Based on a focus group study conducted in New York City (NYC), this paper examines the traditional staples (i.e., nostalgic foods) that Latinas regularly consume in the U.S., along with their beliefs regarding the impact of such foods on weight gain and related body image. Our research findings highlight the "double-bind" of nostalgic foods, defined by Latinas' retention of highly caloric familiar items along with their progressive abandonment of fresh produce and fruits. Despite participants' efforts to eat healthy staples from their homelands, they mostly kept foods perceived as unhealthy (e.g., fatty meats, fried foods). This phenomenon was informed by the "same-food paradox," represented by Latinas' beliefs that the same traditional foods that would make them lose weight in their native countries would lead them to gain weight in the U.S. Our qualitative data show that participants' concerns about their weight gain in the U.S. is in tune with their general body dissatisfaction, as indicated by our quantitative results. Finally, our findings reveal the role of stress in promoting Latinas' deleterious daily habits, including their consumption of fat-saturated snacks. Overall, these results speak to the cultural and structural barriers to healthy eating that financially strapped study participants experienced in NYC. In order to design successful public health interventions targeting Latinas, the nostalgic aspects of food preferences should be considered in conjunction with the barriers that keep them from engaging with healthier lifestyles in the U.S.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2015.11.017 | DOI Listing |
Fungal Biol
December 2024
Faculty of Health Sciences and Wellbeing, University of Sunderland, Science Complex, City Campus, SUNDERLAND, SR1 3SD, UK; Brewlab Limited, Unit 1 West Quay Court, Sunderland Enterprise Park, Sunderland, Tyne and Wear, SR5 2TE, UK. Electronic address:
The recreation of historic beverages is possible via contemporary fermentations carried out with microbes revived form the past. Advanced molecular techniques have recently provided opportunities to investigate historic samples, such as those from beer found in shipwrecks, and provide data on their character as well as identifying differences with contemporary products. In some cases, isolates of yeasts and bacteria create the possibility for authentic recreations of fermented beverages that can have cultural and nostalgic interest.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Sci Food Agric
December 2024
Food Technology and Nutrition Group, LUANAR, Lilongwe, Malawi.
Background: Considering the nutritional value and adaptability of quinoa, integrating it into African diets could enhance food and nutrition security, contingent on the acceptability of quinoa-based foods. This study therefore determined consumer acceptability of six stiff porridge (nsima) samples, their sensory profiles, and their emotion profiles. The samples comprised controls made from whole corn flour, dehulled corn flour, and soaked, dehulled corn flour and from 1:1 blends of quinoa and each corn flour type.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Ethnobiol Ethnomed
July 2024
School of Life Sciences and Technology, Institut Teknologi Bandung, Jl. Ganesha 10, Bandung, 40132, Indonesia.
Background: As one of the world's biodiversity hotspots, Indonesia contains over 25,000 plant species, including unconventional food plants (UFPs). These plants are integral to the dietary practices of rural communities, providing essential nutrients often overlooked in modern diets. However, the use of UFP is declining, with both their dietary and cultural values being undermined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Promot J Austr
October 2024
Faculty of Society and Design, Bond University, Gold Coast, Australia.
Issue Addressed: Nostalgia-the bittersweet reliving of the past-has been linked to social connection and psychological wellbeing. Although food consumption is often an intrinsically social experience, relatively little research has examined how individuals experience and understand how food consumption relates to feelings of nostalgia, food and mood.
Methods: In the current study, semi-structured interviews were conducted with eight Australians from varying cultural backgrounds to explore their experiences with nostalgia, food and mood.
Autobiographical memories activated by the senses, particularly smell and taste, can be among the most potent and influential, an experience labelled the Proust Effect. Contemporary research has helped to explain the physiological, neurological, and psychological reasons underlying this phenomenon. Nostalgic memories triggered by taste and smell are especially self-relevant, arousing, and familiar.
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