Everyone’s heard the phrase breakfast is the most important meal of the day and my theory is: if it’s the most important meal of the day, why not eat it twice? One of my all time favorite things to eat for dinner is breakfast. Typically I’ll make one of the following, depending on how many people I’m cooking for.
Breakfast Burrito
Freshly Cooked Tortilla
Scrambled Cheesy Eggs
Bacon (extra crispy)
Potato (in any form, preferably hash browns)
Avocado
Hot Sauce (some people like it...me, not so much)
Pancakes (or Waffles)
Any Pancake Batter
Sliced Strawberries
Semi-sweet Chocolate Chips
Butter or Syrup on top
French Toast
Bread of your Choice, dipped and cooked in a mixture of egg, milk, cinnamon, and
vanilla
Maple Syrup (warm is ten times better than cold)
Powdered Sugar
Sliced Strawberries
I’m also a huge fruit person; I have yet to find a fruit I don’t like, besides coconut, which I don’t think is even a fruit. For the sake of my argument, I’m calling it a nut.
If it were up to me, I would probably eat breakfast for every meal of the day, with the exception of a sandwich every once in a while. I’ve always wondered why the time of the day determines which foods are acceptable to eat? It’s not like people are incapable of eating pasta for break fast or making an egg, sunny side up, with a piece of toast for dinner. The time of day has given society expectations as to what is “normal” to eat at the different hours of the day. People should break free and eat lunch for breakfast, breakfast for dessert, dinner for lunch, and dessert for dinner; if you think about it, you’re still eating the same foods throughout the course of the day. Just don’t eat food right before you go to bed because I’ve heard that’s bad for you...or your digestive system, or whatever.
Time is like the media. According to Habermas, the media has taken over the public sphere and has provided society with a constant stream of topics that have grown to be expected topics of daily discussion. We have become so dependent upon events publicized by the media as conversation topics that phrases like “how ‘bout them Chargers/Red Sox/Pats...” have been used to fill the awkward silences when people can’t think up something of their own to discuss. Events displayed by the media have not only infiltrated our conversations, but have also been used as a default “panic phrase” to avoid sitting in silence; time, in a way, has provided society with types of food that are customarily eaten for specific meals of the day and people rarely go out of that realm of accepted foods and eat pancakes for dinner. When people brainstorm what they might want to eat for dinner, it’s usually just a list of the average dinner foods, or they panic and by default choose one of their three favorite fast food places to order in from. Barlow thinks that blogs are taking back the public sphere, in the sense that the media no longer defines all that we talk about. If it were up to me, society would no longer feel obligated to make certain meals based solely upon what society expects us to eat at that time of day. If you are one of those people who often skip breakfast due to lack of hunger or over sleeping, eat if for dinner. Why would you miss out on the most important meal of the day?
I agree with not having to eat certain meals at the time of day that society tells us we should be eating it especially because I LOVE EATING WAFFLES FOR DINNER :-D!
ReplyDeletePeople definitely need to loosen up about when certain foods can be eaten at certain times.
ReplyDeleteEggs for breakfast? standard.
Egg on a bagel as a lunch sandwich? less common, but socially acceptable
Egg on your burger? sounds ridiculous, but is possibly the best way to eat a burger.
breakfast foods>all other foods
i agree with the fact that you should eat whatever you want regardless of the time of day, but I'm kind of the opposite. i wish it was normal to eat regular (non-breakfast) food for breakfast, instead of breakfast food for dinner.
ReplyDelete