What do kids around the globe eat ? I’m assuming that a lot of countries have way more balanced and healthy diets than the United States, but you just never know.
That is why this project from photographer Gregg Segal is so interesting. Segal spent three years in nine different countries documenting what kids eat around the globe on a daily basis. The information is fascinating and the photos are beautiful as well.
Buy Segal’s book, Daily Bread: What Kids Eat Around the World , HERE and take a look at these great photos.
1. USA
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Prince, photographed in 2016 for Daily Bread. When he was 12, Prince and his family left St. James Montego Bay for the U.S. His parents decided life in Jamaica was too dangerous after Prince’s cousin was gunned down at the little neighborhood market his family owned. Prince misses the green open space of his family farm and the animals they raised: goats, chickens, geese, rabbits, pigs and cows. They grew and harvested corn, yams, coconut, oranges, apples, pears, ackee and breadfruit – and back then his diet was much better than it is now. Prince misses his dad, too, who’s stuck in Montego Bay driving a cab. He prays he’ll get his papers and come to America. #dailybread #powerhousebooks #culture #americandream #whatkidseat #diet #foodaroundtheworld #jamaicanculture
A post shared by Gregg Segal (@greggsegal) on Jun 22, 2019 at 8:19pm PDT
2. Mexico
3. Indigenous Brazil
4. Posh Brazil
5. Amazonian Brazil
6. Poor Brazil
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Thayla, Brasilia, 2018. Most poor kids in Brasil attend school to be able to eat, but the government has failed to provide adequate school lunches, offering little more than milk and crackers or canned beans. Thayla wishes she had more flavors in her diet and could afford to eat feijoada. If she had enough money, she’d buy clothes for the street kids who are worse off than her. Someday, she’d like to be a teacher. In Brazil, corporate food is finding ways to profit from the poorest consumers, reaching ever more remote places. Nestle hires micro-entrepreneurs, mom and pops who trundle thru villages with carts selling cheap processed snacks. A generation ago, Brazil’s poor were underfed. Today, 50% of the population is overweight. The UN should be focused not only at calorie intake but nutrient. #dailybread #powerhousebooks #whatkidseat #diet #nutrition #kids #brazil #schoollunch
A post shared by Gregg Segal (@greggsegal) on Jun 9, 2019 at 10:25am PDT
7. Junk Food USA
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Can you guess what percent of our calories come from vegetables in the US? Less than 1%! Looking at all of the kids’ food I photographed, not just in the US, but all over the world, greens were consistently absent. Parents often say, “My kid won’t eat vegetables.” They throw up their hands. “I put healthy food in front of them, but they only like pizza.” You can’t force kids to eat healthy foods, but if you give them the choice, they’ll choose salt, fat, and sugar over leafy greens because salt, fat, and sugar appeal to our deepest, primal cravings stretching back to our caveman days! If you don’t introduce whipped cream Frappuccinos, sautéed spinach with a little butter and salt isn’t bad. #dailybread #eatyourgreens #whatkidseat #parenting #primalcravings #diet #powerhousebooks
A post shared by Gregg Segal (@greggsegal) on Jun 7, 2019 at 8:56pm PDT
8. Italy
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12 year old Amelia from Catania, Sicily, surrounded by her vibrantly colorful diet: the green of beans and zucchini, red of cherry tomatoes, yellow of peppers, purple of radicchio, orange of melon, etc. Outside of a single pizza box, there’s no packaging in Amelia’s week of meals. Everything’s homemade, which is as pleasing to the eye as it is easy on the environment! Daily Bread is a finalist for the 2018 Food Sustainability Media Award announced next week in Milan. All finalists have been put forward for the Best of the Web Award. The winner is chosen by the public. Check out finalists here: www.goodfoodmediaaward.com/finalists/2018/ #dailybread #goodfoodmediaaward #homemade #lesswaste #colorfulfood #regenerativeagriculture
A post shared by Gregg Segal (@greggsegal) on Nov 21, 2018 at 4:05pm PST
9. India
10. No processed foods
11. Dubai
12. Senegal and Mumbai
13. Kuala Lumpur
14. Senegal
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Sira Sissokho, photographed in Dakar, Senegal with what she ate in a week. In 2015, Cambridge University conducted an exhaustive study, identifying countries with the healthiest diets in the world. 9 of the top 10 countries are in Africa, where fish, vegetables, fruits, nuts, legumes, and grains are staples and most meals are homemade. #whatkidseat #dailybread #homemade #wholefoods #diet #nutrition
A post shared by Gregg Segal (@greggsegal) on Jan 8, 2018 at 9:48pm PST
15. The photographer’s son, Hank
What a wonderful project!
The post Take a Look at These Photos of What Kids Eating Around the World appeared first on UberFacts .