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Did You Know? When carrots arrived in England and France, the lacy green tops were prized as an adornment for women’s hats and hair.

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Did You Know?. When carrots arrived in England and France, the lacy green tops were prized as an adornment for women’s hats and hair. Did You Know?. Food energy or kilocalories is the energy released from the metabolism of foods and allows the production and maintenance of body tissue cells. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• When carrots arrived in England and France, the lacy green tops were prized as an adornment for women’s hats and hair.

Page 2: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• Food energy or kilocalories is the energy released from the metabolism of foods and allows the production and maintenance of body tissue cells.

Page 3: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• The most renowned food companies today were founded in the late 1800s and early 1900s, an era noted for the Industrial Revolution and rising household incomes. As many households could no longer afford the time to process farm products, entrepreneurs capitalized by launching new food companies.

Page 4: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• The Nestle Company, founded in 1865 in Switzerland by Henri Nestle, initially focused on infant nutrition and later expanded to other milk-based and confectionary products.

• In 1903, James Kraft began a wholesale cheese business in Chicago that later became Kraft Foods.

Page 5: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• Unilever’s roots can be traced to the 1930 merger between a Dutch margarine manufacturer, Margarine Unie, and the British company, Lever Brothers, a company that had previously diversified into ice cream from soap.

Page 6: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• Henry J. Heinz skillfully combined new advances in canning with sprightly advertising to make famous not just his pickles but his other “57 Brands,” a figure he picked out of thin air.

Page 7: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• It was the French who inspired the English word “cabbage,” believed to be derived from caboche, a slang term meaning “head.”

Page 8: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• Carbohydrates constitute only about 1% of body weight, but supply most of the energy needs of the body.

Page 9: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• Taste buds are particularly subject to wear and tear, and may be replaced every 2 weeks. The total number of buds diminishes over time, but there appears to be considerable reserve capacity, so there is normally little loss in the sense of taste as we age.

Page 10: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• If you had 10 billion $1 notes and spent one every second of every day, it would take 317 years for you to go broke.

Page 11: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• Silent Spring by Rachel Carson and other books during the 1960s heightened consumer awareness of the presence of pesticides and other residues in food.

Page 12: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• Spanish explorers introduced the tomato to Europe in the 1600s. Northern Europeans suspected the “wolf peach” was poisonous and only grew it for decoration.

Page 13: Did You Know?

Did You Know?• Fats are the major source

of energy storage, help to hold body organs and nerves in position, protect against injury and shock, insulate and maintain body temperature, and act in the transportation and absorption of fat-soluble vitamins.

Page 14: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• Eggplants come in hundreds of shapes and colors. But the fruit probably got its name because some small-fruited, white-pigmented varieties look like chicken eggs.

Page 15: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• The age-old Camellia sinensis plant is the source of all nonherbal teas. Manufacturers process the leaves three different ways to produce green, black, and oolong—the three major classes of teas.

Page 16: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• Potato starch is used in baked goods, such as specialty breads, rolls, and crackers, instant pudding mixes, and molding confections, such as gum drops, jelly beans, and chewing gum.

Page 17: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• Refrigerators and freezers consume about 1/6 of the electricity used in American households, much more than any other household appliance.

Page 18: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• Pumpkins are native to the Americas and are members of the Cucurbit (gourd) family, which includes watermelon, cucumbers, and zucchini squash. The ornamental jack-o-lantern remains the most popular use of pumpkins in the U. S.

Page 19: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• Lifestyle change in diet and physical activity is the best first choice for weight loss.

Page 20: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• In 1943, the “Basic Seven” food guide was issued as the leaflet, National Wartime Nutrition Guide. Rather than numbers of servings of food groups, this guide suggested alternate choices of food groups in case of limited supplies of certain types of foods during the war.

Page 21: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• Though botanically a fruit, in 1893 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the tomato was a vegetable. The import tax placed on vegetables (but not fruits) protected U.S. tomato growers from foreign markets.

Page 22: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• As World War II loomed in Europe, some critics…began to complain about the vitamin deficiencies of processed food. They linked such food to the dismal health status of many new military recruits. In 1940 and 1941, physicians at Mayo Clinic found that teenagers placed on a diet low in thiamine (vitamin B1) became surly and uncooperative. As a result, the Federal Government had millers restore thiamine (dubbed the “morale vitamin”) into bread flour.

Page 23: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• Like white asparagus, white (blanched) celery is preferred in some European countries. In fact, during the early 1900’s, white celery was in vogue in the U.S., and not until the 1940’s did green celery become the industry standard.

Page 24: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• Carbohydrates convert to glucose, the main simple sugar used by the body for energy. Grain products, fruits, and vegetables are important sources of carbohydrate in the food supply.

Page 25: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• A loss of consumer confidence in a company’s products can be financially devastating. Hudson Foods, for example, exited the hamburger patty business after it was held responsible for the production of hamburgers tainted with E. coli O157:H7.

Page 26: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• The color molecules that form the more than 2,000 pigments in plant foods not only look scrumptious but also contain strong antioxidants, the health-promoting substances that neutralize the free radicals formed when cells burn oxygen for energy. Free radicals damage or destroy healthy cells. In general, the deeper the color of a fruit or vegetable, the more powerful its antioxidant action.

Page 27: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• Peanuts and peanut products are a familiar and longstanding staple in the American diet. Peanuts are also valued when crushed—as high-protein animal feed and as vegetable oil preferred for its long shelf life and cooking qualities.

Page 28: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• In 1909, Americans consumed a total of 34 gallons of fluid milk per person—27 gallons of whole milk and 7 gallons of milks lower in fat than whole milk, mostly buttermilk. Back then, buttermilk was the byproduct of churning milk or cream into butter, often done on farms. Today, the major byproduct of the commercial butter-making process is nonfat dry milk, and our buttermilk is cultured, or soured, by the addition of lactic acid or suitable bacteria to sweet milk.

Page 29: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• The term “snap beans” refers to the crackling sound made when fresh beans are broken in two. Once widely known as string beans because of their stringy pods, over the past century the tough pod strings have been bred out of most of today’s popular varieties.

Page 30: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• Gourmet cooking, with its often exotic sauces and time-consuming methods, became popular in the 1960’s, thanks to Julia Child and a variety of new cookbooks that urged cooks to abandon cans, jars, and mixes for fresh ingredients. This was especially true of French cooking, driven by the postwar popularity of American tourism in Europe.

Page 31: Did You Know?

Did You Know?• Sweet potatoes are not

yams. The yam is a starchy tropical root crop of Asian or African origin, unrelated to the sweet potato family. The word “yam” came from the African word “nyami.” What is marketed in the U.S. as a “yam” is really a type of sweet potato.

Page 32: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• Historically, two grades of milk have been identified: Grade A and Grade B. Grade A milk meets the sanitary standards for use in fluid milk products and can be used for any dairy product. Grade B, or manufacturing grade, milk meets slightly lower standards and can be used only for manufactured dairy products.

Page 33: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• Eggplant goes back about 2,000 years in the recorded history of India, and there are actually more than 30 Sanskrit names for the fruit in ancient Indian literature. Thomas Jefferson is credited with bringing the fruit to the United States.

Page 34: Did You Know?

Did You Know?• Most eggs sold today are

infertile because there are no roosters housed with the laying hens. Fertile eggs are often found at roadside stands or health foods stores. There are no nutritional differences between fertile and infertile eggs. If fertile eggs are not incubated there will be no development of the embryo and no way to distinguish them from infertile eggs.

Page 35: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• During the 1940s, researchers created frozen concentrated orange juice as a way of providing fruit to soldiers during World War II.

• After the war, the juice became popular in U.S. households as consumers found it more convenient than squeezing the fruit themselves.

Page 36: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• With a crop production cycle opposite to that of the Northern Hemisphere, the Southern Hemisphere exporters, whose summers come during Northern Hemisphere winters, play a vital role in making the year-round supply of fresh fruits possible.

Page 37: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• At birth, the taste buds are found on the roof of the mouth and in the throat, as well as on the tip, sides, and back of the tongue. Taste buds, such as those on the tip of the tongue, are particularly subject to wear and tear, and may be replaced every 2 weeks.

Page 38: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• In time, the movement away from farms reduced by millions the families who produced much of their own food—milk, eggs, vegetables, fruit, chickens, pork, and beef. It added greatly to those who became reliant on purchased food. And as those who remained in farming modernized and entered more into the cash economy, they, too, typically gave up home food production, except for vegetables, and joined the lines at the supermarket.

Page 39: Did You Know?

Did You Know?

• The Curriculum and Instructional Materials Center (CIMC) has produced high-quality, industry-approved curriculum since 1967.

• Visit the CIMC today at www.okcimc.com.