ON4R on Nostr: Infants were fed beef even before their teeth had grown in. The English novelist ...
Infants were fed beef even before their teeth had grown in. The English novelist Anthony Trollope reported, during a trip to the United States in 1861, that Americans ate twice as much beef as did Englishmen. Charles Dickens, when he visited, wrote that “no breakfast was breakfast” without a T-bone steak. Apparently, starting a day on puffed wheat and low-fat milk—our “Breakfast of Champions!”—would not have been considered adequate even for a servant.
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/06/how-americans-used-to-eat/371895/#meatstr #carnivore
Published at
2024-10-01 20:32:59Event JSON
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"content": "Infants were fed beef even before their teeth had grown in. The English novelist Anthony Trollope reported, during a trip to the United States in 1861, that Americans ate twice as much beef as did Englishmen. Charles Dickens, when he visited, wrote that “no breakfast was breakfast” without a T-bone steak. Apparently, starting a day on puffed wheat and low-fat milk—our “Breakfast of Champions!”—would not have been considered adequate even for a servant.\n\nhttps://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/06/how-americans-used-to-eat/371895/\n\n#meatstr #carnivore",
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