John Prigent wrote:In this house it's cups of tea when we've let the dogs out for their first run in the garden - nothing solid for us but they get their breakfasts. Then brunch in late morning - coffee and a single croissant/sandwich/or roll. Afternoon tea mid-afternoon is tea and a single slice of homemade cake. Early-evening supper is our only cooked, sit-at-the-table meal though usually only a single course. Are we unusual?
Cheers
John
stewart wrote:HB of CJ wrote:Breakfast, Dinner, Supper. SW Virginia. USA. HB of CJ (old coot)
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Breakfast / Lunch / Dinner -- most days
If referring to Sunday Dinner -- usually early afternoon 1-2 PM (after church) with supper as a light optional in the evening
West Coast with Northern Mid-west roots.
-- Stewart
No John. Not unusual at all. It seems to be pretty standard for your side of the globe. Whenever I visit any of my friends across the waters, I have to get accustomed to the fact that no one does breakfast. I was raised that breakfast is the most important meal of the day. On your side of the world, a bagel and coffee is it - if you're lucky. Mostly it's just coffee for breakfast. Coffee Is Not Breakfast! Add a bagel to the coffee, and or tea, and call it lunch??? My Romanian friends seems like they're starving themselves.
Let's eat! But their stomachs can't handle a heavy meal before lunch.
They make allowances when I visit. But they mostly stare and gawk at me like I imagine everyone gawks at Honor.
"How does everyone eat like that in America so early. How do you work the rest of the day?"
Without a nice breakfast, I'm so weak by lunch I'm famished. Shaking. Close to passing out!
But I also notice, that in America we generally tend to eat dinner much earlier than our foreign friends. Dinner between 7-9 pm is not unheard of across the waters from America. I would have died from hunger by then. And I've eaten something during the day! It's supposed to be three meals a day. Not a snack, a munching... then a meal.
But then, we are the most obese country in the world aren't we?
My Ro friends and I tease each other unmercifully about food.
"You all should be wasting away," I tell them.
"You should be big as a house," they tell me. I'm 6'2" 190-198 lbs. It fluctuates, summer to winter.
I suppose I have a high metabolism. If I ate like foreigners, I'd be anorexic.