خيارات البحث
النتائج 1 - 3 من 3
Food consumption and related water resources in Nordic cities النص الكامل
2017
Vanham, D. | Gawlik, B.M. | Bidoglio, G.
Many modern cities have strongly invested in the sustainability of their urban water management system. Nordic cities like Stockholm or Copenhagen are amongst pioneers in investments towards integrated urban water management. However, cities can never be fully self-sufficient due to their dependency on external (water) resources. In this paper, we quantify this water dependency with respect to food consumption in nine cities located in the five Nordic countries (Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Norway and Iceland), by means of the water footprint concept. Detailed urban water footprint assessments are scarce in the literature. By analysing national nutrition surveys, we find that urban food intake behaviour differs from national food intake behaviour. In large Nordic cities people eat generally less potatoes, milk products (without cheese), meat and animal fats and they drink less coffee than outside city borders. On the other hand, they generally eat more vegetables and vegetable oils and they drink more tea and alcoholic beverages. This leads consistently – for the six large Nordic cities Stockholm, Malmö, Copenhagen, Helsinki, Oslo and Reykjavik – to slightly smaller food related urban water footprints (−2 to −6%) than national average values. We also analyse the water footprint for different diets based upon Nordic Nutrition Recommendations (NNR) for these cities. We assessed three healthy diet scenarios: 1) including meat (HEALTHY-MEAT), 2) pesco-vegetarian (HEALTHY-PESCO-VEG) and 3) vegetarian (HEALTHY-VEG). This shows that Nordic urban dwellers 1) eat too many animal products (red meat, milk and milk products) and sugar and drink too much alcohol and 2) they eat not enough vegetables, fruit and products from the group pulses, nuts and oilcrops. Their overall energy and protein intake is too high. A shift to a healthy diet with recommended energy and protein intake reduces the urban WF related to food consumption substantially. A shift to HEALTHY-MEAT results in a reduction of −9 to −24%, for HEALTHY-PESCO-VEG the reduction is −29 to −37%, for HEALTHY-VEG the reduction is −36 to −44%. In other words, Nordic urban dwellers can save a lot of water by shifting to a healthy diet.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Water sorption thermodynamic behavior of whey protein isolate/ polyvinyl alcohol blends for food packaging النص الكامل
2020
Lara, Bruna Rage Baldone | Dias, Marali Vilela | Guimarães Junior, Mario | de Andrade, Paulo Sérgio | de Souza Nascimento, Bruna | Ferreira, Laura Fonseca | Yoshida, Maria Irene
In food packaging systems, moisture content influences chemical and physical film properties, also determining processes such as food spoilage, and properties of food texture and crispiness level. The study of water permeation and sorption processes of new materials intended to be used as packaging is very important to determine the best application conditions and to predict the film behavior under different moisture conditions inside and/or outside the packaging. In order to determine the suitable temperature and water activity (aw) application conditions for whey protein isolate (WPI)/polyvinyl alcohol (PVOH) blends as food flexible packaging, water permeation and water sorption thermodynamic behavior of these materials were evaluated. WPI/PVOH films and blends had solubility preponderant over the diffusion on the water permeation process. Water sorption experimental data were well described by the GAB model, and curves showed a more expressive increase of water sorption at aw > 0.75, with lower equilibrium moistures (Ye) at room than at chilled temperatures. Differential enthalpy decreased and differential entropy increased by the Ye gain, and the occurrence of enthalpy-entropy compensation was confirmed with enthalpy driving the sorption process. The addition of PVOH to the WPI matrix made the water sorption process more spontaneous. Water sorption thermodynamic analysis indicates that the application of WPI/PVOH blends as packaging is best suitable for foods and external environments with aw below 0.75 and at room temperature.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Comparison of a web-based food record tool and a food-frequency questionnaire and objective validation using the doubly labelled water technique in a Swedish middle-aged population النص الكامل
2016
Nybacka, Sanna | Bertéus Forslund, Heléne | Wirfält, Elisabet | Larsson, Ingrid | Ericson, Ulrika | Warensjö Lemming, Eva | Bergström, Göran | Hedblad, Bo | Winkvist, Anna | Lindroos, Anna Karin
Two web-based dietary assessment tools have been developed for use in large-scale studies: the Riksmaten method (4-d food record) and MiniMeal-Q (food-frequency method). The aim of the present study was to examine the ability of these methods to capture energy intake against objectively measured total energy expenditure (TEE) with the doubly labelled water technique (TEEDLW), and to compare reported energy and macronutrient intake. This study was conducted within the pilot study of the Swedish CArdioPulmonary bioImage Study (SCAPIS), which included 1111 randomly selected men and women aged 50–64 years from the Gothenburg general population. Of these, 200 were enrolled in the SCAPIS diet substudy. TEEDLW was measured in a subsample (n 40). Compared with TEEDLW, both methods underestimated energy intake: −2·5 (sd 2·9) MJ with the Riksmaten method; −2·3 (sd 3·6) MJ with MiniMeal-Q. Mean reporting accuracy was 80 and 82 %, respectively. The correlation between reported energy intake and TEEDLW was r 0·4 for the Riksmaten method (P < 0·05) and r 0·28 (non-significant) for MiniMeal-Q. Women reported similar average intake of energy and macronutrients in both methods whereas men reported higher intakes with the Riksmaten method. Energy-adjusted correlations ranged from 0·14 (polyunsaturated fat) to 0·77 (alcohol). Bland–Altman plots showed acceptable agreement for energy and energy-adjusted protein and carbohydrate intake, whereas the agreement for fat intake was poorer. According to energy intake data, both methods displayed similar precision on energy intake reporting. However, MiniMeal-Q was less successful in ranking individuals than the Riksmaten method. The development of methods to achieve limited under-reporting is a major challenge for future research.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]