Staple food explained

A staple food, food staple, or simply staple, is a food that is eaten often and in such quantities that it constitutes a dominant portion of a standard diet for an individual or a population group, supplying a large fraction of energy needs and generally forming a significant proportion of the intake of other nutrients as well.[1] For humans, a staple food of a specific society may be eaten as often as every day or every meal, and most people live on a diet based on just a small variety of food staples.[2] Specific staples vary from place to place, but typically are inexpensive or readily available foods that supply one or more of the macronutrients and micronutrients needed for survival and health: carbohydrates, proteins, fats, minerals, and vitamins. Typical examples include grains (cereals and legumes), seeds, nuts and root vegetables (tubers and roots). Among them, cereals (rice, wheat, oat, maize, etc.), legumes (lentils and beans) and tubers (e.g. potato, taro and yam) account for about 90% of the world's food calorie intake.

Early agricultural civilizations valued the crop foods that they established as staples because, in addition to providing necessary nutrition, they generally are suitable for storage over long periods of time without decay. Such nonperishable foods are the only possible staples during seasons of shortage, such as dry seasons or cold temperate winters, against which times harvests have been stored. During seasons of surplus, wider choices of foods may be available.

Type

Staple foods are derived from either plant or animal products that are digestible by humans and can be supplied in substantial quantities. Common plant-based staples include cereals (e.g. rice, wheat, maize, millet, barley, oats, rye, spelt, emmer, triticale and sorghum), starchy tubers (e.g. potato, sweet potato, yam and taro) or root vegetables (e.g. cassava, turnip, carrot, rutabagas), and dried legumes (lentils and beans).[3] Animal-based staples include various types of meat (typically livestock and poultry), fish, eggs, milk and dairy products (e.g. cheese). Other staple foods include sago (derived from the pith of the sago palm tree),[4] and large, fleshy fruits (e.g. breadfruit, breadnut, coconut and plantains). Staple foods may also include processed food products (depending on the region) such as olive oil, coconut oil, and sugar.[5] [6] [7]

Generally, staple foods are those eaten in bulk that supply energy to humans, predominantly in the form of saccharide sugars and carbohydrates, and so are mainly plant-based, as meats and eggs are predominantly protein and fat, though dairy products provide all these. However, not all places are suitable for agriculture, and so pastoralism can be favoured instead, as it has the advantage that animals can live off of land unsuitable for agricultural crops and consume the local plant matter that is otherwise inedible to humans and convert that into foods - meat, offal, fat, eggs and milk - that humans can eat. This makes their importance to providing staples to human diets increase in more inhospitable ecosystems such as deserts, steppe, taiga, tundra, and in mountainous terrain. Examples include herding in regions such as Mongolia where sheep are herded, the Prairies where the Sioux herded bison, and the Sami people that herd reindeer in the Arctic.[8] [9] [10]

Demographics

The dominant staple foods in different parts of the world are a function of weather patterns, local terrain, farming constraints, acquired tastes and ecosystems. For example, the main energy source staples in the average African diet are cereals (46 percent), roots and tubers (20 percent) and animal products (7 percent). In Western Europe the main staples in the average diet are animal products (33 percent), cereals (26 percent), and roots and tubers (4 percent).

Most of the human population lives on a diet based on one or more of the following staples: cereals (rice, wheat, maize (corn), millet, and sorghum), roots and tubers (potatoes, cassava, yams and taro), and animal products such as meat, milk, eggs, cheese and fish. Regional staples include the plants rye, soybeans, barley, oats, and teff.

Just 15 plant crops provide 90 percent of the world's food energy intake (exclusive of meat), with rice, maize, and wheat comprising 2/3 of human food consumption. These three are the staples of about 80 percent of the world population,[11] and rice feeds almost half of humanity.

Roots and tubers, meanwhile, are important staples for over one billion people in the developing world, accounting for roughly 40 percent of the food eaten by half the population of sub-Saharan Africa. Roots and tubers are high in carbohydrates, calcium, and vitamin C, but low in protein. Cassava root, for example, is a major food staple in the developing world, a basic food source for around 500 million people.

With economic development and free trade, many countries have shifted away from low-nutrient-density staple foods to higher-nutrient-density staples, as well as towards greater meat consumption.

Some foods like quinoa—a pseudocereal grain that originally came from the Andes—were also staples centuries ago.[12] Oca tubers, ulluku tubers and grain amaranth are other foods that may have been historical Andean staples.[13] Pemmican made from dried meat and fat was a staple of the Plains Indians of North America.[14]

Production

Most staple food is currently produced using modern, conventional farming practices. However, the production of staple food using organic farming methods is growing.

Ten staple foods of global importance (ranked by annual production)[15]
World production,
2012[16]
Average world yield,
2010
World's most productive countries,[17]
2012[18]
World's largest producing countries,2013[19]
RankCrop(metric tons)(tons per hectare)(tons per hectare)Country(metric tons)Country
1 Maize (Corn) 873 million5.1 11.1[20] United States354 millionUnited States
2 738 million 4.3 9.5 Egypt204 millionChina
3 671 million 3.1 8.9 New Zealand122 millionChina
4 Potatoes 365 million 17.245.4Netherlands96 millionChina
5 269 million 12.5 34.8 Indonesia47 millionNigeria
6 Soybeans 241 million 2.4 4.4 Egypt91 millionUnited States
7 Sweet potatoes 108 million 13.5 33.3 Senegal71 millionChina
8 59.5 million 10.5 28.3 Colombia36 millionNigeria
9 57.0 million 1.5 4.5 United States10 millionUnited States
10 37.2 million 6.3 31.1 El Salvador9 millionUganda

Processing

Rice is most commonly cooked and eaten as separate entire grains, but most other staple cereals are milled into a flour or meal that can be used to make bread, noodles, pasta, porridge and mushes like mealie pap (although both can be eaten either as grains or ground into flour). Root vegetables can be mashed and used to make porridge-like dishes such as poi and fufu. Pulses (such as chickpeas, from which gram flour is made) and starchy root vegetables (such as canna rhizomes) can also be made into flour.

Nutrition

Consumed in isolation, staple foods do not provide the full range of essential nutrients. The nutrient-deficiency disease pellagra is associated with a diet consisting primarily of maize, while the disease beriberi is associated with a diet of refined white rice.[21] Scurvy can result from a lack of vitamin C, also known as ascorbic acid. One author indicated that the nutritional value of some staple foods are negatively affected by higher levels of carbon dioxide, as occurs in climate change.[22]

Comparison of 10 staple foods

The following table shows the nutrient content of 10 major staple vegetable foods in raw form on a dry weight basis to account for their different water contents. Raw grains are not edible and cannot be digested, so must be cooked, sprouted, or otherwise prepared for human consumption. In sprouted and cooked form, the relative nutritional and anti-nutritional contents of each of these grains is different from that of the raw form of these grains, as shown. Potatoes also must be cooked, but should not be sprouted. The highlighted values show the highest nutrient density among these 10 staples. Other foods, consumed in smaller quantities, may have nutrient densities different from these values.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Su. Wen-Hao. He. Hong-Ju. Sun. Da-Wen. 24 March 2017. Non-Destructive and rapid evaluation of staple foods quality by using spectroscopic techniques: A review. Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition. 57. 5. 1039–1051. 10.1080/10408398.2015.1082966. 1040-8398. 26480047. 40398017.
  2. Web site: Dimensions of Need - Staples: What do people eat? . United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization: Agriculture and Consumer Protection . 15 October 2010.
  3. Web site: Around the world in dishes made with pulses. 18 November 2015. Food and Agricultural Organisation of the United Nations. 23 September 2017.
  4. Book: The Sago Palm: The Food and Environmental Challenges of the 21st Century. Kyoto University Press. 2015. 978-1-920901-13-4. 331.
  5. Web site: African Food Staples. 29 May 2015.
  6. Web site: Olive Oil & Health - All Olive Oil. 29 May 2015.
  7. How Sugar Went From a Condiment to a Diet Staple. Time.
  8. Web site: Bidos. March 26, 2016.
  9. Book: Sustainability of the Indigenous People's food system. openknowledge.fao.org. 2021 . 10.4060/cb5131en . 978-92-5-134561-0 .
  10. Book: Hill, Christina Gish. The Routledge History of American Foodways. Precolonial Foodways . May 2, 2016. Routledge. 10.4324/9781315871271-3/precolonial-foodways-christina-gish-hill. 2024-05-08 . 978-1-315-87127-1 .
  11. Web site: Dimensions of Need: An atlas of food and agriculture. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. 1995.
  12. Web site: Quinoa. E.A. Oelke. University of Minnesota. etal.
  13. Web site: Plant Production and Protection Series No. 26. FAO, Rome, Italy. Arbizu and Tapia. FAO / Purdue University. 1994.
  14. Encyclopedia: Pemmican. John E. Foster. The Canadian Encyclopedia. 29 May 2015. 29 May 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150529205441/http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/en/article/pemmican/. live.
  15. Web site: Food security: Ten Crops that Feed the World. Allianz. Allianz.
  16. Web site: Food and Agricultural commodities production / Commodities by regions. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. 2012. 7 January 2015. 16 June 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160616181355/http://faostat3.fao.org/browse/rankings/commodities_by_regions/E. dead.
  17. The numbers in this column are country average; regional farm productivity within the country varies, with some farms even higher.
  18. Web site: FAOSTAT: Production-Crops, 2010 data. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. 2011.
  19. Web site: Food and Agricultural commodities production / Countries by commodity (2013 data). Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. 24 April 2016.
  20. Web site: USDA Crop Production. 20 February 2022.
  21. Web site: Rice and Human Nutrition . United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization: Agriculture and Consumer Protection . 15 October 2010.
  22. News: Wernick. Adam. Global warming threatens nutrition levels in staple crops. 30 October 2017. Public Radio International (PRI). 29 October 2017.