is pleasant The stevia plant contains a compound known as steviol which when extracted has 300 times the sweetness of sugar while having minimal impact on blood sugar 18 Sour edit Sourness is caused by the taste of acids such as vinegar in alcoholic beverages Sour foods include citrus specifically lemons limes and to a lesser degree oranges Sour is evolutionarily significant as it is a sign of food that may have gone rancid due to bacteria 19 Many foods however are slightly acidic and help stimulate the taste buds and enhance flavour Salty edit nbsp Salt mounds in BoliviaSaltiness 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 flavour although eating pure salt is regarded as highly unpleasant There are many different types of salt with each having a different degree of saltiness including sea salt fleur de sel kosher salt mined salt and grey salt Other than enhancing flavour its significance is that the body needs and maintains a delicate electrolyte balance which is the kidney s function Salt may be iodized meaning iodine has been added to it a necessary nutrient that promotes thyroid function Some canned foods notably soups or packaged broths tend to be high in salt as a means of preserving the food longer Historically salt has long been used as a meat preservative as salt promotes water excretion Similarly dried foods also promote food safety Bitter edit Bitterness is a sensation often considered unpleasant and characterized by having a sharp pungent taste Unsweetened dark chocolate caffeine lemon rind and some types of fruit are known to be bitter Umami edit Umami has been described as savoury and is characteristic of broths and cooked meats 20 21 22 23 35 36 Foods that have a strong umami flavor include meats shellfish fish including fish sauce and preserved fish such as Maldives fish sardines and anchovies tomatoes mushrooms hydrolyzed vegetable protein meat extract yeast extract cheeses and soy sauce Cuisine editMain articles Cuisine Regional cuisine and Global cuisines nbsp Typical Balinese cuisine in IndonesiaMany scholars claim that the rhetorical function of food is to represent the culture of a country and that it can be used as a form of communication According to Goode Curtis and Theophano food is the last aspect of an ethnic culture to be lost 24 Many cultures have a recognizable cuisine a specific set of cooking traditions using various spices or a combination of flavours unique to that culture which evolves Other differences include preferences hot or cold spicy etc and practices the study of which is known as gastronomy Many cultures have diversified their foods by utilizing preparation cooking methods and manufacturing This also includes a complex food trade which helps the cultures to economically survive by way of food not just by consumption Some popular types of ethnic foods include Italian French Japanese Chinese American Cajun Thai African Indian and Nepalese Various cultures throughout the world study the dietary analysis of food habits While evolutionarily speaking as opposed to culturally humans are omnivores religion and social constructs such as morality activism or environmentalism will often affect which foods they will consume Food is eaten and typically enjoyed through the sense of taste the perception of flavour from eating and drinking Certain tastes are more enjoyable than others for evolutionary purposes Presentation edit nbsp A French basil salmon terrine with eye appealing garnishesMain article Food presentation Aesthetically pleasing and eye appealing food presentations can encourage people to consume food A common saying is that people eat with their eyes Food presented in a clean and appetizing way will encourage a good flavour even if unsatisfactory 25 26 Texture plays a crucial role in the enjoyment of eating foods Contrasts in textures such as something crunchy in an otherwise smooth dish may increase the appeal of eating it Common examples include adding granola to yoghurt adding croutons to a salad or soup and toasting bread to enhance its crunchiness for a smooth topping such as jam or butter 27 Another universal phenomenon regarding food is the appeal of contrast in taste and presentation For example such opposite flavours as sweetness and saltiness tend to go well together as in kettle corn and nuts Food preparation edit Main article Outline of food preparation While many foods can be eaten raw many also undergo some form of preparation for reasons of safety palatability texture or flavour At the simplest level this may involve washing cutting trimming or adding other foods or ingredients such as spices It may also involve mixing heating or cooling pressure cooking fermentation or combination with other food In a home most food preparation takes place in a kitchen Some preparation is done to enhance the taste or aesthetic appeal other preparation may help to preserve the food others may be involved in cultural identity A meal is made up of food which is prepared to be eaten at a specific time and place 28 nbsp A refrigerator helps to keep foods fresh Animal preparation edit The preparation of animal based food usually involves slaughter evisceration hanging portioning and rendering In developed countries this is usually done outside the home in slaughterhouses which are used to process animals en masse for meat production Many countries regulate their slaughterhouses by law For example the United States established the Humane Slaughter Act of 1958 which requires that an animal be stunned before killing This act like those in many countries exempts slaughter following religious law such as kosher shechita and dhabiḥah halal Strict interpretations of kashrut require the animal to be fully aware when its carotid artery is cut 29 On the local level a butcher may commonly break down larger animal meat into smaller manageable cuts and pre wrap them for commercial sale or wrap them to order in butcher paper In addition fish and seafood may be fabricated into smaller cuts by a fishmonger However fish butchery may be done on board a fishing vessel and quick frozen for the preservation of the quality 30 Raw food preparation edit nbsp Many types of fish ready to be eaten including salmon and tunaCertain cultures highlight animal and vegetable foods in a raw state Salads consisting of raw vegetables or fruits are common in many cuisines Sashimi in Japanese cuisine consists of raw sliced fish or other meat and sushi often incorporates raw fish or seafood Steak tartare and salmon tartare are dishes made from diced or ground raw beef or salmon mixed with various ingredients and served with baguettes brioche or frites 31 In Italy carpaccio is a dish of very thinly sliced raw beef drizzled with a vinaigrette made with olive oil 32 The health food movement known as raw foodism promotes a mostly vegan diet of raw fruits vegetables and grains prepared in various ways including juicing food dehydration sprouting and other methods of preparation that do not heat the food above 118 F 47 8 C 33 An example of a raw meat dish is ceviche a Latin American dish made with raw meat that is cooked from the highly acidic citric juice from lemons and limes along with other aromatics such as garlic Cooking edit nbsp Cooking with a wok in ChinaMain article Cooking The term cooking encompasses a vast range of methods tools and combinations of ingredients to improve the flavour or digestibility of food Cooking technique known as culinary art generally requires the selection measurement and combining of ingredients in an ordered procedure to achieve the desired result Constraints on success include the variability of ingredients ambient conditions tools and the skill of the individual cook 34 The diversity of cooking worldwide is a reflection of the myriad nutritional aesthetic agricultural economic cultural and religious considerations that affect it 35 Cooking requires applying heat to a food which usually though not always chemically changes the molecules thus changing its flavour texture appearance and nutritional properties 36 Cooking certain proteins such as egg whites meats and fish denatures the protein causing it to become firm There is archaeological evidence of roasted foodstuffs at Homo erectus campsites dating from 420 000 years ago 37 Boiling as a means of cooking requires a container and has been practised at least since the 10th millennium BC with the introduction of pottery 38 Cooking equipment edit nbsp A stainless steel frying pan nbsp A traditional asado barbecue Main article Cookware and bakeware There are many different types of equipment used for cooking Ovens are mostly hollow devices that get very hot up to 500 F 260 C and are used for baking or roasting and offer a dry heat cooking method Different cuisines will use different types of ovens For example Indian culture uses a tandoor oven which is a cylindrical clay oven which operates at a single high temperature 39 Western kitchens use variable temperature convection ovens conventional ovens toaster ovens or non radiant heat ovens like the microwave oven Classic Italian cuisine includes the use of a brick oven containing burning wood Ovens may be wood fired coal fired gas electric or oil fired 40 Various types of cooktops are used as well They carry the same variations of fuel types as the ovens mentioned above Cook tops are used to heat vessels placed on top of the heat source such as a saute pan sauce pot frying pan or pressure cooker These pieces of equipment can use either a moist or dry cooking method and include methods such as steaming simmering boiling and poaching for moist methods while the dry methods include sauteing pan frying and deep frying 41 In addition many cultures use grills for cooking A grill operates with a radiant heat source from below usually covered with a metal grid and sometimes a cover An open pit barbecue in the American south is one example along with the American style outdoor grill fueled by wood liquid propane or charcoal along with soaked wood chips for smoking 42 A Mexican style of barbecue is called barbacoa which involves the cooking of meats such as whole sheep over an open fire In Argentina an asado Spanish for grilled is prepared on a grill held over an open pit or fire made upon the ground on which a whole animal or smaller cuts are grilled 43 Restaurants edit nbsp Cafe Procope in Paris was founded in 1686 nbsp The Allyn House restaurant menu 5 March 1859 Main article Restaurant Restaurants employ chefs to prepare the food and waiters to serve customers at the table 44 The term restaurant comes from an old term for a restorative meat broth this broth or bouillon was served in elegant outlets in Paris from the mid 18th century 45 46 These refined restaurants were a marked change from the usual basic eateries such as inns and taverns 46 and some had developed from early Parisian cafes such as Cafe Procope by first serving bouillon then adding other cooked food to their menus 47 Commercial eateries existed during the Roman period with evidence of 150 thermopolia a form of fast food restaurant found in Pompeii 48 and urban sales of prepared foods may have existed in China during the Song dynasty 49 In 2005 the population of the United States spent 496 billion on out of home dining Expenditures by type of out of home dining were as follows 40 in full service restaurants 37 2 in limited service restaurants fast food 6 6 in schools or colleges 5 4 in bars and vending machines 4 7 in hotels and motels 4 0 in recreational places and 2 2 in others which includes military bases 50 better source needed relevant Economy edit nbsp SeaWiFS image for the global biosphere nbsp Global average daily calorie consumption in 1995 nbsp Food imports in 2005 nbsp Population density by country Food systems have complex economic and social value chains that effect many parts of the global economy Production edit Main articles Agriculture Food industry and Genetically modified food nbsp A tractor pulling a chaser binMost food has always been obtained through agriculture With increasing concern over both the methods and products of modern industrial agriculture there has been a growing trend toward sustainable agricultural practices This approach partly fueled by consumer demand encourages biodiversity local self reliance and organic farming methods 51 Major influences on food production include international organizations e g the World Trade Organization and Common Agricultural Policy national government policy or law and war 52 Several organisations have begun calling for a new kind of agriculture in which agroecosystems provide food but also support vital ecosystem services so that soil fertility and biodiversity are maintained rather than compromised According to the International Water Management Institute and UNEP well managed agroecosystems not only provide food fibre and animal products they also provide services such as flood mitigation groundwater recharge erosion control and habitats for plants birds fish and other animals 53 Food manufacturing edit Main article Food manufacture nbsp Packaged household food itemsPackaged foods are manufactured outside the home for purchase This can be as simple as a butcher preparing meat or as complex as a modern international food industry Early food processing techniques were limited by available food preservation packaging and transportation This mainly involved salting curing curdling drying pickling fermenting and smoking 54 Food manufacturing arose during the industrial revolution in the 19th century 55 This development took advantage of new mass markets and emerging technology such as milling preservation packaging and labeling and transportation It brought the advantages of pre prepared time saving food to the bulk of ordinary people who did not employ domestic servants 56 At the start of the 21st century a two tier structure has arisen with a few international food processing giants controlling a wide range of well known food brands There also exists a wide array of small local or national food processing companies 57 Advanced technologies have also come to change food manufacturing Computer based control systems sophisticated processing and packaging methods and logistics and distribution advances can enhance product quality improve food safety and reduce costs 56 International food imports and exports edit See also Population density The World Bank reported that the European Union was the top food importer in 2005 followed at a distance by the US and Japan Britain s need for food was especially well illustrated in World War II Despite the implementation of food rationing Britain remained dependent on food imports and the result was a long term engagement in the Battle of the Atlantic Food is traded and marketed on a global basis The variety and availability of food is no longer restricted by the diversity of locally grown food or the limitations of the local growing season 58 Between 1961 and 1999 there was a 400 increase in worldwide food exports 59 Some countries are now economically dependent on food exports which in some cases account for over 80 of all exports 60 In 1994 over 100 countries became signatories to the Uruguay Round of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade in a dramatic increase in trade liberalization This included an agreement to reduce subsidies paid to farmers underpinned by the WTO enforcement of agricultural subsidy tariffs import quotas and settlement of trade disputes that cannot be bilaterally resolved 61 Where trade barriers are raised on the disputed grounds of public health and safety the WTO refer the dispute to the Codex Alimentarius Commission which was founded in 1962 by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization and the World Health Organization Trade liberalization has greatly affected world food trade 62 Marketing and retailing edit Main article Food marketing nbsp Packaged food aisles of supermarket in Portland Oregon United StatesFood marketing brings together the producer and the consumer The marketing of even a single food product can be a complicated process involving many producers and companies For example 56 companies are involved in making one can of chicken noodle soup These businesses include not only chicken and vegetable processors but also the companies that transport the ingredients and those that print labels and manufacture cans 63 The food marketing system is the largest direct and indirect non government employer in the United States In the pre modern era the sale of surplus food took place once a week when farmers took their wares on market day into the local village marketplace Here food was sold to grocers for sale in their local shops for purchase by local consumers 35 56 With the onset of industrialization and the development of the food processing industry a wider range of food could be sold and distributed in distant locations Typically early grocery shops would be counter based shops in which purchasers told the shop keeper what they wanted so that the shop keeper could get it for them 35 64 In the 20th century supermarkets were born Supermarkets brought with them a self service approach to shopping using shopping carts and were able to offer quality food at lower cost through economies of scale and reduced staffing costs In the latter part of the 20th century this has been further revolutionized by the development of vast warehouse sized out of town supermarkets selling a wide range of food from around the world 65 Unlike food processors food retailing is a two tier market in which a small number of very large companies control a large proportion of supermarkets The supermarket giants wield great purchasing power over farmers and processors and strong influence over consumers Nevertheless less than 10 of consumer spending on food goes to farmers with larger percentages going to advertising transportation and intermediate corporations 66 Access edit Access to food is an economical and a sociological issue Disadvantaged people typically live further away from providers of healthy food than the middle class A study of 94 million visits to food retailers showed that Americans travel a median distance of 5 95 km 3 7 miles each time they buy food 67 Prices edit This section is an excerpt from Food prices edit Food prices refer to the average price level for food across countries regions and on a global scale 68 Food prices affect producers and consumers of food nbsp Food pricing for tomatoes given in US dollars per pound nbsp The Food and Agriculture Organization FAO Food Price Index 1961 2021 in nominal and real terms The Real Price Index is the Nominal Price Index deflated by the World Bank Manufactures Unit Value Index MUV Years 2014 2016 is 100 Price levels depend on the food production process including food marketing and food distribution Fluctuation in food prices is determined by a number of compounding factors 69 Geopolitical events global demand exchange rates 70 government policy diseases and crop yield energy costs availability of natural resources for agriculture 71 food speculation 72 73 74 changes in the use of soil and weather events directly affect food prices 75 The consequences of food price fluctuation are multiple Increases in food prices or agflation endangers food security particularly for developing countries and can cause social unrest 76 77 78 Increases in food prices is related to disparities in diet quality and health 79 particularly among vulnerable populations such as women and children 80 Food prices will on average continue to rise due to a variety of reasons Growing world population will put more pressure on the supply and demand Climate change will increase extreme weather events including droughts storms and heavy rain and overall increases in temperature will affect food production 81 To a certain extent adverse price trends can be counteracted by food politics An intervention to reduce food loss or waste if sufficiently large will affect prices upstream and downstream in the supply chain relative to where the intervention occurred 82 The CPI Consumer Price Index for all food increased 0 8 from July 2022 to August 2022 and food prices were 11 4 higher than in August 2021 83 nbsp Some essential food products including bread rice and pastaAs investment edit This section is an excerpt from Food speculation edit Food speculation refers to the buying and selling of futures contracts by traders with the aim of profiting from changes in food prices Food speculation can be both positive and negative for food producers and buyers It is betting on food prices unregulated financial markets Food speculation by global players like banks hedge funds or pension funds is alleged to cause price swings in staple foods such as wheat maize and soy even though too large price swings in an idealized economy are theoretically ruled out Adam Smith in 1776 reasoned that the only way to make money from commodities trading is by buying low and selling high which has the effect of smoothing out price swings and mitigating shortages 84 85 For the actors the apparently random swings are predictable which means potential huge profits For the global poor food speculation and resulting price peaks may result in increased poverty or even famine 86 In contrast to food hoarding speculation does not mean that real food shortages or scarcity need to be evoked the price changes are only due to trading activity 87 Food speculation may be a reason for agflation 88 The 2007 08 world food price crisis is thought to have been be partially caused by speculation 87 89 90 Problems edit nbsp MyPlate replaced MyPyramid as the USDA nutrition guide Because of its centrality to human life problems related to access quality and production of food effect every aspect of human life Nutrition and dietary problems edit Between the extremes of optimal health and death from starvation or malnutrition there is an array of disease states that can be caused or alleviated by changes in diet Deficiencies excesses and imbalances in diet can produce negative impacts on health which may lead to various health problems such as scurvy obesity or osteoporosis diabetes cardiovascular diseases as well as psychological and behavioral problems The science of nutrition attempts to understand how and why specific dietary aspects influence health Nutrients in food are grouped into several categories Macronutrients are fat protein and carbohydrates Micronutrients are the minerals and vitamins Additionally food contains water and dietary fiber As previously discussed the body is designed by natural selection to enjoy sweet and fattening foods for evolutionary diets ideal for hunters and gatherers Thus sweet and fattening foods in nature are typically rare and are very pleasurable to eat In modern times these foods are easily available to consumers which promotes obesity in adults and children alike Hunger and starvation edit Food deprivation leads to malnutrition and ultimately starvation This is often connected with famine which involves the absence of food in entire communities This can have a devastating and widespread effect on human health and mortality Rationing is sometimes used to distribute food in times of shortage most notably during times of war 52 Starvation is a significant international problem Approximately 815 million people are undernourished and over 16 000 children die per day from hunger related causes 91 Food deprivation is regarded as a deficit need in Maslow s hierarchy of needs and is measured using famine scales 92 Food waste edit This section is an excerpt from Food loss and waste edit nbsp Fruit and vegetables in a dumpster discarded uneaten nbsp Food recovered by food waste critic Rob Greenfield in Madison Wisconsin from two days of recovery from dumpsters 93 Food loss and waste is food that is not eaten The causes of food waste or loss are numerous and occur throughout the food system during production processing distribution retail and food service sales and consumption Overall about one third of the world s food is thrown away 94 95 A 2021 meta analysis that did not include food lost during production by the United Nations Environment Programme found that food waste was a challenge in all countries at all levels of economic development 96 The analysis estimated that global food waste was 931 million tonnes of food waste about 121 kg per capita across three sectors 61 percent from households 26 percent from food service and 13 percent from retail 96 Food loss and waste is a major part of the impact of agriculture on climate change it amounts to 3 3 billion tons of CO2e emissions annually 97 98 and other environmental issues such as land use water use and loss of biodiversity Prevention of food waste is the highest priority and when prevention is not possible the food waste hierarchy ranks the food waste treatment options from preferred to least preferred based on their negative environmental impacts 99 Reuse pathways of surplus food intended for human consumption such as food donation is the next best strategy after prevention followed by animal feed recycling of nutrients and energy followed by the least preferred option landfill which is a major source of the greenhouse gas methane 100 Other considerations include unreclaimed phosphorus in food waste leading to further phosphate mining Moreover reducing food waste in all parts of the food system is an important part of reducing the environmental impact of agriculture by reducing the total amount of water land and other resources used The UN s Sustainable Development Goal Target 12 3 seeks to halve global per capita food waste at the retail and consumer levels and reduce food losses along production and supply chains including post harvest losses by 2030 101 Climate change mitigation strategies prominently feature reducing food waste 102 In the 2022 United Nations Biodiversity Conference nations agree to reduce food waste by 50 by the year 2030 103 According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations FAO plastics help to prevent about 1 billion tonnes of food waste each year This is equivalent to about one third of all food produced for human consumption Therefore plastics help to reduce food waste by about 33 Policy editThis section is an excerpt from Food policy edit Food policy is the area of public policy concerning how food is produced processed distributed purchased or provided Food policies are designed to influence the operation of the food and agriculture system balanced with ensuring human health needs This often includes decision making around production and processing techniques marketing availability utilization and consumption of food in the interest of meeting or furthering social objectives Food policy can be promulgated on any level from local to global and by a government agency business or organization Food policymakers engage in activities such as regulation of food related industries establishing eligibility standards for food assistance programs for the poor ensuring safety of the food supply food labeling and even the qualifications of a product to be considered organic 104 nbsp RiceMost food policy is initiated at the domestic level for purposes of ensuring a safe and adequate food supply for the citizenry 105 In a developing nation there are three main objectives for food policy to protect the poor from crises to develop long run markets that enhance efficient resource use and to increase food production that will in turn promote an increase in income 106 Food policy comprises the mechanisms by which food related matters are addressed or administered by governments including international bodies or networks and by public institutions or private organizations Agricultural producers often bear the burden of governments desire to keep food prices sufficiently low for growing urban populations Low prices for consumers can be a disincentive for farmers to produce more food often resulting in hunger poor trade prospects and an increased need for food imports 105 In a more developed country such as the United States food and nutrition policy must be viewed in context with regional and national economic concerns environmental pressures maintenance of a social safety net health encouragement of private enterprise and innovation and an agrarian landscape dominated by fewer larger mechanized farms 107 Industrialized countries strive to ensure that farmers earn relatively stable incomes despite price and supply fluctuations and adverse weather events The cost of subsidizing farm incomes is passed along to consumers in the form of higher food prices 105 Legal definition edit Some countries list a legal definition of food often referring them with the word foodstuff These countries list food as any item that is to be processed partially processed or unprocessed for consumption The listing of items included as food includes any substance intended to be or reasonably expected to be ingested by humans In addition to these foodstuffs drink chewing gum water or other items processed into said food items are part of the legal definition of food Items not included in the legal definition of food include animal feed live animals unless being prepared for sale in a market plants before harvesting medicinal products cosmetics tobacco and tobacco products narcotic or psychotropic substances and residues and contaminants 108 Right to food edit This section is an excerpt from Right to food edit nbsp Right to food around the world as of 2011 2012 109 110 111 Adopted or drafting a framework law 19 Constitutional explicit as a right 23 Constitutional implicit in broader rights or as directive principle 41 Direct applicability via international treaties 103 Committed by ratifying the International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights 160 No known right to food Note The same country can fall in multiple categories the colour given to a country corresponds to the highest listed category in which a country falls The right to food and its variations is a human right protecting the right of people to feed themselves in dignity implying that sufficient food is available that people have the means to access it and that it adequately meets the individual s dietary needs The right to food protects the right of all human beings to be free from hunger food insecurity and malnutrition 112 The right to food implies that governments only have an obligation to hand out enough free food to starving recipients to ensure subsistence it does not imply a universal right to be fed Also if people are deprived of access to food for reasons beyond their control for example because they are in detention in times of war or after natural disasters the right requires the government to provide food directly 113 The right is derived from the International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights 113 which has 170 state parties as of April 2020 110 States that sign the covenant agree to take steps to the maximum of their available resources to achieve progressively the full realization of the right to adequate food both nationally and internationally 114 112 In a total of 106 countries the right to food is applicable either via constitutional arrangements of various forms or via direct applicability in law of various international treaties in which the right to food is protected 115 At the 1996 World Food Summit governments reaffirmed the right to food and committed themselves to halve the number of hungry and malnourished from 840 to 420 million by 2015 However the number has increased over the past years reaching an infamous record in 2009 of more than 1 billion undernourished people worldwide 112 Furthermore the number who suffer from hidden hunger micronutrient deficiences that may cause stunted bodily and intellectual growth in children amounts to over 2 billion people worldwide 116 Whilst under international law states are obliged to respect protect and fulfill the right to food the practical difficulties in achieving this human right are demonstrated by prevalent food insecurity across the world and ongoing litigation in countries such as India 117 118 In the continents with the biggest food related problems Africa Asia and South America not only is there shortage of food and lack of infrastructure but also maldistribution and inadequate access to food 119 The Human Rights Measurement Initiative 120 measures the right to food for countries around the world based on their level of income 121 Food security edit This section is an excerpt from Food security edit nbsp A woman selling produce at a market in Lilongwe Malawi nbsp A farmer holding up onions he has grown on his farm near Gilgil KenyaFood security is the availability of food in a country or a geographic region and the ability of individuals within that country region to access afford and source adequate foodstuff According to the United Nations Committee on World Food Security food security is defined as meaning that all people at all times have physical social and economic access to sufficient safe and nutritious food that meets their food preferences and dietary needs for an active and healthy life 122 The availability of food irrespective of class gender or region is another element of food security There is evidence of food security being a concern many thousands of years ago with central authorities in ancient China and ancient Egypt being known to release food from storage in times of famine At the 1974 World Food Conference the term food security was defined with an emphasis on supply food security is defined as the availability at all times of adequate nourishing diverse balanced and moderate world food supplies of basic foodstuff to sustain a steady expansion of food consumption and to offset the fluctuations in production and prices 123 Later definitions added demand and access issues to the definition The first World Food Summit held in 1996 stated that food security exists when all people at all times have physical and economic access to sufficient safe and nutritious food to meet their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life 124 125 Similarly household food security is considered to exist when all the members of a family at all times have access to enough food for an active healthy life 126 Individuals who are food secure do not live in hunger or fear of starvation 127 Food insecurity on the other hand is defined by the United States Department of Agriculture USDA as a situation of limited or uncertain availability of nutritionally adequate and safe foods or limited or uncertain ability to acquire acceptable foods in socially acceptable ways 128 Food security incorporates a measure of resilience to future disruption or unavailability of critical food supply due to various risk factors including droughts shipping disruptions fuel shortages economic instability and wars 129 The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations or FAO identified the four pillars of food security as availability access utilization and stability 130 The United Nations UN recognized the Right to Food in the Declaration of Human Rights in 1948 127 and has since said that it is vital for the enjoyment of all other rights 131 The concept of food security has evolved to recognize the centrality of agency and sustainability along with the four other dimensions of availability access utilization and stability These six dimensions of food security are reinforced in conceptual and legal understandings of the right to food 132 133 The 1996 World Summit on Food Security 134 declared that food should not be used as an instrument for political and economic pressure 125 Multiple different international agreements and mechanisms have been developed to address food security The main global policy to reduce hunger and poverty is in the Sustainable Development Goals In particular Goal 2 Zero Hunger sets globally agreed targets to end hunger achieve food security and improved nutrition and promote sustainable agriculture by 2030 135 The International Monetary Fund cautioned in September 2022 that the impact of increasing import costs for food and fertilizer for those extremely vulnerable to food insecurity will add 9 billion to their balance of payments pressures in 2022 and 2023 This would deplete countries foreign reserves as well as their capacity to pay for food and fertilizer imports 136 137 International aid edit Main article Food aid Food aid can benefit people suffering from a shortage of food It can be used to improve peoples lives in the short term so that a society can increase its standard of living to the point that food aid is no longer required 138 Conversely badly managed food aid can create problems by disrupting local markets depressing crop prices and discouraging food production Sometimes a cycle of food aid dependence can develop 139 Its provision or threatened withdrawal is sometimes used as a political tool to influence the policies of the destination country a strategy known as food politics Sometimes food aid provisions will require certain types of food be purchased from certain sellers and food aid can be misused to enhance the markets of donor countries 140 International efforts to distribute food to the neediest countries are often coordinated by the World Food Programme 141 Safety editMain article Food safety nbsp Salmonella bacteria is a common cause of foodborne illness particularly in undercooked chicken and chicken eggs Foodborne illness commonly called food poisoning is caused by bacteria toxins viruses parasites and prions Roughly 7 million people die of food poisoning each year with about 10 times as many suffering from a non fatal version 142 The two most common factors leading to cases of bacterial foodborne illness are cross contamination of ready to eat food from other uncooked foods and improper temperature control Less commonly acute adverse reactions can also occur if chemical contamination of food occurs for example from improper storage or use of non food grade soaps and disinfectants Food can also be adulterated by a very wide range of articles known as foreign bodies during farming manufacture cooking packaging distribution or sale These foreign bodies can include pests or their droppings hairs cigarette butts wood chips and all manner of other contaminants Certain types of food can become contaminated if stored or presented in an unsafe container such as a ceramic pot with lead based glaze 142 Food poisoning has been recognized as a disease since as early as Hippocrates 143 The sale of rancid contaminated or adulterated food was commonplace until the introduction of hygiene refrigeration and vermin controls in the 19th century Discovery of techniques for killing bacteria using heat and other microbiological studies by scientists such as Louis Pasteur contributed to the modern sanitation standards that are ubiquitous in developed nations today This was further underpinned by the work of Justus von Liebig which led to the development of modern food storage and food preservation methods 144 In more recent years a greater understanding of the causes of food borne illnesses has led to the development of more systematic approaches such as the Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points HACCP which can identify and eliminate many risks 145 Recommended measures for ensuring food safety include maintaining a clean preparation area with foods of different types kept separate ensuring an adequate cooking temperature and refrigerating foods promptly after cooking 146 Foods that spoil easily such as meats dairy and seafood must be prepared a certain way to avoid contaminating the people for whom they are prepared As such the rule of thumb is that cold foods such as dairy products should be kept cold and hot foods such as soup should be kept hot until storage Cold meats such as chicken that are to be cooked should not be placed at room temperature for thawing at the risk of dangerous bacterial growth such as Salmonella or E coli 147 Allergies edit Main article Food allergy Some people have allergies or sensitivities to foods that are not problematic to most people This occurs when a person s immune system mistakes a certain food protein for a harmful foreign agent and attacks it About 2 of adults and 8 of children have a food allergy 148 The amount of the food substance required to provoke a reaction in a particularly susceptible individual can be quite small In some instances traces of food in the air too minute to be perceived through smell have been known to provoke lethal reactions in extremely sensitive individuals Common food allergens are gluten corn shellfish mollusks peanuts and soy 148 Allergens frequently produce symptoms such as diarrhea rashes bloating vomiting and regurgitation The digestive complaints usually develop within half an hour of ingesting the allergen 148 Rarely food allergies can lead to a medical emergency such as anaphylactic shock hypotension low blood pressure and loss of consciousness An allergen associated with this type of reaction is peanut although latex products can induce similar reactions 148 Initial treatment is with epinephrine adrenaline often carried by known patients in the form of an Epi pen or Twinject 149 150 Other health issues edit Human diet was estimated to cause perhaps around 35 of cancers in a human epidemiological analysis by Richard Doll and Richard Peto in 1981 151 These cancer may be caused by carcinogens that are present in food naturally or as contaminants Food contaminated with fungal growth may contain mycotoxins such as aflatoxins which may be found in contaminated corn and peanuts Other carcinogens identified in food include heterocyclic amines generated in meat when cooked at high temperature polyaromatic hydrocarbons in charred meat and smoked fish and nitrosamines generated from nitrites used as food preservatives in cured meat such as bacon 152 Anticarcinogens that may help prevent cancer can also be found in many food especially fruit and vegetables Antioxidants are important groups of compounds that may help remove potentially harmful chemicals It is however often difficult to identify the specific components in diet that serve to increase or decrease cancer risk since many food such as beef steak and broccoli contain low concentrations of both carcinogens and anticarcinogens 152 There are many international certifications in the cooking field such as Monde Selection A A Certification iTQi They use high quality evaluation methods to make the food safer Diet edit nbsp Changes of food supply by energy 153 154 Other area Yr 2010 155 Africa sub Sahara 2170 kcal capita day N E and N Africa 3120 kcal capita day South Asia 2450 kcal capita day East Asia 3040 kcal capita day Latin America Caribbean 2950 kcal capita day Developed countries 3470 kcal capita dayMain article Diet nutrition Cultural and religious diets edit Many cultures hold some food preferences and some food taboos Dietary choices can also define cultures and play a role in religion For example only kosher foods are permitted by Judaism halal foods by Islam and in Hinduism beef is restricted 156 In addition the dietary choices of different countries or regions have different characteristics This is highly related to a culture s cuisine Diet deficiencies edit Main article Avitaminosis Dietary habits play a significant role in the health and mortality of all humans Imbalances between the consumed fuels and expended energy results in either starvation or excessive reserves of adipose tissue known as body fat 157 Poor intake of various vitamins and minerals can lead to diseases that can have far reaching effects on health For instance 30 of the world s population either has or is at risk for developing iodine deficiency 158 It is estimated that at least 3 million children are blind due to vitamin A deficiency 159 Vitamin C deficiency results in scurvy 160 Calcium vitamin D and phosphorus are inter related the consumption of each may affect the absorption of the others Kwashiorkor and marasmus are childhood disorders caused by lack of dietary protein 161 Moral ethical and health conscious diets edit Many individuals limit what foods they eat for reasons of morality or other habits For instance vegetarians choose to forgo food from animal sources to varying degrees Others choose a healthier diet avoiding sugars or animal fats and increasing consumption of dietary fiber and antioxidants 162 Obesity a serious problem in the western world leads to higher chances of developing heart disease diabetes cancer and many other diseases 163 More recently dietary habits have been influenced by the concerns that some people have about possible impacts on health or the environment from genetically modified food 164 Further concerns about the impact of industrial farming grains on animal welfare human health and the environment are also affecting contemporary human dietary habits This has led to the emergence of a movement with a preference for organic and local food 165 History editMain articles Timeline of food Food history and Culinary arts HistorySee also edit nbsp Food portal nbsp Drink portal nbsp Agriculture and Agronomy portal Bulk foods Beverages Food and Bioprocess Technology Food engineering Food Inc a 2009 documentary Food science Future food technology Industrial crop List of foods Lists of prepared foods Optimal foraging theory Outline of cooking Outline of nutrition Right to food by countryReferences edit 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 Society National Geographic 2011 01 21 omnivore National Geographic Society Archived from the original on 2021 12 15 Retrieved 2021 12 15 food National Geographic Society 1 March 2011 Archived from the original on 22 March 2017 Retrieved 25 May 2017 ProdSTAT FAOSTAT Archived from the original on 10 February 2012 Favour Eboh Design and Fabrication of a Mill Pulverizer Academia Archived from the original on 26 December 2017 Engineers NIIR Board of Consultants amp 2006 The Complete Book on Spices amp Condiments with Cultivation Processing amp Uses 2nd Revised Edition With Cultivation Processing amp Uses Asia Pacific Business Press Inc ISBN 978 81 7833 038 9 Archived from the original on 26 December 2017 Plumer Brad 2014 08 21 How much of the world s cropland is actually used to grow food Vox Archived from the original on 2022 04 12 Retrieved 2022 04 11 Palombo Enzo 21 April 2016 Kitchen Science bacteria and fungi are your foody friends The Conversation Archived from the original on 2022 04 11 Retrieved 2022 04 11 Serban Proches Wilson John R U Vamosi Jana C Richardson David M 1 February 2008 Plant Diversity in the Human Diet Weak Phylogenetic Signal Indicates Breadth BioScience 58 2 151 159 doi 10 1641 B580209 S2CID 86483332 Fardet Anthony 2017 New Concepts and Paradigms for the Protective Effects of Plant Based Food Components In Relation To Food Complexity Vegetarian and Plant Based Diets in Health and Disease Prevention Elsevier pp 293 312 doi 10 1016 b978 0 12 803968 7 00016 2 ISBN 978 0 12 803968 7 archived from the original on 2022 06 15 retrieved 2022 04 12 McGee Chapter 9 Animal Products www ksre k state edu Archived from the original on 2022 03 20 Retrieved 2022 05 12 Marcus Jacqueline B 2013 Protein Basics Animal and Vegetable Proteins in Food and Health Culinary Nutrition Elsevier pp 189 230 doi 10 1016 b978 0 12 391882 6 00005 4 ISBN 978 0 12 391882 6 archived from the original on 2018 06 26 retrieved 2022 05 13 Boston 677 Huntington Avenue Ma 02115 1495 1000 2021 09 15 Aquatic Foods The Nutrition Source Retrieved 2023 01 11 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Evolution of taste receptor may have shaped human sensitivity to toxic compounds Medical News Today Archived from the original on 27 September 2010 Retrieved 29 May 2015 Why does pure water have no taste or colour The Times Of India 3 April 2004 Archived from the original on 30 December 2015 New Oxford American Dictionary The sweetness multiplier 300 times comes from subjective evaluations by a panel of test subjects Archived 23 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine tasting various dilutions compared to a standard dilution of sucrose Sources referenced in this article say stevioside has up to 250 times the sweetness of sucrose but others including stevioside brands such as SweetLeaf claim 300 times 1 3 to 1 2 teaspoon 1 6 2 5 ml of stevioside powder is claimed to have equivalent sweetening power to 1 US cup 237 ml of sugar States having an acid taste like lemon or vinegar she sampled the wine and found it was sour of food esp milk spoiled because of fermentation New Oxford American Dictionary Fleming A 9 April 2013 Umami why the fifth taste is so important The Guardian London UK Retrieved 18 February 2017 Blake H 9 February 2010 Umami in a tube fifth taste goes on sale in supermarkets The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 10 February 2011 Jufresa L February 16 2015 Umami Mapa de las lenguas Ebook in Spanish Spain Penguin Random House Grupo Editorial Mexico ISBN 978 607 31 2817 9 Mouritsen JD Drotner J Styrbaek K Mouritsen OG April 2014 Umami Unlocking the Secrets of the Fifth Taste Ebook United States Columbia University Press pp 35 36 doi 10 7312 mour16890 ISBN 978 0 231 53758 2 JSTOR 10 7312 mour16890 Shugart Helene A 2008 Sumptuous Texts Consuming Otherness in the Food Film Genre Critical Studies in Media Communication 25 1 68 90 doi 10 1080 15295030701849928 S2CID 145672719 You first eat with your eyes Archived from the original on 29 May 2015 Retrieved 29 May 2015 Food Texture Andrew J Rosenthal Rosenthal Andrew J 1999 Food Texture Measurement and Perception Springer ISBN 978 0 8342 1238 1 Archived from the original on 2021 09 22 Retrieved 2020 11 11 Mead 11 19 McGee 142 43 McGee 202 06 Davidson 786 87 Robuchon 224 Davidson 656 McGee Chapter 14 a b c Mead 11 19 McGee Campbell 312 McGee 784 Davidson 782 83 McGee 539 784 McGee 771 91 Davidson 356 Asado Argentina Definition of restaurant collinsdictionary com Archived from the original on 2018 10 06 Retrieved 2018 10 06 restaurant n etymonline com Archived from the original on 2018 10 06 Retrieved 2018 10 06 a b The History of the Restaurant digital library unlv edu Archived from the original on 2018 10 06 Retrieved 2018 10 06 Davidson 660 61 Bee Wilson 3 March 2013 Pompeii exhibition the food and drink of the ancient Roman cities telegraph co uk Archived from the original on 27 March 2013 A Culinary Legacy from the Song Dynasty Shanghai Daily 11 September 2014 via ProQuest United States Department of Agriculture Mason a b Messer 53 91 Boelee E Ed Ecosystems for water and food security Archived 23 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine 2011 IWMI UNEP Aguilera 1 3 Miguel 3 a b c Jango Cohen Hannaford The Economic Research Service of the USDA Regmi CIA World Factbook World Trade Organization The Uruguay Round Van den Bossche Smith 501 03 Benson Humphery Magdoff Fred Ed T he farmer s share of the food dollar after paying for input costs has steadily declined from about 40 percent in 1910 to less than 10 percent in 1990 Xu Ran Huang Xiao Zhang Kai Lyu Weixuan Ghosh Debarchana Li Zhenlong Chen Xiang 2023 11 13 Integrating human activity into food environments can better predict cardiometabolic diseases in the United States Nature Communications 14 1 7326 doi 10 1038 s41467 023 42667 8 ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 10643374 PMID 37957191 Roser Max Ritchie Hannah 2013 10 08 Food Prices Our World in Data Amadeo Kimberly 5 Causes of High Food Prices The Balance Retrieved 2020 09 19 Abbott Philip C Hurt Christopher Tyner Wallace E eds 2008 What s Driving Food Prices Issue Report Savary Serge Ficke Andrea Aubertot Jean Noel Hollier Clayton 2012 12 01 Crop losses due to diseases and their implications for global food production losses and food security Food Security 4 4 519 537 doi 10 1007 s12571 012 0200 5 ISSN 1876 4525 S2CID 3335739 Hedge funds accused of gambling with lives of the poorest as food prices soar The Guardian 2010 07 18 Retrieved 2020 09 19 Food speculation Global Justice Now 2014 12 09 Retrieved 2020 09 19 Spratt S 2013 Food price volatility and financial speculation FAC Working Paper 47 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 304 5228 Food Price Explained Futures Fundamentals Retrieved 2020 09 19 Bellemare Marc F 2015 Rising Food Prices Food Price Volatility and Social Unrest American Journal of Agricultural Economics 97 1 1 21 doi 10 1093 ajae aau038 hdl 10 1093 ajae aau038 ISSN 1467 8276 S2CID 34238445 Perez Ines Climate Change and Rising Food Prices Heightened Arab Spring Scientific American Retrieved 2020 09 19 Winecoff Ore Koren W Kindred 20 May 2020 Food Price Spikes and Social Unrest The Dark Side of the Fed s Crisis Fighting Foreign Policy Retrieved 2020 09 19 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Darmon Nicole Drewnowski Adam 2015 10 01 Contribution of food prices and diet cost to socioeconomic disparities in diet quality and health a systematic review and analysis Nutrition Reviews 73 10 643 660 doi 10 1093 nutrit nuv027 ISSN 0029 6643 PMC 4586446 PMID 26307238 Darnton Hill Ian Cogill Bruce 2010 01 01 Maternal and Young Child Nutrition Adversely Affected by External Shocks Such As Increasing Global Food Prices The Journal of Nutrition 140 1 162S 169S doi 10 3945 jn 109 111682 ISSN 0022 3166 PMID 19939995 Climate Change The Unseen Force Behind Rising Food Prices World Watch Institute 2013 Archived from the original on 17 July 2018 Retrieved 7 June 2016 The State of Food and Agriculture 2019 Moving forward on food loss and waste reduction In brief Rome FAO 2019 p 18 Summary Findings Food Price Outlook 2022 and 2023 USDA Gunther Capelle Blancard Dramane Coulibaly 2011 Index trading and agricultural commodity prices A panel Granger causality analysis Economie Internationale 2 3 126 51 72 Smith Adam 1977 1776 An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 76374 9 Food speculation Global Justice Now 2014 12 09 Retrieved 2019 08 21 a b Vidal John 2011 01 23 Food speculation aFood speculation People die from hunger while banks make a killing on food the Guardian Retrieved 2019 08 21 Islam M Shahidul Of Agflation and Agriculture Time to Fix the Structural Problems PDF National University of Singapore Retrieved 23 June 2021 Anna Chadwick 2015 Food Commodity Speculation Hunger and the Global Food Crisis Whither Regulation Thesis London School of Economics and Political Science S2CID 155654460 GHOSH JAYATI 2010 The Unnatural Coupling Food and Global Finance Journal of Agrarian Change Wiley 10 1 72 86 doi 10 1111 j 1471 0366 2009 00249 x ISSN 1471 0358 World Health Organization Howe 353 72 The Food Waste Fiasco You Have to See it to Believe it 2014 10 06 Jenny Gustavsson Global food losses and food waste extent causes and prevention study conducted for the International Congress Save Food at Interpack 2011 Dusseldorf Germany OCLC 1126211917 UN Calls for Action to End Food Waste Culture Daily News Brief 2021 10 04 Archived from the original on 2021 10 04 Retrieved 2021 10 04 a b UNEP Food Waste Index Report 2021 Report United Nations Environment Programme 2021 03 04 ISBN 9789280738513 Archived from the original on 2022 02 01 Retrieved 2022 02 01 FAO News Article Food wastage Key facts and figures www fao org Archived from the original on 2021 06 07 Retrieved 2021 06 07 A third of food is wasted making it third biggest carbon emitter U N says Reuters 2013 09 11 Archived from the original on 2021 06 07 Retrieved 2021 06 07 Brief on food waste in the European Union European Commission 2020 08 25 Archived from the original on 2022 11 15 Retrieved 2022 11 15 US EPA OLEM 2015 08 12 Food Recovery Hierarchy www epa gov Archived from the original on 2019 05 23 Retrieved 2022 05 15 United Nations 2017 Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 6 July 2017 Work of the Statistical Commission pertaining to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development A RES 71 313 Archived 2020 10 23 at the Wayback Machine Reduced Food Waste Project Drawdown 2020 02 12 Archived from the original on 2020 09 24 Retrieved 2020 09 19 COP15 NATIONS ADOPT FOUR GOALS 23 TARGETS FOR 2030 IN LANDMARK UN BIODIVERSITY AGREEMENT Convention on Biological Diversity United Nations Archived from the original on 2022 12 20 Retrieved 9 January 2023 Drake University What is a food policy State and Local Food Policy Councils Iowa Food Policy Councils Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 28 February 2011 a b c Fischer G Frohberg K Keyzer M A Parikh K S 1988 Linked National Models A Tool for International Policy Analysis The Netherlands Kluwer Academic Publishers ISBN 978 9024737345 Byerlee Derek Jayne T S Myers Robert J 2006 Managing food price risks and instability in a liberalizing market environment Overview and policy options Food Policy 31 4 275 287 doi 10 1016 j foodpol 2006 02 002 Wilde Parke 2013 Food Policy in the United States An Introduction London and New York Routledge Taylor amp Francis Group ISBN 978 1 84971 428 0 United Kingdom Office of Public Sector Information Knuth 2011 a b United Nations Treaty Collection 2012a United Nations Treaty Collection 2012b a b c Ziegler 2012 What is the right to food a b Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food 2012a Right to Food International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights 1966 article 2 1 11 1 and 23 Knuth 2011 32 Ahluwalia 2004 12 Westcott Catherine and Nadia Khoury and CMS Cameron McKenna The Right to Food Advocates for International Development October 2011 http a4id org sites default files user Right 20to 20Food 20Legal 20Guide pdf Aadhaar vs Right to food Ahluwalia 2004 iii Human Rights Measurement Initiative The first global initiative to track the human rights performance of countries humanrightsmeasurement org Retrieved 2022 03 09 Right to food HRMI Rights Tracker rightstracker org Retrieved 2022 03 09 Food Security ifpri org Archived from the original on 2021 04 28 Retrieved 2020 11 30 Trade Reforms and Food Security Conceptualizing the Linkages FAO UN 2003 Archived from the original on 2010 08 26 Retrieved 2015 02 14 Patel Raj 20 November 2013 Raj Patel Food sovereignty is next big idea Financial Times Archived from the original on 15 January 2023 Retrieved 17 January 2014 a b Food and Agriculture Organization November 1996 Rome Declaration on Food Security and World Food Summit Plan of Action Archived from the original on 8 February 2019 Retrieved 26 October 2013 Food Security in the United States Measuring Household Food Security USDA Archived from the original on 2019 11 22 Retrieved 2008 02 23 a b Food Security FAO Agricultural and Development Economics Division June 2006 Archived from the original on May 15 2012 Retrieved June 8 2012 Gary Bickel Mark Nord Cristofer Price William Hamilton John Cook 2000 Guide to Measuring Household Food Security PDF USDA Food and Nutrition Service Archived from the original PDF on 4 November 2013 Retrieved 1 November 2013 The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2013 The multiple dimensions of food security PDF FAO Archived PDF from the original on 22 December 2018 Retrieved 26 November 2013 FAO 2009 Declaration of the World Food Summit on Food Security PDF Rome Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations Archived PDF from the original on 2018 10 19 Retrieved 2013 10 15 Nations United Food United Nations Archived from the original on 2022 06 17 Retrieved 2022 06 17 The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World 2021 Transforming food systems for food security improved nutrition and affordable healthy diets for all In brief 2021 ed Rome Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations 2021 p 5 doi 10 4060 cb5409en ISBN 978 92 5 134634 1 Food security and nutrition building a global narrative towards 2030 PDF High Level Panel of Experts Report 15 7 11 2020 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 12 20 Retrieved 2023 01 15 1996 Summit on World Food Security Report 1996 Summit on World Food Security Report Goal 2 Zero Hunger Archived from the original on 2019 12 10 Retrieved 2017 06 28 Global Health Is the Best Investment We Can Make European Investment Bank Archived from the original on 2023 01 27 Retrieved 2023 01 27 Global Food Crisis Demands Support for People Open Trade Bigger Local Harvests IMF 30 September 2022 Archived from the original on 2023 01 27 Retrieved 2023 01 27 World Food Programme Shah Kripke United Nations World Food program a b National Institute of Health MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia Hippocrates On Acute Diseases Magner 243 498 USDA Check Your Steps Archived from the original on 21 May 2015 Retrieved 29 May 2015 Fact sheets Poultry Preparation Focus on Chicken Archived from the original on 19 May 2004 a b c d National Institute of Health About Epipen Epipen com Archived 6 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine About Twinject Archived 2009 01 07 at the Wayback Machine Twinject com Doll R Peto R 1981 The causes of cancer Quantitative estimates of avoidable risks of cancer in the United States today Journal of the National Cancer Institute 66 6 1191 1308 doi 10 1093 jnci 66 6 1192 PMID 7017215 a b Carcinogens and Anticarcinogens in the Human Diet National Academy Press 1996 ISBN 978 0 309 05391 4 FAO FAOSTAT Archived 2 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine These are supplied energy intake energy are about 60 80 of supply FAO Food Security Archived 31 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Simoons Nicklas Merson 245 Merson 231 Merson 464 Merson 224 Carpenter Merson 266 68 Parekh 187 206 Schor Sources edit Aguilera Jose Miguel and David W Stanley Microstructural Principles of Food Processing and Engineering Springer 1999 ISBN 0 8342 1256 0 Ahluwalia Pooja 2004 The Implementation of the Right to Food at the National Level A Critical Examination of the Indian Campaign on the Right to Food as an Effective Operationalization of Article 11 of ICESCR PDF Centre for Human Rights and Global Justice Working Paper No 8 2004 New York NYU School of Law archived from the original PDF on 16 October 2011 Asado Argentina About Asado Argentina Retrieved from http www asadoargentina com about asado argentina Archived 2007 07 30 at the Wayback Machine on 2007 05 28 Campbell Bernard Grant Human Evolution An Introduction to Man s Adaptations Aldine Transaction 1998 ISBN 0 202 02042 8 Carpenter Ruth Ann Finley Carrie E Healthy Eating Every Day Human Kinetics 2005 ISBN 0 7360 5186 4 Davidson Alan The Oxford Companion to Food 2nd ed UK Oxford University Press 2006 Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2005 Retrieved from http www fao org docrep 008 a0200e a0200e00 htm Archived 2010 11 04 at the Wayback Machine on 2006 09 29 Hannaford Steve Oligopoly Watch Top 20 world food companies Retrieved from https web archive org web 20090918101335 http www oligopolywatch com 2005 10 06 html on 2006 09 23 Howe P and S Devereux Famine Intensity and Magnitude Scales A Proposal for an Instrumental Definition of Famine 2004 Humphery Kim Shelf Life Supermarkets and the Changing Cultures of Consumption Cambridge University Press 1998 ISBN 0 521 62630 7 International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights United Nations 1966 Jango Cohen Judith The History Of Food Twenty First Century Books 2005 ISBN 0 8225 2484 8 Jurgens Marshall H Animal Feeding and Nutrition Kendall Hunt 2001 ISBN 0 7872 7839 4 Knuth Lidija 2011 Constitutional and Legal Protection of the Right to Food around the World Margret Vidar Rome Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations archived PDF from the original on 14 May 2012 Kripke Gawain Food aid or hidden dumping Oxfam International March 2005 Retrieved from https web archive org web 20060714133231 http www oxfam org en policy briefingpapers bp71 food aid 240305 on 2007 05 26 Lawrie Stephen R A Lawrie Lawrie s Meat Science Woodhead Publishing 1998 ISBN 1 85573 395 1 Magdoff Fred Foster John Bellamy and Buttel Frederick H Hungry for Profit The Agribusiness Threat to Farmers Food and the Environment September 2000 ISBN 1 58367 016 5 Mason John Sustainable Agriculture Landlinks Press 2003 ISBN 0 643 06876 7 Merson Michael H Black Robert E Mills Anne J International Public Health Disease Programs Systems and Policies Jones and Bartlett Publishers 2005 McGee Harold On Food and Cooking The Science and Lore of the Kitchen New York Simon amp Schuster 2004 ISBN 0 684 80001 2 Mead Margaret The Changing Significance of Food In Carole Counihan and Penny Van Esterik Ed Food and Culture A Reader UK Routledge 1997 ISBN 0 415 91710 7 Messer Ellen Derose Laurie Fields and Sara Millman Who s Hungry and How Do We Know Food Shortage Poverty and Deprivation United Nations University Press 1998 ISBN 92 808 0985 7 National Institute of Health Food poisoning MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia F 11 May 2006 Retrieved from https web archive org web 20060928222906 http www niaid nih gov publications pdf foodallergy pdf on 2006 09 29 Nicklas Barbara J Endurance Exercise and Adipose Tissue CRC Press 2002 ISBN 0 8493 0460 1 Parekh Sarad R The Gmo Handbook Genetically Modified Animals Microbes and Plants in Biotechnology Humana Press 2004 ISBN 1 58829 307 6 Regmi Anita editor Changing Structure of Global Food Consumption and Trade Market and Trade Economics Division Economic Research Service USDA 30 May 2001 stock ERSWRS01 1 Schor Juliet Taylor Betsy editors Sustainable Planet Roadmaps for the Twenty First Century Beacon Press 2003 ISBN 0 8070 0455 3 Shah Anup Food Dumping Aid Maintains Poverty Causes of Poverty Retrieved from http www globalissues org TradeRelated Poverty FoodDumping asp Archived 2006 10 03 at the Wayback Machine on 2006 09 29 Simoons Frederick J Eat Not This Flesh Food Avoidances from Prehistory to the Present ISBN 0 299 14250 7 Smith Andrew Editor Food Marketing in Oxford Encyclopedia of American Food and Drink New York Oxford University Press 2007 Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food 2012a Website of the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food Olivier De Schutter archived from the original on 25 May 2012 retrieved 24 May 2012 The Economic Research Service of the USDA Global Food Markets Briefing Rooms Retrieved from https web archive org web 20170704104430 https www ers usda gov topics international markets trade global food markets aspx on 2006 09 29 United Kingdom Office of Public Sector Information Food Safety Act 1990 c 16 Retrieved from http www opsi gov uk acts acts1990 Ukpga 19900016 en 2 htm mdiv1 Archived 2006 10 25 at the Wayback Machine on 2006 11 08 United Nations Treaty Collection 2012a International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights United Nations archived from the original on 11 June 2012 United Nations Treaty Collection 2012b Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights United Nations archived from the original on 18 July 2012 United States Department of Agriculture USDA Economic Research Service The Economics of Food Farming Natural Resources and Rural America Briefing Rooms Food CPI Prices and Expenditures Food Expenditure Tables Retrieved from http www ers usda gov data products food price outlook aspx Archived 2015 04 29 at the Wayback Machine on 2007 06 06 Van den Bossche Peter The Law and Policy of the bosanac Trade Organization Text Cases and Materials UK Cambridge University Press 2005 ISBN 0 521 82290 4 World Food Programme Breaking out of the Poverty Trap How We Use Food Aid Retrieved from https web archive org web 20060928075506 http www wfp org food aid introduction index asp section 12 amp sub section 1 on 2006 09 29 World Health Organization WHO Global Database on Child Growth and Malnutrition Retrieved from 1 on 2006 09 29 World Trade Organization The Uruguay Round Retrieved from https web archive org web 20060822200650 http www wto org trade resources history wto urug round htm on 2006 09 29 Ziegler Jean 2012 Right to Food Website of the former Special Rapporteur archived from the original on 18 January 2012 Further reading editCollingham 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 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 Mobbs Michael 2012 Sustainable Food Sydney NewSouth Publishing ISBN 978 1 920705 54 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 edit nbsp Wikibooks has a book on the topic of Cookbook nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Human food nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Human food nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Human food nbsp The dictionary definition of human food at Wiktionary nbsp Media related to food at Wikimedia Commons Food Timeline Wikibooks Cookbook 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 Human food amp oldid 1186558759, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.