Read First Bite: How We Learn to Eat Online

Authors: Bee Wilson

Tags: #Food Science, #Science

First Bite: How We Learn to Eat (41 page)

119
   
parenting styles:
Rhee et al. 2006.

119
   
indulgent feeding:
Vollmer and Mobley 2013.

119
   
habits for life:
Hoerr et al. 2009.

119
   
bodyweight in the children:
Huang et al. 2012.

120
   
hunger and fullness:
Carnell et al. 2011.

120
   
192 girls:
Fisher and Birch 2002.

121
   
emotional eaters:
Vollmer and Mobley 2013.

121
   
food when angry:
Topham et al. 2011.

121
   
“competent eater”:
“Ellyn Satter’s Division of Responsibility in Feeding,” Ellyn Satter Institute,
http://www.ellynsatterinstitute.org
, accessed December 2014.

122
   
introduced at six months:
Rapley and Murkett 2008; Rapley Weaning,
http://www.rapleyweaning.com
, accessed December 2014.

122
   
“things for themselves”:
Rapley and Murkett 2008.

123
   
“decisions for him”:
Gill Rapley, “Guidelines for Implementing a BabyLed Approach to the Introduction of Solid Foods,” June 2008,
http://www.rapleyweaning.com/assets/blw_guidelines.pdf
, accessed March 2016.

124
   
especially folate:
Rowan and Harris 2012.

124
   
self-feed at six months:
Wright et al. 2011.

125
   
“environment of school”:
Gold 1993.

125
   
school canteen:
Henry Dimbleby and John Vincent, “The School Food Plan,”
http://www.schoolfoodplan.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/School_Food_Plan_2013.pdf
, accessed March 2015.

125
   
calcium than school lunches:
Farris et al. 2014.

126
   
lunchbox kids:
“School Meals Help Fussy Children Try New Foods,” Children’s Food Trust,
http://www.childrensfoodtrust.org.uk/news-and-events/news/school-meals-help-fussy-children-try-new-foods
, accessed December 2014.

126
   
“portion size”:
Itoh 2011.

Chapter 5: Brothers and Sisters

129
   
regardless of family income:
Levin and Kirby 2012.

130
   
resemble their parents:
Pliner and Pelchat 1986.

130
   
“moderately similar”:
De Leeuw et al. 2007.

131
   
microbes in the gut:
Smith et al. 2013b; see also “Debugging the Problem,”
The Economist,
February 2, 2013.

132
   
“any country in the world”:
Rukmini Shrinivasan, “India Deadliest Place in the World for Girl Child,”
Times of India
, February 1, 2012,
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/India-deadliest-place-in-world-for-girl-child/articleshow/11707102.cms
, accessed December 2014.

132
   
103 males for every 100 females:
Pande 2003.

132
   
“ensure her recovery”:
Ibid.

132
   
how badly girls were fed:
Ibid.

133
   
worthy of food:
Ibid.

134
   
“fear, chance”:
Weber 1981.

135
   
“set themselves with meals”:
Ibid.

136
   
better educated, and better fed:
Fong 2004.

136
   
“gets his cake”:
Sandler 2013.

136
   
outlook to other children:
Laybourn 1994.

136
   
immature sibling:
Sandler 2013.

136
   
one or more siblings:
Mentioned in Coates 1996.

136
   
“eat them”:
Quoted in Pitkeathley and Emerson 1994.

138
   
part of the culture:
Bourdieu 1986.

139
   
fruits and grapes:
Brillat-Savarin 2009.

139
   
washing, and cooking:
Bourdieu 1986.

139
   
bitterly, in 1994:
Cathro and Hilliam 1994.

139
   
fulfilling family life:
Conley and Glauber 2007.

140
   
girls were overweight:
Blisset et al. 2006; but see also Hendy and Williams 2012 for the suggestion that parents do not always feed children of different sexes differently.

140
   
five-year period:
Bauer et al. 2011.

140
   
can be measured:
Hammons and Fiese 2011; Valdes et al. 2012.

141
   
encourage them to diet:
Armstrong and Janicke 2012.

141
   
courteous families:
Neumark-Sztainer et al. 2010.

141
   
overweight after five years:
Bauer et al. 2011.

142
   
“flying saucer”:
Slater 2004.

142
   
plum wine:
“Holding Back Half the Nation,”
The Economist
, March 29, 2014.

142
   
whole extra meal:
“How Many Calories Do Teenagers Need?” NHS Choices, UK,
http://www.nhs.uk/chq/Pages/how-many-calories-do-teenagers-need.aspx?CategoryID=51&SubCategoryID=165
, accessed September 2014.

143
   
remembering them:
Köster 2003.

143
   
crepes were womanly:
Discussed in Ueland 2007.

144
   
differed according to gender:
Wansink et al. 2003.

144
   
“appropriate”:
For gender stereotypes of food in Japan, see Kimura et al. 2009, 2012.

144
   
masculine sort of food:
Komatsu 2008.

144
   
too expensive for them:
Martens 1997.

145
   
cognitive function:
Eftekhari et al. 2009.

145
   
girls of the same age:
Hercberg et al. 2001.

145
   
19.5 percent:
Wei Xia et al. 2012.

145
   
followed by red meats:
Sharon Perkins, “How Often Should You Eat Liver for Iron Intake?,” SFGate,
http://healthyeating.sfgate.com/should-eat-liver-iron-intake-3367.html
, accessed September 2014.

146
   
non-dieting meat-eaters:
Nelson 1996, 362.

146
   
27.8 percent of the normal-weight girls:
Eftekhari et al. 2009.

146
   
metabolizing fatty acids:
Ibid.

147
   
attended in October 2013:
Dr. Laura Stewart, “An Update on Obesity in the U.K. Young,” paper presented at Nutrition and Health Live conference, London, 2013.

148
   
“strong kid”:
Jain et al. 2001.

148
   
more common in men than in women:
Kuchler and Variyam 2003.

148
   
“biomedically obese”:
Howard et al. 2008.

149
   
11 percent of the men:
Rozin et al. 2003.

149
   
being weighed in public:
Geier and Rozin 2008.

149
   
majority of postpubescent girls:
Rodin et al. 1985.

149
   
do not manage it:
Ueland 2007.

150
   
question of healthy eating:
Cited in Groves 2002.

150
   
twice as many boys are obese:
Sirikulchayanonta et al. 2010.

150
   
Syria or Libya:
Musaiger et al. 2012.

150
   
fatty cooking water:
John Platt, “In Kuwait, 88% Overweight and Stomach Stapling Becoming the Norm,” July 19, 2012, Mother Nature Network,
http://www.mnn.com/food/healthy-eating/stories/in-kuwait-88-overweight-and-stomach-stapling-becoming-the-norm
, accessed June 2015.

150
   
“compelled to stop too”:
Roden 1968.

151
   
Kuwaiti boys:
Musaiger at al. 2013.

151
   
men and women were equal:
Botz-Bornstein and Abdullah-Khan 2014.

151
   
“size on the other”:
Musaiger et al. 2013.

153
   
“relationship with chocolate”:
Urbick 2011.

153
   
undermined by a recent study:
Hormes and Rozin 2009.

154
   
Spain and the United States:
Osman and Sobal 2006.

154
   
men feeling guilty:
Kuijer and Boyce 2014.

Chapter 6: Hunger

155
   
not ready for learning:
Share Our Strength, “Not Enough Kids Are Eating School Breakfast,” No Kid Hungry,
http://www.nokidhungry.org/back-to-school/
, accessed June 2015.

156
   
$9,175 as of 2014:
“The Impact of Hunger,” Feeding America,
http://www.feedingamerica.org/hunger-in-america/impact-of-hunger/hunger-and-poverty/
, accessed December 2014.

158
   
Florida in the 1960s:
Ficker and Graves 1971, 44.

158
   
consequences are irreversible:
“Hunger Statistics,” World Food Programme,
http://www.wfp.org/hunger/stats
, accessed December 2014.

158
   
insecurity, too:
Cutts et al. 2011.

159
   
seventy pounds:
Stevens Bryant 1913, 219.

160
   
quieted with feeding:
Carlson 1993, 6.

160
   
sensation of hunger:
Mattes 1990, 2010.

161
   
despite the gap:
Mattes 2010.

161
   
weekday breakfast time:
Ibid.

161
   
hunger and fullness:
De Graaf et al. 2004.

161
   
small intestine:
Ibid.

162
   
continuously monitored:
Kovacs et al. 2002.

162
   
stomach is distended:
Kissileff et al. 2003.

163
   
fall significantly:
De Graaf et al. 2004.

163
   
never experience hunger:
Benelam 2009.

163
   
reducing appetite:
Ibid.

163
   
system increase:
De Graaf et al. 2004.

163
   
grains of wheat:
Carlson 1993.

164
   
University of Minnesota:
Keys et al. 1950.

164
   
water and spices:
Brožek 1953.

165
   
plenty to eat:
Hoefling et al. 2009.

166
   
called Plumpy’Nut:
Rice 2010.

166
   
field-tested it in 2001:
“Peanut Butter That Saves Lives,” Future Food 2050,
http://futurefood2050.com/peanut-butter-that-saves-lives/
, accessed December 2014.

167
   
15 percent “wasted”:
“Child and Mother Nutrition Survey of Bangladesh,” 2005, UNICEF,
http://www.unicef.org/bangladesh/Child_and_Mother_Nutrition_Survey.pdf
, accessed April 2015.

167
   
“locally produced food”:
Conversation with author, March 2014.

167
   
Plumpy’Nut among parents and children:
Ali et al. 2013.

171
   
starting to feel full:
Benelam 2009.

172
   
“filling-in foods”:
Cathro and Hilliam 1994.

172
   
they are forbidden:
Paltrow 2013.

172
   
“preloads” of various nutrients:
See, for example, Yeomans and Chambers 2011.

Other books

Hotel of the Saints by Ursula Hegi
An Eye for Murder by Libby Fischer Hellmann
The Bones Will Speak by Carrie Stuart Parks
The Last Place She'd Look by Schindler, Arlene
Brandy and Bullets by Jessica Fletcher
B008KQO31S EBOK by Cooke, Deborah, Cross, Claire
Continental Life by Ella Dominguez