though they are of little or no food value themselves. Cereals, eggs, and milk may be added to increase their food value. Cereals in the form of gruels or delicate puddings, as cornstarch blancmange and tapioca cream, are easily digested. Vegetables are best given rather sparingly, and only delicate, mild-flavored ones, such as spinach or asparagus, if digestion is much disturbed. In getting an invalid to take sufficient food, much depends upon the attractiveness of the service. Remember that very little things, like a fingermark on a glass, or coffee spilled into the saucer, may take away appetite and prevent enough food being eaten. Food in small quantities and taken at more frequent intervals than in health helps towards the best results. Knowledge of what particular diet is best in different diseases comes only through careful study of the science of nutrition after much study of chemistry and physiology.
EXERCISES
1. Calculate your own energy requirement.
2. Calculate the energy requirement of your family group.
3. Find the cost for your locality of the dietary arranged from Menu No. 1.
4. Make a dietary yielding 10,000 Calories, from ten to fifteen per cent of which shall be protein calories, from Menu No. II, and calculate its cost.
5. Find out the lowest sum for which a balanced dietary could be obtained in your locality.
6. Revise the dietary from Menu No. I, so that it shall not cost over one cent per hundred Calories.
7. Plan an ideal day’s dietary for yourself.
8. Plan a day’s dietary for an invalid which shall yield 2000 Calories, 300 of which shall be protein Calories.