All American Breakfast

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Gob
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All American Breakfast

Post by Gob »

Imagine an American breakfast and what comes to mind? Ham and eggs, with hash browns? Pancakes with maple syrup and bacon? The reality tends to be simpler. Cereal and fruit juice have been breakfast staples for generations - though that now seems to be changing.

The breakfast cereal behemoth, Kellogg, announced in July that quarterly global earnings had fallen by a sizable 16% over the year before. That same month, orange juice sales plummeted to the lowest in a decade, according to the Florida Department of Citrus.

Two pillars of the everyday American breakfast, seen for decades as part of a well-rounded morning meal, seem to be slowly losing their appeal to US consumers. But what foods are Americans turning to instead?

One telling sign was the departure last year of the head of Kellogg's US breakfast-foods division, who took up the helm of Greek yogurt maker Chobani Inc. As Kellogg's sales have dropped, Chobani's have skyrocketed to nearly $1bn a year.

According to Harry Balzer, a food industry analyst for market research firm NPD Group, yogurt like Chobani's is a "perfect replacement" for cereal. It's a nourishing dairy product - and it's also portable.

Balzer has been studying changing food trends for more than 30 years. And one thing remains constant, he says: people are looking for products that save them time.

To break into the breakfast market, "you have to give me something new that makes my life easier", he says.

Balzer says the rise of easy, portable items like yogurt, breakfast sandwiches, toastable pastry items, fruit, and breakfast bars have all been responsible for stealing cereal's lunch, so to speak.

"Time-saving maybe for my great grandmother was having eggs delivered to her house for the ham and eggs she was going to make for her family," he explains.

"And by the time it came to my mother, maybe it was about the cereal and whether the kids could make the cereal on their own. And by the time it came to me, maybe it was can we stop and get a breakfast sandwich, an Egg McMuffin," Balzer adds. "And when you get to my daughter… she may be looking at it as, 'Can I just give the kids some yogurt and fruit and a bar for breakfast.'"

Some 80% of Americans still eat breakfast inside the home, according to Balzer. An estimated 10% report they skip the meal entirely - people aged between 18 and 35 are most likely to do this - while another 10% get breakfast elsewhere.

And it's that last 10% that have restaurants in a feeding frenzy. In fact, the only area where the crowded restaurant industry has seen growth in the last decade has been on take-out breakfast, Balzer says.

McDonald's, which began selling the Egg McMuffin in 1971, is still king with more than 19% of all fast-food breakfast sales in the US - sales that are worth $40bn per year. Burger King gobbles up nearly 3%, according to the Wall Street Journal, but companies like Subway and Taco Bell are entering the fray with items such as the new "waffle taco".

Some consumers are looking for a low-fat, low-calorie breakfast, though, or one that matches their personal definition of what a "healthy" breakfast should be. One of the reasons cereal and orange juice have had the pulp beaten out of them is because of a shift away from sugar and carbohydrates toward yogurt and sandwiches with protein-rich fillings.

Breakfasters in Britain have also jumped on the higher-protein trend with eggs showing a 13.7% rise in consumption in the last year. Eggs' perfect partners, bacon and sausage, have also seen a rise in popularity as cereal sales declined, according to The Grocer.

In both countries, the link between weight loss and breakfast is constantly debated. Every year, conflicting studies are released touting breakfast as a must for fighting obesity, or skipping breakfast as the key to keep weight down.

Andrew Brown, a scientist at the The University of Alabama at Birmingham Nutrition and Obesity Research Center, investigated more than 100 different studies in this area and found there was no clear link.
Breakfast in the UK

Cereal, tea and bread are the three most common breakfast items, though cereal and bread have been in long-term decline
Eggs are now being eaten 13.7% more often at breakfast than they were a year ago - they feature in about one in 13 breakfasts - partly because of reports that they help people feel full for longer
There has also been a 7.1% increase in bacon consumption at breakfast in the last six months
One in three people regularly skip breakfast
Consumption of on-the-go breakfast products - taken from home to be eaten elsewhere - was down 9% over the six months from December to May, compared with a year earlier

Source: The Grocer
"There's a halo around breakfast, that if you want to lose weight, you have to eat breakfast," Brown says. "[But] there wasn't a lot of good strong evidence to support it."

What he and his colleagues did find was that American attitudes about breakfast have changed significantly over the last century.

In historical literature from the early 1900s, "you've got these gigantic breakfasts with steak and eggs and oatmeal - so many calories - and it talks about that you must have this energy or you'll waste away, that you need to be able to be fuelled for your day," he says.

"And now we look at the narrative and we're telling people you have to eat in the morning so you don't weigh as much," he says. The theory just wasn't born out in his study's data.

One thing experts do appear to agree on is the difficulty in determining just what, exactly, Americans do eat for breakfast on any given day. The reason? Most people, when surveyed, tend to lie about it to avoid negative judgement.

According to Balzer, what people say they eat eat says just as much about them as, say, their choice in fashion. They say "what they want you to hear," he says. "They want you to hear they're eating quinoa."
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”

rubato
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Re: All American Breakfast

Post by rubato »

Plain oatmeal (no flavorings or sugar) usually. Sometimes eggs. Yogurt. Fruit. I never buy cold cereal unless we're having guests (like when my nephew and his college friends visited).

yrs,
rubato

oldr_n_wsr
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Re: All American Breakfast

Post by oldr_n_wsr »

Two over easies with bacon and cheese on an english muffin and a side of hash browns. And coffee, black.
But most days breakfast is just a buttered roll with coffe, black.

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Sue U
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Re: All American Breakfast

Post by Sue U »

As a rule, I prefer to have a smoothie for breakfast (a banana, a handful of frozen strawberries, a cup of yogurt and a cup of milk thrown into the blender; it's enough for two). Problem is, the eggs start stacking up, so I'm pretty much forced to have eggs and a piece of toast two or three days a week. And coffee, always coffee, black.
GAH!

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Daisy
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Re: All American Breakfast

Post by Daisy »

Whilst I love coffee, I can't have it for the first drink of the day as it gives me chronic heartburn on an empty stomach. Strong tea with just a drop of milk is my first drink of the day. A few years ago I convinced Cookie to try it instead of his usual cup of coffee.

Now the first words he says on waking is "Cup. Of. Tea"

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Gob
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Re: All American Breakfast

Post by Gob »

Pint of tea.

Hour at gym

Pint of tea, two slices of thick toast with marge and marmite.
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”

dgs49
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Re: All American Breakfast

Post by dgs49 »

Breakfast of Champions: PB&J, Iced tea/lemonade (an 'Arnold Palmer').

But the "smoothie" mentioned above sounds interesting.

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TPFKA@W
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Re: All American Breakfast

Post by TPFKA@W »

Chocolate milk on work days. Non-work days no breakfast.

If I get the opportunity then I get an order of B&G and scrambled eggs and hash browns.

liberty
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Re: All American Breakfast

Post by liberty »

A great breakfast is: hot tomales and milk.
Soon, I’ll post my farewell message. The end is starting to get close. There are many misconceptions about me, and before I go, to live with my ancestors on the steppes, I want to set the record straight.

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BoSoxGal
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Re: All American Breakfast

Post by BoSoxGal »

High fiber English muffin w/raisins, and peanut butter topping. :ok
For me, it is far better to grasp the Universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring.
~ Carl Sagan

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Sue U
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Re: All American Breakfast

Post by Sue U »

dgs49 wrote:But the "smoothie" mentioned above sounds interesting.
The smoothie thing is great, especially after an early-morning workout. Per serving, it's about 200-225 cal., 10g protein and 0g fat if you use fat-free yogurt and milk. Delicious and virtuous.
GAH!

wesw
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Re: All American Breakfast

Post by wesw »

weekdays: coffee

weekends: coffee, then bacon egg and cheese on toast or scrapple egg and cheese on toast and pepsi or lemonade

constipated: sausage egg and cheese mc muffin, but the local mc donalds has changed the sausage and it just does not work as well

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