item: #1 of 10 id: 15237 author: Duncan, A. W. title: The Chemistry of Food and Nutrition date: None words: 34030 flesch: 66 summary: | | Absorbs moisture very rapidly Absorbs moisture very slowly | | Dries very rapidly Dries very slowly | | Radiates away all moisture from Retains the moisture of the body | | the pores | | Can be easily cleansed Cannot be boiled without | | destroying the fabric | | Hardens and strengthens the Enervates and enfeebles the | | system system | | Does not shrink in washing or wear Always shrinks | | Prevents chills and colds Encourages chills and colds | | Prevents and relieves Rheumatism Promotes Rheumatism and similar | | diseases | | Does not irritate the most Causes Rash and other skin | | sensitive skin troubles | | Cures and prevents prickly heat Irritates all skin diseases | | _________ | | Cooked Fruit, | | Dish of GRAPE-NUTS and Cream or hot or | | cold Milk, Two lightly boiled eggs, | | One cup of our Postum Food Coffee, | | Slice of toast. keywords: acid; animal; beef; blood; body; bread; cent; day; diet; dietary; digestion; digestive; fat; flesh; food; form; fruits; man; matter; meat; milk; organs; persons; proportion; proteid; quantities; quantity; salt; starch; time; uric; use; value; vegetable; water; | | cache: 15237.txt plain text: 15237.txt item: #2 of 10 id: 20871 author: Snyder, Harry title: Human Foods and Their Nutritive Value date: None words: 89942 flesch: 69 summary: ] STATEMENT OF RESULTS OF A DIGESTION EXPERIMENT ============================================================================= FOOD CONSUMED | WEIGHT | PROTEIN | ETHER | CARBO- | | HEAT OF | OF | N � 6.25 | EXTRACT | HY- | ASH | COMBUS- | MATERIAL | | | DRATES | | TION ------------------+----------+----------+---------+--------+-------+--------- | Grams | Grams | Grams | Grams | Grams | Calories Bread | 773.5 | 60.0 | 6.9 | 362.8 | 2.5 | 1895 Milk | 2000.0 | 63.0 | 92.6 | 100.0 | 14.0 | 1585 | | ------- ========================================================================= |WATER| PROTEIN | FAT| CARBO-| ASH| ACIDITY | HEAT OF MILLED PRODUCT | |(N � 5.7)| | HY- | keywords: = =; = c_{6}h_{12}o_{6; = cahpo_{4; = knac_{4}h_{4}o_{6; = na_{2}c_{2}h_{4}o_{6}.2; = |; acid; action; amounts; animal; ash |; bread |; butter |; carbohydrates; cent; changes; chemical; composition; compounds; content; cooking; dietary; digestibility; digestion; dry; experiment =; extent; fat |; flour =; food; food value; fruits =; general; grain |; making; material; matter; meats; milk |; nitrogenous; nutrients; potato =; process; products; proteids; protein; ration; starch; sugar; use; value; water |; wheat =; wheat flour; work =; | -|; | =; | lb; | |; |citric = cache: 20871.txt plain text: 20871.txt item: #3 of 10 id: 30478 author: Alcott, William A. (William Andrus) title: Vegetable Diet: As Sanctioned by Medical Men, and by Experience in All Ages Including a System of Vegetable Cookery date: None words: 93225 flesch: 69 summary: vegetable food in opposition to good animal food; for no one will pretend that a diet of crude, miserable, or imperfect, or sickly vegetables will be as wholesome as one consisting of rich farinaceous articles and fruits; nor even as many kinds of plain meat. The men, even--the Scotch and Irish, for example--are they weaker than their brethren, the English, who use more animal food? keywords: age; animal diet; animal food; animals; body; bread; case; cents; course; cure; day; diet; disease; drink; eat; eating; fish; flesh; following; food; fruits; general; good; habits; half; health; human; kind; letter; life; living; man; meal; meat; medical; men; milk; mind; months; nature; new; old; persons; present; quantity; receipt; regard; simple; state; stomach; strength; subject; system; thing; time; use; vegetable; vegetable diet; vegetable food; water; way; work; world; years cache: 30478.txt plain text: 30478.txt item: #4 of 10 id: 38762 author: Chamberlain, James Franklin title: How We Are Fed: A Geographical Reader date: None words: 29665 flesch: 88 summary: Do you know what great man was born there? It is obtained in Germany, Poland, Austria, India, the United States, and in many other countries. keywords: california; cattle; cents; coffee; country; day; father; feet; fig; food; fruit; ground; illustration; leaves; men; milk; new; nuts; people; pounds; rice; salt; sugar; tea; time; trees; use; water; way; work; year cache: 38762.txt plain text: 38762.txt item: #5 of 10 id: 43643 author: Martyn, Charles title: Foods and Culinary Utensils of the Ancients date: None words: 19034 flesch: 72 summary: Other fruits, some of them found in great numbers, were pomegranates, grapes, citrons, pineapples, oranges, pears, apples and many small berries. Among other fruit trees and shrubs may be mentioned the fig, pomegranate, vine, olive, peach, pear, plum, apple, carob or locust (_Ceratonia siliqua_), persea, palma, christi or castor oil plant, nebk (_Rhamnus Nabeca_), and the prickly pear or _shok_. keywords: animals; bread; cakes; chinese; classes; date; day; days; dishes; egypt; feet; fire; fish; flesh; food; fruits; gold; guests; illustration; kitchen; man; meal; meat; men; oil; people; present; silver; time; use; vegetables; water; wine cache: 43643.txt plain text: 43643.txt item: #6 of 10 id: 47701 author: Christian, Eugene title: Encyclopedia of Diet: A Treatise on the Food Question, Vol. 4 date: None words: 26666 flesch: 67 summary: /Third Day/: BREAKFAST Bran gems, or a baked potato, with butter Two glasses of milk LUNCHEON A liberal portion of baked sweet potatoes, with butter A cup of hot water, into which put a little sugar and cream Figs, cream, and nuts DINNER A salad of lettuce, celery, or endive, with nuts One fresh vegetable A bit of chicken or turkey--white meat; or shell-fish, such as lobster or crab, may be eaten A baked potato /Note/: The meats are given only in case there is a craving for something salty. BREAKFAST A cantaloup or a pear Wheat bran, cooked A liberal portion of baked sweet potatoes keywords: beans; bran; breakfast; butter; corn; cream; cup; dinner; egg; eggs; glass; luncheon; menu; milk; nuts; portion; potato; water; wheat; wheat bran cache: 47701.txt plain text: 47701.txt item: #7 of 10 id: 48746 author: Christian, Eugene title: Encyclopedia of Diet: A Treatise on the Food Question, Vol. 2 date: None words: 40501 flesch: 56 summary: BILIOUSNESS--THE REMEDY The logical remedy is to remove the above causes by eliminating from the diet such articles as tea, coffee, distilled, brewed and malted liquors of every character, and sweets, selecting such foods as will give to the body all the elements of nutrition, and so combining them as to furnish these elements in the right proportions. It should be balanced according to age, labor, and temperature of the atmosphere, and should consist of-- Such foods as will cause normal action of the bowels Green corn Nuts Rich fresh milk Yolks of eggs Young beans, peas, or any legume before it hardens Immature starch composes the best form of carbohydrate food, which is exceedingly necessary in most cases of neurasthenia, unless the patient be obese, in which event it should be reduced to meet only the requirements of the body, and nitrogenous foods should predominate. keywords: acid; body; cases; cause; cent; condition; diet; dis; drugs; ease; eggs; exercise; fat; fermentation; food; form; fruits; heart; milk; nature; nuts; oil; patient; products; quantity; remedy; sidenote; stomach; sugar; symptoms; treatment; vegetables; water; wheat; | | cache: 48746.txt plain text: 48746.txt item: #8 of 10 id: 50660 author: Christian, Eugene title: Encyclopedia of Diet: A Treatise on the Food Question, Vol. 5 date: None words: 34084 flesch: 51 summary: I 262 P PANCREAS, THE functions of, I 138 PAIN a warning, I 12 PATENT MEDICINES Defined, II 347 why alcohol is used in, II 370 per cent of alcohol in, II 371 PENTOSES from the standpoint of human food, I 110 PEPSIN action of, I 155 PHOSPHORUS uses of, I 75 PHYSICAL CULTURE systems of, V 1333 tensing in, V 1339 vibratory exercise, V 1339 heavy weight exercise, V 1340 indoor exercises, V 1340 PHYSIOLOGY the old, V 1305 PILES causes of, II 471 symptoms of, II 472 treatment for, II 472 diet for, II 473 POISONS body, Page_ composition of, II 358 effects of, II 358 ACIDITY sub, symptoms of, II 462 ---- remedy for, II 463 ---- diet in, II 464 super, chart indicating dis-eases caused by, I 9 ACIDS nitric, I 62 ---- properties of, I 63 hydrochloric, I 64 ---- uses of, I 65 ---- preparation of, I 66 ---- elements of, I 67 ---- purpose of, I 149 ---- formation of, I 149 bases of, I 68 ---- tests for, I 69 ---- neutralization of, I 70 Relation of bases to, I 69 organic, I 94 ---- properties of, I 94 acetic, I 95 ---- process of making, I 95 oxalic, I 97 lactic, I 97 malic, I 97 tartaric, I 97 citric, I 98 uric, in rheumatism, V 1179 AIR composition of, I 32 liquefaction of, I 35 and oxidation, V 1312 relative importance of food, water and, V 1313 ALBUMIN sources of, I 129 solubility of, I 129 coagulation of, I 129 ALCOHOL varieties of, I 91 effect of, II 367 a poison, II 368 ALDEHYDES and ethers, I 93 ALKALIS principles of neutralization of, I 71 rules governing neutralization of, I 71 AMIDO compounds, I 128 AMMONIA composition of, I 60 uses of, I 60 AMYLOPSIN properties of, I 154 APPENDIX (VERIFORM) dis-eases of (see Appendicitis), II 580 functions of, II 581 APPENDICITIS symptoms of, II 582 treatment of (mild cases), II 583 a natural remedy for, II 583 diet in, II 584 list of foods for, II 585 chronic cases of, II 586 ---- treatment for, II 587 ---- causes of, II 588 diet a factor in, II 589 coarse food a factor in, II 590 old diagnosis of, II 582 menus for, IV 1029 APPETITE lack of, IV 1081 difference between hunger and, IV 1081 ARTERIO-SCLEROSIS causes of, I 170 food in, I 171 ASSIMILATION definition of, III 630 ASTHMA described, II 519 causes of, II 533 symptoms of, II 533 remedy for, II 634 diet in, II 534 foods to eat in, II 535 foods to omit in, II 535 ATHLETES selection, combination and proportioning of food for, V 1188 summer diet for, V 1191 winter diet for, V 1192 suggestions regarding diet in exposure to extreme cold or for exertion, V 1201 AUTOINTOXICATION defined, I 247 bacteria in, I 247 meat a factor in, I 247 B BACTERIA discussed, I 166 origin of, I 167 not all harmful, I 168 species of, I 168 producers of, I 168 fermentation produced by, I 169 growth of, I 169 meat a producer of, I 259 BANANAS varieties of, III 675 how to select and ripen, III 676 how to bake, III 677 BILE defined, I 153 function of, I 153 purposes of, I 153 BILIOUSNESS cause of, II 466 symptoms of, II 466 remedy for, II 466 what to eat, II 467 what to omit, II 467 BRAN meal, composition of, III 683 ---- bread made from, III 683 wheat, composition of, III 681 ---- medicinal properties of, III 681 BLOOD, THE Antipepsin in, I 152 glucose in, I 204 process of oxidation of, II 346 corpuscles of, II 386 automatic action of, II 388 incorrect feeding cause of impurity of, II 397 defective circulation of, II 398 exercise a factor in poisoning and purification of, V 1331 increase of circulation of, V 1335 BRIGHT'S DIS-EASE described, II 550 causes of, II 551 symptoms of, II 551 prevention of, II 552 treatment for, II 553 general suggestion in feeding in, II 554 foods to eat in, II 555 foods to omit in, II 555 BROMIN defined, I 73 BUSINESS MAN a lesson for, V 1317 examples of poor, V 1318 wealth at the expense of health for the V 1319 the abnormal, V 1320 what is a good, V 1320 qualities of a, V 1321 routine life of the average, V 1322 bad habits of the average, V 1322 the ancient remedy for the average, V 1322 the physician of the average, V 1324 twelve rules of health for the, V 1324-1326 BUTTER composition of, I 283 its value as a food, I 284 caloric value of, I 285 cocoa, how made, II 338 cocoanut, composition of, II 339 home-made, how to make, III 674 BUTTERMILK how made, III 674 BUTYRIN defined, I 123 C CALORIES definition of, I 199 method of determining numbers of, keywords: age; body; business; causes; child; conditions; cream; day; development; diet; dis; energy; evolution; exercise; fall; food; health; iii; life; man; milk; mother; nature; nuts; quantity; sidenote; spring; summer; water; winter; work cache: 50660.txt plain text: 50660.txt item: #9 of 10 id: 54721 author: Various title: The Food Question: Health and Economy date: None words: 27492 flesch: 71 summary: For five months, they subsisted upon a diet comprising from one half to one third the quantity of protein food they had been in the habit of eating. Any person can have access to these tables of food values by applying to the government, or by purchasing from almost any bookstore any one of the several books on food values, that are on the market. keywords: body; boil; bread; brown; butter; calories; cent; corn; cream; cup; cups; day; diet; egg; elements; fat; flesh; flour; food; fruit; half; meal; meat; milk; pan; protein; rice; salt; sugar; tablespoonfuls; taste; time; use; value; vegetable; water cache: 54721.txt plain text: 54721.txt item: #10 of 10 id: 57313 author: Bulkley, M. E. (Mildred Emily) title: The Feeding of School Children date: None words: 94054 flesch: 65 summary: In the great majority of towns, though the School Medical Officer may recommend for school meals children whom he finds suffering from malnutrition in the course of medical inspection, the greater number of children are selected on the poverty test. The consequence was that the attempt to make the provision of meals for school children part of the Poor Law was abandoned. keywords: act; attendance; authorities; authority; bradford; care; cases; cent; centres; committee; cost; council; county; course; day; dinner; education; education committee; family; feeding; food; footnote; guardians; home; ibid; london school; meals act; medical; number; officer; parents; poor; provision; public; relief; report; school board; school children; school feeding; school meals; schools; society; system; teachers; time; towns; underfed; vol; week; work; year cache: 57313.txt plain text: 57313.txt