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ELA 3: Different Breakfasts Around the World 5 Views
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Description:
Did you know you can eat fish for breakfast? We guess technically you could eat anything for breakfast. So long as it's edible. Shmoop does not advocate eating your sister's Malibu Barbie beach buggie.
Transcript
- 00:04
[Coop and Dino singing]
- 00:13
What do you typically like to eat for breakfast? [Man sitting down with sushi and caviar for breakfast]
- 00:16
Hm.
- 00:17
Sushi and caviar.
- 00:18
Consider yourself in the minority.
Full Transcript
- 00:19
In the United States, most children eat foods like cereal, toast, eggs, bacon, or yogurt
- 00:24
for breakfast. [A selection of different breakfast meals]
- 00:25
However, there are people from other countries in the world who eat very differently than
- 00:28
we do.
- 00:29
Some of them even chew with their mouths closed. [Man chewing food]
- 00:32
In this lesson, we learned about a few of those countries.
- 00:34
In Iceland, children eat oatmeal that is cooked in water or milk with brown sugar, maple syrup,
- 00:39
butter, or fruit. [A bowl of oatmeal with berries with Iceland highlighted on a map]
- 00:40
Children also take cod-liver oil to make sure they get enough Vitamin D, because of the [Boy takes sip of cod liver oil]
- 00:44
lack of sunlight there.
- 00:45
And also because their parents love seeing the looks on their kids’ faces while
- 00:49
drinking cod-liver oil. [Parents laughing at son drinking cod-liver oil]
- 00:50
In Amsterdam, children have a glass of milk with bread, unsalted butter, and sweet sprinkles…
- 00:55
chocolate, vanilla, or fruit.
- 00:56
Parents in Amsterdam are much nicer than those in Iceland, apparently. [Parents with daughter having breakfast]
- 01:00
They call it “hagelslag” or “hailstorm”.
- 01:02
Who cares what they call it?
- 01:03
We’d stuff it in our face.
- 01:05
In Brazil, children eat ham and cheese with bread and butter. [A slice of bread with ham and cheese]
- 01:08
They also drink coffee.
- 01:09
Especially on mornings when they’re late to the office.
- 01:11
In Malawi, children eat a type of cornbread called chikondamoyo, which is cooked over a fire. [A plate of chikondamoyo cooked over a fire]
- 01:16
Sometimes, they also eat boiled potatoes and black tea with a heaping spoonful of sugar.
- 01:20
Or, if they’re making breakfast in the dark, a heaping spoonful of table salt. [Person grabs table salt in the dark]
- 01:24
In Tokyo, children sometimes eat an American-style breakfast…
- 01:27
…but mostly, they eat rice with side dishes such as green peppers cooked with dried fish,
- 01:31
raw egg mixed with soy sauce, carrots sautéed in sesame-seed oil, and sliced pears.
- 01:36
Or, if they’re all out of that stuff…Lucky Charms. [Boy eating a bowl of lucky charms]
- 01:38
So yeah, just because we eat one type of breakfast here in the U.S. doesn’t mean it’s “correct”
- 01:42
or “normal.”
- 01:43
In fact, considering how many of our breakfast cereals feature miniature chocolate chip cookies, [A bowl of miniature chocolate chip cookies]
- 01:47
you could probably argue the opposite…
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