What The World Eats Summary

944 Words2 Pages

The images selected from the book, What the World Eats, depict three families around the world and their food supply for a week. These families range from poverty stricken and living in a third world country, to middle class families living in more developed countries. The family's relative, housing and financial situations, climate, family size, and available resources are determinants in the contrasting diets of families living in developed countries as opposed to the diet of families living in underdeveloped countries. The Aboubaker family is a displaced family, originally from the Darfur Providence in Sudan, currently living in a refugee camp located in Chad, an underdeveloped country. The Aboubaker’s are a large family consisting of a …show more content…

The family of four’s average cost for a weeks’ worth of food is $341.98. This cost is higher than both of the other families’ costs combined. The climate in North Carolina, unlike the climate in Egypt and Chad, differs greatly from season to season, as it can get very cold in the winter and very hot in the summer. Much like the Ahmed family, the Revis family has a very nice home with electricity giving them the ability to properly store items that would otherwise parish. The Revis family diet contains plenty of meat, a small amount of fruits and vegetables, and a vast amount of unneeded sugar. Sugary snacks along with sugary drinks and fast-food are commodities and would not be considered healthy. The family consumes an excess of certain nutrients, such as sugar and fat, but not enough of other nutrients, present in foods such as fruits, vegetables, and grains. The overall quality of the food is unhealthy; however, the family has a substantial quantity of food. The average daily caloric intake for a member of the Revis family is 3,000 calories. The nutrition value of the Revis family diet can be summarized as exceedingly fattening and much less nourishing than the diet of the Ahmed family, but more nourishing than the Aboubaker family

Open Document