Breakfast is a meal preceding lunch or dinner and usually eaten in the morning. Less frequently, the term breakfast may also be used by people that work evenings or late nights to refer to the first meal of the day, although it may not include the same ingredients as breakfast in the standard sense. A meal can be considered breakfast if it satisfies two of the following three criteria: 1. It is the first meal of the day 2. It consists of "breakfast style food" (see below) 3. It is eaten before noon.
The erosion of breakfast has been an ongoing trend in the West since at least the early 20th century, coinciding with later waking times than when most Westerners had agricultural occupations. Today, hampered by busy morning schedules, many neglect breakfast or skip it entirely. This trend now exists in industrialized nations worldwide, where it is accompanied frequently by replacing local breakfast traditions with modern Western-style foods, often packaged or pre-made. Nevertheless, many nutritionists consider breakfast a very important meal, since it provides vital nourishment and energy for starting that day. Studies have indicated that children and adolescents who usually have breakfasts generally consumed more daily calories than those who skip this meal and, yet, are less likely to be overweight.
In Central and Eastern China, typified by Shanghai and the neighbouring Jiangsu, Zhejiang, and Anhui provinces breakfast fares include some Northern as well as Southern dishes. Typically breakfast consists of zifan (a rice dumpling made by glutinous rice and yóutiáo (fried bread stick), salted jiacai (mustard greens), and dried pork mince as fillings), yóudoùfu fěnsī (a soup made by fried tofu and cellophane noodles), bāozi, plain rice congee/jook (zōu) served with numerous side dishes such as salted duck eggs, pickled vegetables, and century eggs, or sweetened or savoury soy milk served with shāobǐng or yóutiáo.
In Southeastern China such as Fujian province, breakfasts consist of rice congee/jook served with side dishes like pickled vegetables and century eggs.
In Southern China represented by Guangdong province breakfasts include rice congee/jook prepared to a thicker consistency than those sold in Shanghai and side dishes are not served. Congee is served with yóutiáo if it is plain. In many cases, however, congee is prepared with meats or dried vegetables such as beef slices, shredded salted pork and century eggs, fish, or slices of pig's liver and kidney and could be served with or without yóutiáo. Other breakfast fares include rice noodle rolls or cheong fun (served with Hoi sin sauce and soy sauce and, unlike the rice noddle rolls served in restaurants, without fillings), fried noodles (pan fried noodles with bean sprouts, spring onions, and soy sauce), fagao (rice cakes), jiānbǐng (thin pancakes, similar to crêpes), lúobogāo (turnip cakes) and zòngzi (another kind of rice cake). The dim sum breakfast, is a world in itself, and is often eaten as brunch at specialist restaurants.
In Taiwan due to the influx of mainland Chinese in the aftermath of the Republic of China's retreat to Taiwan in 1949 after the end of the Chinese Civil War, breakfasts tend to be a mix of Northern and Eastern Chinese fares in addition to the traditional Southeastern Chinese fares. This is more pronounced in cities with high proportions of mainland Chinese descents like Taipei.
Traditional breakfasts in Hong Kong follow very similarly with those in Guangdong. But due to long periods of British colonial rule and the influx of substantial refugees from Jiangsu and Zhejiang provinces and Shanghai with the end of Chinese Civil War in 1949, localized interpretations of English breakfast and Eastern Chinese breakfast fares are commonly found alongside Cantonese breakfasts. In a Hong Kong cha chaan teng breakfasts could consist of tea, coffee, or yin-yeung served with bread, ham, and fried eggs, and a bowl of macaroni soup with ham. This local interpretation of English breakfast is regarded in both mainland China and Taiwan as uniquely Hong Kong. In upper market restaurants or hotels, however, standard English and Continental breakfasts are served.
Australia has a popular unique spread called Vegemite that is routinely smeared on toast for breakfast. It is similar to a popular British spread called Marmite, but has very few followers outside of Australia other than expatriates.
An institutional meal plan based on lighter Mediterranean breakfast traditions and served in hotels world-wide is known as a European "Continental breakfast". It is a light snack meant to tide one over until lunch. It consists mainly of coffee and milk (often mixed as Cappuccino or latte) with a variety of sweet cakes such as brioche and pastries such as croissant, often with a sweet jam, cream, or chocolate filling. It is often served with juice.
Hotels and other types of lodging in Europe typically include breakfast in their rates, and in many cases, especially in larger hotels, it is served as a buffet. Specific items will vary from country to country, depending on local breakfast tastes and habits. In Switzerland, for example, cold cuts (luncheon meats), cheese, yoghurt, prepared fruit, butter, croissants, breads, and rolls are served. Regardless of location, the standard requirements for a British breakfast (eggs, sausages, tomatoes (fresh grilled or canned), bacon) are also often a part of the buffet, and can be augmented by baked beans, a working class addition, and hash browns, a more recently acquired taste from the US. Note that a full-on British breakfast can legitimately run to several courses and can include, as well as the signature fry-up, cereal, half-grapefruit, kippers, smoked haddock, porridge, rehydrated dried fruit such as prunes and figs, cheese, ham, toast, rolls, yoghurts, and fruit salad. Visitors are strongly advised to stoke up on the breakfast buffet: "The only way to eat well in England is to have breakfast three times a day. —W. Somerset Maugham"
British imperial experience in India introduced kedgeree to the breakfast buffet in grander British households. Today this dish remains popular but is normally served later in the day rather than at breakfast.
In Ireland, breakfast traditions resemble those of Britain. A specifically Irish breakfast may include white pudding, soda bread, and in Ulster, soda farls and potato farls.
In Poland, the breakfast can consist of, toast, eggs, hot oatmeal and bread with various sides of ham, Polish sausage kielbasa, sardines, tomatoes, Polish white cheese "twarog" (plain or mixed with honey or chives).
Yoghurt or, especially in central and eastern Europe, kefir may be consumed. In some Balkan countries such as Serbia, savory pastries known as burek are consumed with yogurt.
Breakfasts in other parts of Scandinavia may be quite ample. Fish, cheese, eggs, bacon, hot and cold cereals, breads, potatoes, and fruits are all eaten in various combinations, along with juices, coffee and tea. Filmjölk, a soured milk similar to buttermilk or yoghurt is often used on cereals. Whole-grain porridges are popular in Finland, also accompanied by this type of soured milk.
In Nothern South America, like in Venezuela Maize-based breads such as tortillas or arepas may predominate, or be augmented with wheat breads or pastries. Caffè, Caffè e latte, chocolate and tea.
In Argentina the breakfats consist of espresso coffee, cafe con leche or yerba mate. Also croissants, brioches or "facturas" with dulce de leche, filled churros, french bread with jam and butter, grilled sandwiches of ham and cheese known as "tostados" and sweet or salted coookies.
In the past, when Mexico's population was predominantly rural and agricultural, breakfast tradition included a light desayuno of hot beverages and breads at dawn, and a heavier almuerzo mid-morning, with egg dishes such as huevos rancheros, meats, beans, tortillas, pastries, and fruits. Today almuerzo generally means lunch, and the Mexican breakfast may be the lighter or heavier version, depending on the person or occasion. Menudo, a tripe stew considered a folk remedy for a hangover, has become a breakfast dish as well as one eaten at other meals.
In Egypt the traditional breakfast is ful medames: slow cooked fava beans (sometimes with lentils) dressed in olive oil, lemon juice and garlic.
Similarly in Turkey a standard breakfast is comprised of white cheese, tomatoes, black olives, bread with honey or preserves, soujouk, and an egg — all accompanied by sweet black tea.
An Israeli breakfast typically consists of nothing more than some coffee (usually instant) and some small cookies or slices of cake. A fuller breakfast might include fried or hard-boiled eggs, cottage cheese, quark cheese, fresh bread, and Israeli salad: diced cucumber and tomato with dressed with olive oil and vinegar or lemon juice.
Many regions of the U.S.A. have local breakfast specialties that are less popular nationally. In the South, liver and grits are one traditional breakfast menu; the Southwest has huevos rancheros; scrapple is a favorite in the Mid-Atlantic states; pork roll is rarely available outside New Jersey and Philadelphia; and New Englanders still occasionally indulge in fried salt-pork, and pie. Specialty sausages also vary in popularity regionally, such as linguiça in Hawaii and southern New England, andouille in Louisiana, chorizo in the Southwest, et al.
A worker's breakfast often consists only of coffee and prepared food purchased on the way to work or brought from home, eaten during the morning commute or at the workplace just before clocking in. Food items that fit this eat-on-the-go strategy include various sweet breakfast breads and pastries, sweetened flavored yoghurt cups, fresh fruit, granola or "energy" bars, Hot Pockets, toaster pastries such as Pop-Tarts, and instant oatmeal. Leftovers from the previous day's meals may also be eaten.
Caffeinated carbonated beverages are occasionally substituted for the traditional coffee or hot tea.
A typical contemporary combination of food for a hearty breakfast consists of eggs (fried or scrambled), one type of meat, and one or two starchy dishes; commonly hash browns and toast. A more basic breakfast combination would be a starchy food (such as toast, pastry, cereal, porridge, or pancakes) either alone or served with fruit and yogurt. This second option, similar to the Continental breakfasts served in Europe, is especially common in institutional situations where serving hot food is difficult, expensive, or impractical.
Eggs are strongly associated with breakfast, to the extent that many Americans and Canadians consider egg dishes out-of-place later in the day. Many fast-food restaurants sell breakfast versions of their typical offerings that include eggs and are usually sweeter and less spicy. Examples of such breakfasts-to-go are: egg-filled sandwiches of croissants or muffins; hamburgers without the usual vegetable garnishes; and breakfast burritos or tacos filled with eggs and cheese, optionally with other additions like meat or beans. Huevos rancheros is treated as such an hybrid in non-Mexican communities in the United States.
The modern options typical of the U.S.A. and Canada are representative of Western-style breakfasts that have become common worldwide, especially in industrialized nations.
The English name derives from the concept that one has not eaten while sleeping, i.e., one is fasting during that time, and one breaks that fast with the meal. The meaning is therefore the same as the French déjeuner or petit déjeuner and the Spanish desayuno. The German Frühstück, the Danish morgenmad, the Esperanto matenmanĝo, the Japanese asagohan or asameshi (朝飯), the Chinese zao can (早餐), and the Hebrew aruchat boker (ארוחת בוקר) mean "morning meal." The Arabic Eftar or Fotoor (فطـور)(إفطـار)
The Portuguese pequeno almoço, meaning "little lunch", like its eastern neighbors, France and Spain. In Brazil, breakfast is café da manhã, the "coffee of the morning".
As the preceding regional descriptions show, beverage choices at breakfast are fairly uniform worldwide, comprising
Cultures around the world commonly shun or restrict alcoholic beverages at breakfast. Notable exceptions would be the Mimosa cocktail: champagne and orange juice; and the Bloody Mary cocktail: vodka and tomato juice. While a Mimosa is normally served at brunch, and rarely consumed before 10:00 in the morning at breakfast proper, the Bloody Mary is almost exclusively a morning cocktail, frequently consumed at breakfast by those suffering from hangovers.
Some restaurants devote themselves to breakfast or have special breakfast menus. The field is dominated on one hand by greasy spoons, diners, cafés, cafeterias, and fast food places, and on the other hand by hotels. However, some breakfast places resemble standard restaurants in procedure, selection, and price.
Breakfast is occasionally served as an entertainment meal. More popular than breakfast in this regard, however, is brunch.
The serving of a pancake breakfast is traditional on Pancake Day (Shrove Tuesday), and some celebrate a festive breakfast on Christmas morning.
During Ramadan, Muslims describe the meal after sunset that "breaks the fast" as Iftar.
Brecwast | Frühstück | Desayuno | Matenmanĝo | Petit déjeuner | Sarapan | ארוחת בוקר | Ontbijt | 朝食 | Frokost | Fröhstück | Śniadanie | Завтрак | Breakfast | Aamiainen | Frukost | 早餐
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"Breakfast".
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