Food Guide for War Service at Home / Prepared under the direction of the United States Food Administration in co-operation with the United States Department of Agriculture and the Bureau of Education, with a preface by Herbert Hoover
The Project Gutenberg eBook, Food Guide for War Service at Home, by Katharine Blunt, Frances L. Swain, and Florence Powdermaker, et al
In the spring of 1918 the Collegiate Section of the United States Food Administration was called upon to prepare a simple statement of the food situation as affected by the war, suitable for elementary and high school teachers, high-school pupils, and the general public. The demand arose because of the wide adoption of the three courses on this subject then being sent out weekly to universities, colleges, and normal schools throughout the country.
This little volume is the response to that request. It was written by Katharine Blunt, of the University of Chicago, Frances L. Swain, of the Chicago Normal School, and Florence Powdermaker, of the United States Department of Agriculture.
The records of the Food Administration have been open to the writers and they have had the advice and criticism of its officials and specialists. No effort has been spared to secure accuracy of statement in the text.
OLIN TEMPLIN,
Director of the Collegiate Section.
July 1, 1918.
The long war has brought hunger to Europe; some of her peoples stand constantly face to face with starvation.
All agriculture has been seriously interfered with. Food production has been lessened to the point of danger. Millions of men who had given all their time and energy to raising food have been killed; more millions are still fighting; other millions have gone from the farms into the great war-factories. Women, too, have been drafted from the fields and home gardens into the factories and to replace the absent men in a host of occupations. Great stretches of once fertile land have been temporarily ruined by the scourge of war; some are still under falling shot and shell. Belgium and France have lost millions of acres of productive land to the enemy. The fertilizers necessary for keeping up the production of the land still available are lacking.
United States Food Administration
Katharine Blunt
Florence Powdermaker
Frances Lucy Swain
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FOOD GUIDE
FOR
WAR SERVICE AT HOME
PREPARED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF
THE UNITED STATES FOOD ADMINISTRATION
WITH A PREFACE BY HERBERT HOOVER
ANNOUNCEMENT
PREFACE
CONTENTS
THE WORLD'S SUPPLY OF WHEAT
WHEAT IN THE UNITED STATES
MEETING THE WHEAT SHORTAGE
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF DIFFERENT KINDS OF FOOD
THE SOCIAL IMPORTANCE OF CEREALS, ESPECIALLY WHEAT
WHEAT FLOUR IN WAR-TIME
SUBSTITUTES FOR WHEAT FLOUR
THE BAKERS' REGULATIONS. VICTORY BREAD
THE INDIVIDUAL'S ANSWER TO THE BREAD CRY
FLOUR AND BREAD IN THE ALLIED COUNTRIES
WHY WE IN THE UNITED STATES DO NOT HAVE BREAD CARDS
WHERE EUROPE'S MEAT HAS BEEN PRODUCED
THE WAR AND THE EUROPEAN MEAT-SUPPLY
THE MEAT RATIONS OF EUROPE
THE PART OF THE UNITED STATES
MEAT CONSERVATION
MEAT AND OTHER PROTEIN FOODS
THE MEAT SUBSTITUTES
THE SITUATION ABROAD
THE SITUATION IN THE UNITED STATES
WHY IS THERE A SUGAR SHORTAGE?
THE EFFECT OF THE SHORTAGE
IN PLACE OF SUGAR
THE PRICE OF SUGAR
TO CUT DOWN ON SUGAR
THE VALUABLE CONSTITUENTS OF MILK
OUR MILK PROBLEM
OUR MILK ABROAD
IN THE WAR DIET
CANNING AND DRYING VEGETABLES AND FRUITS
CONCLUSION
A FEW REFERENCES
INDEX