Breakfast by country
Breakfast, the first meal of the day eaten after waking from the night's sleep, varies in composition and tradition across the world.
Africa
Breakfast in Africa varies greatly from region to region.[1]
Algeria
Due to Algeria's history of having been a colony of France, breakfast in Algeria is heavily influenced by French cuisine and most commonly consists of café au lait or espresso along with a sweet pastry (some common examples are croissants, mille-feuilles, pain au chocolats known as "petits pains", etc.) or some kind of traditional bread with a date filling or jam (kesra, bradj, etc.)
Egypt
Most Egyptians begin the day with a light breakfast. Ful medames (dish of cooked fava beans), one of Egypt's several national dishes, is typical. It is seasoned with salt and cumin, garnished with vegetable oil and optionally with tahini, chopped parsley, chopped tomato, garlic, onion, lemon juice and chili pepper, and often served topped with a boiled egg. It is scooped up and eaten with the staple whole wheat pita bread called Eish Masri or Eish Baladi (Egyptian Arabic: عيش Egyptian Arabic pronunciation: [ʕeːʃ]; Modern Standard Arabic: ʿayš) and usually accompanied by taʿamiya (Egyptian Arabic: طعمية) which is the local variant of falafel made with fava beans, fresh cut homemade French fries and various fresh or pickled vegetables (called torshi). Several kinds of cheeses are popular, including gebna bēḍa or Domyati cheese, gebna rūmi (Roman cheese) which is similar to Pecorino Romano or Manchego, and Istanbuli cheese (a brined white cheese with peppers added to the brine which makes it spicy). Fried eggs with pastirma is also a common breakfast food in Egypt.
Malawi
For breakfast, some children in Malawi eat porridge, cornbread, savory fritters, and boiled starchy vegetables, such as white potatoes, sweet potatoes, or pumpkin, and drink sweet black tea.[2]
Morocco
For breakfast, many Moroccans eat bread, harcha (semolina griddle cakes), or msemen (oiled pancakes) with olive oil, tea, and different kinds of Moroccan crepes.[3]
Nigeria
Nigeria has over 250 different ethnic groups,[4] with a corresponding variety of cuisines. For the Hausa of northern Nigeria, a typical breakfast consists of kosai (cakes made from ground beans which are then fried) or funkaso (wheat flour soaked for a day then fried and served with sugar). Both of these cakes can be served with porridge and sugar known as koko. For the southwestern Yoruba people (Ilé Yorùbá) one of the most common breakfasts is Ògì— a porridge made from corn, usually served with evaporated milk. Ògì is eaten with Acarajé (akara) or Moi moi.[5] Both are made from ground bean paste; akara is fried in oil, and moi moi is wrapped in leaves or foil and then steamed. Ògì can also be steamed in leaves to harden it and eaten with akara or moi moi for breakfast. English tea or malta is served as a breakfast drink. Another popular option in southwest Nigeria is Gari, which is eaten like cereal. Gari, known in Brazil as farofa, is made from the root of cassava. For breakfast, it is soaked in water and sweetened with sugar.[6]
Senegal
Breakfast typically consists of café Touba,[lower-alpha 1][7] spiced coffee with abundant sugar sometimes consumed with dried milk,[8] or kinkeliba tea.[9] Small beignets and fresh fruit, including mangoes and bananas, are often part of a simple breakfast, and are accompanied by baguette[10] with various spreads: Chocoleca (a Nutella equivalent made from peanuts), butter, or processed mild cheese.
Somalia
Breakfast (quraac) is an important meal for Somalis, who often start the day with some style of tea (shaah). The main dish is typically pancake-like bread (canjeero, canjeelo). It might also be eaten with a stew or soup (maraq).[11] Lahoh is a pancake-like bread originating in Somalia, Djibouti and Yemen.[12][13] It is often eaten along with honey and ghee or beef jerky (muqmad) and washed down with a cup of tea. During lunch, lahoh is sometimes consumed with soup or stew.
Tunisia
In Tunisia, Lablabi is a common and popular breakfast stew.
Uganda
In Uganda, most tribes have different cuisines but the most popular breakfast dishes are porridge and katogo. Porridge is made by mixing maize flour or millet flour with water and bringing the mixture to a boil.[14] While katogo is made from matoke (green bananas), peeled and cooked in the same pot with a sauce (beef, peanuts, beans, or greens), katogo is served with tea or juice.[15] Both dishes are popular in all regions of Uganda.
Asia
Breakfasts vary widely throughout Asia. In Arab countries, breakfast is often a quick meal, consisting of bread and dairy products, with tea and sometimes jam. Flat bread with olive oil and za'tar is also popular.[3]
Bangladesh
The typical Bangladeshi breakfast consists of flour-based flatbreads such as chapati, roti, or paratha, served with a curry. Usually, the curry can be vegetable, home-fried potatoes, or scrambled eggs. The breakfast varies according to location and the eater's income. In villages and rural areas, rice with curry (potato mash, dal ) is mostly preferred by day laborers. In the city, sliced bread with jam or jelly is chosen due to time efficiency. In Bangladesh tea is preferred to coffee and is an essential part of most breakfasts. Having toasted biscuits, bread or puffed rice with tea is also very popular.
China
As mainland China is made up of many distinct provinces, each with its own unique cuisine, breakfast in China can vary significantly from province to province. In general, basic choices include sweet or salty pancakes, soup, deep-fried bread sticks or doughnuts (youtiao), buns (mantou), porridge (congee), and fried or soup-based noodles.[16] These options are often accompanied by tea or sweetened soybean milk. However, condiments for porridge and the soup base tend to vary between provinces and regions. The types of teas that are served and spices that are used can also differ significantly between the provinces.
Hong Kong
Due to its nearly two centuries' history as a British colony and proximity to China's Canton region, both English and traditional Cantonese style breakfasts are of somewhat equal popularity in Hong Kong, as well as the hybrid form of breakfast commonly offered in Cha chaan teng. Cha Chaan Teng breakfasts often include Hong Kong-style milk tea, pan-fried egg, bread, Cantonese noodles, or Hong Kong-style macaroni in soup.[17] Traditional Cantonese breakfast may include dim sum, which includes a variety of different ingredients and is prepared in numerous different forms from delicately wrapped baby shrimp steamed dumplings to sweet water chestnut cake. Each dish is designed to be sampled and diners can go through a large selection of dim sum quickly accompanied by a generous amount of good tea. Tieguanyin is the most common accompaniment, but other teas such as pu'er and oolong are also common.[18] Fried and rice-based noodles and cakes are also popular. In modern times, dim sum is commonly prepared and served in Yum Cha restaurants rather than at home because of the skill and efforts involved in the preparation.
India
In all, there are at least 25 types of Indian breakfasts, each consisting of a choice of over 100 different food items.[19] Each state in India has different specialties and items for breakfast. Thus there is no single standard Indian breakfast, with items changing with regions. However, one can broadly classify breakfast varieties in India into two types: North Indian and South Indian. The eastern and western parts of India also have individual breakfast items unique to their cultures and states.
A typical south Indian breakfast consists of idli,[20] vada, or dosa[21] coupled with chutney and sambar. Many variations of these dishes exist such as rava idli, thayir vadai (yogurt vada), sambar vada and masala dosa. Other popular south Indian breakfast items are pongal, bisibelebath, upma, and poori. The state of Kerala has some special breakfast items such as appam, parotta, puttu, idiyappam, and palappam.[21]
The people of Bihar in eastern India eat litti chokha and dahi chura.
A typical north Indian breakfast may either be a type of paratha or roti served with a vegetable curry, curd, and pickles. There are several varieties of parathas available depending on the type of stuffing such as aloo paratha, paneer (cottage cheese) paratha, mooli paratha (radish paratha), etc.[22] Other popular breakfast items in the north are poori bhaji, poha, and bhindi bhujia.
Among Bengals roti and curry are the general variants in breakfast. The menu may also include "Indian French toast" which is also known as "Bombay toast", chire bhaja (flaked rice fried in oil with salt added to taste),[23] and boiled eggs.
In Western India, a Gujarati household may serve dhoklas, khakhras, or theplas for breakfast, the most popular of which is methi thepla.[24] In Mangalore the breakfast dish oondees may be served. In Maharashtra, the typical breakfast (nashta) consists of kande pohe, upma, ukkad, and thalipeeth.[25] Sometimes, chapati bhaji or a chapati roll with tea becomes breakfast. In South India, a Tamil household may serve idlis, dosas, or vadas for breakfast, the most popular of which is Idli.[26]
In Kashmir people prefer to have their authentic traditional food items like Noon Chai, Chhir Chot, Kahwa, Girda, Lavasa Masala Tchot and Bakarkhani for breakfast. Sometimes they also eat Chochwor and Roth in their morning meal.
Apart from traditional breakfast, factory produced bread is consumed throughout India with butter, jelly or jam or as French toast, where bread is fried with egg, onions and oil.
Indonesia
Indonesia is a great melting pot country and multiracial nation with more than 1,300 ethnic groups.[27] In Indonesian, breakfast is known as sarapan or makan pagi, breakfast options are different in the different areas. Rice is a staple food in Indonesia[28] and commonly served at breakfast. A typical Indonesian breakfast, bubur ayam[29] is a rice congee with shredded chicken meat served with some condiments, such as chopped scallion, crispy fried shallot, celery, tongcai, fried soybean, cakwe, both salty and sweet soy sauce, and sometimes topped with yellow chicken broth and krupuk. Steamed rice in coconut milk known as nasi uduk[30] is made by cooking rice soaked in coconut milk instead of water, along with clove, cassia bark, and lemongrass to add aroma. Sometimes knotted pandan leaves are thrown into the rice while steaming to give it more fragrance. The coconut milk and spices imparts an oily, rich taste to the rice. Nasi gurih,[31] nasi lemak[32] and nasi liwet[33] are breakfast dishes that are similar to nasi uduk.
In eastern Indonesia, a sago congee papeda is a staple breakfast of native people in Maluku and Papua.[34] Papeda is made up of sago starch and generally consumed with mackerel.
However, bread is also a popular choice for breakfast. Roti bakar is a sandwich toast filled with hagelslag or spreads. Kue may be eaten throughout the day for light breakfast, such as arem-arem, bagea, bahulu, gapit, kochi, nagasari, lemper and serabi.
Other typical Indonesian breakfasts include bakpau (meat bun), bihun goreng (fried rice vermicelli), bubur cha cha (cha-cha porridge), bubur kacang hijau (mung beans porridge), bubur sumsum (gruel), burgo (rice pancake in coconut milk-based soup), gado-gado (salad with rice cake in peanut sauce), gudeg (jackfruit curry), ketoprak (salad with rice vermicelli in peanut sauce), lontong sayur (rice cake and vegetable in coconut milk-based soup), nasi campur (mixed rice), nasi goreng (fried rice), nasi kari (rice and curry), nasi kuning (turmeric rice), nasi padang (rice with a variety of dishes), nasi pecel (rice with salad in peanut sauce), panekuk (pancake), roti canai (flatbread), roti gambang (herbs bread), roti jala (net bread), roti john (sandwich with minced meat and egg), sayur sop (vegetable soup in clear broth), soto (traditional soup with different variations) and tinutuan (leafy vegetables porridge).
Iran
Breakfast in Iran generally consists of different kinds of flatbread – such as barbari, tafton, sangak, or lavash – eaten with white cheese, butter, jam, marmalade (morabba), honey, clotted cream (sar sheer), or nuts and fresh/dried fruits, and accompanied by black tea or coffee. Frequently breakfast can be as simple as butter and jam on bread with tea. Iranians prefer to drink their hot black tea with sugar. Traditional cooked dishes for breakfast include haleem (wheat and chicken/lamb/turkey porridge eaten with cinnamon) or kale pache (sheep's feet, stomach, and other offal), adasi (green lentil soup), fried/boiled/soft-boiled eggs, omlet (eggs cooked in tomato sauce).
Israel
The Israeli breakfast is a mix of culinary influences from eastern Europe, agrarian Yishuv culture, North African cuisine, and Levantine cuisine.[35] It usually consists of a range of cheeses along with sliced vegetables, scrambled eggs (or another kind of fried egg)[36][37] and bread, served with spreads like butter, jam, or honey. The most commonly used vegetables are cucumbers, tomatoes, and red bell peppers; carrots, onions and radishes may also be included.[38] Cheeses include, at the very least, cottage cheese, quark or fromage blanc, and a local variety of Edam ("yellow cheese"), and often Tzfatit and labneh too. Side dishes including pickled olives and herring may also be served. Typical Middle Eastern mezze such as Israeli salad, hummus, tehina and baba ghanoush, as well as Shakshouka and a variety of salads may be served.[38] The meal is most often accompanied by coffee, tea and orange juice. A typical Israeli meal could be either dairy- or meat-based, but not both. Only certain types of meat are considered kosher. Israeli hotels usually present this type of breakfast as a buffet.[39] Restaurants may prefer a pre-set "Israeli Breakfast" menu item.[40]
Japan
Breakfast in modern Japanese households comes in two major variations: Japanese style and Western style.[41] Japanese-style breakfasts are eaten widely in Japan, but often only on weekends and non-working days.[41] Younger Japanese couples may prefer Western-style breakfasts because they are generally less time-consuming to prepare.[41] The standard Japanese breakfast consists of steamed white rice, a bowl of miso soup, and Japanese-style pickles (like takuan or umeboshi).[41][42] A raw egg and nori are often served; the raw egg is beaten in a small bowl and poured on the hot rice[41] to make golden colored tamago kake gohan, whilst the nori (sheets of dried seaweed) is used to wrap rice.[41] Grilled fish and Japanese green tea are often served as well.[42]
Western-style breakfasts in Japanese households are similar to those in the United States. Japanese children often eat corn flakes and drink milk, hot chocolate or fruit juice. Japanese adults (especially younger ones) tend to have toast with butter or jam, eggs, and slices of vegetables. They often drink coffee or orange juice.[41] Traditional Japanese inns (like ryokan) serve complete traditional breakfast.[41] Western-style hotels and restaurants in Japan generally offer a mix of the Western and Japanese styles.[41]
Korea
Traditionally, Korean breakfasts consist mainly of rice and soup dishes. These can include small amounts of fish or beef, and some form of broth, stew or porridge. Like all Korean meals, breakfast is usually served with banchan, or side dishes consisting of kimchi, Gyeran-jjim (steamed eggs) and tofu.[43]
Malaysia and Singapore
As multiracial nations, breakfast options vary greatly in both Malaysia and Singapore. Breakfast is typically consumed in various establishments i.e. gerai, kopitiams and hawker centres.[44] A traditional Malaysian and Singaporean breakfast consists of nasi lemak (fragrant coconut rice dish served with various accompaniments, typically sambal, sliced cucumbers, egg, fried chicken, roasted peanuts and fried anchovies), roti canai/prata (Indian-influenced flatbread), teh tarik (milk-infused black tea with a foamy head), kaya toast (coconut milk jam with bread), half-boiled eggs and Kopi (coffee made from robusta beans, typically roasted with butter or margarine and sugar).[45] Locals usually dip the toast into the eggs mixed with soya sauce and pepper.[44] Other commonly consumed dishes include nasi dagang (Coconut rice dish served with pickled vegetables and curried tongkol), nasi kerabu (rice dish served with fresh vegetables and herbs), laksa (rice noodle dish in spicy broth), fishball noodles, bihun goreng (fried rice vermicelli), dim sum and appam (small savoury pancakes).[44]
Myanmar
In Burma the traditional breakfast is htamin jaw, fried rice with boiled peas (pè byouk), and yei nway jan (green tea), especially among the poor.[46] Glutinous rice or kao hnyin is steamed and wrapped in banana leaf often served with peas as kao hnyin baung with a sprinkle of crushed and salted toasted sesame.[46] Equally popular is the purple variety of rice known as nga cheik which is cooked the same way and called nga cheik paung. Si damin is sticky rice cooked with turmeric and onions in peanut oil which is served with crushed and salted toasted sesame and crisp fried onions. Assorted fritters such as baya jaw (urad dal) are often served as a complement.
Nan bya or naan (Indian-style flatbreads) again with pè byouk or simply buttered, is served with Indian tea or coffee. It goes well with hseiksoup (mutton soup).[46] Fried chapati, blistered like nan bya but crispy, with pè byouk and crispy fried onions is a popular alternative.[47] Htat ta ya, lit. "a hundred layers", is flaky multi-layered fried paratha served with either pè byouk or a sprinkle of sugar.[48] Eeja gway (Chinese-style fried breadsticks or youtiao) with Indian tea or coffee is another favourite.[46] Mohinga,[49] perhaps the most popular of all, now available as an "all-day breakfast" in many towns and cities, is rice vermicelli in fish broth kept on the boil with chickpea flour or crushed toasted rice, lemon grass, sliced banana stem, onions, garlic, ginger, pepper and fish paste and served with crispy fried onions, crushed dried chilli, coriander, fish sauce and lime. Add fritters such as split chickpea (pè jan jaw), urad dal (baya jaw) or gourd (bu jaw), boiled egg and fried fish cake (nga hpè jaw).
Pakistan
In Pakistani Cuisine, a breakfast consists of fried bread called (Paratha) and Omelette with black milk tea. A more common Pakistani speciality for breakfast consist few items "Nehari'Nihari is a popular meat-based dish originating from Old Delhi. When Pakistan gained independence in 1947, numerous immigrants from Delhi settled in Karachi, where they established their own restaurants, so nihar is also associated with Pakistani cuisine' served with kulcha'flatbread made with wheat flour', Halwa poori, and Siri paya.
Philippines
A typical Filipino breakfast usually includes one or more fried eggs (either scrambled or sunny side-up), tocino, dried fish known as tuyo, tapa, and fried rice, normally seasoned with garlic. The word silog is a portmanteau of sinangag (garlic fried rice) and itlog (egg), which form the basis of many breakfast combinations. These combinations include tapsilog (with tapa), tocilog (with tocino), and longsilog (with longganisa).[50] Breakfast is usually served at seven in the morning since school classes start relatively early. If a cooked breakfast is unavailable, a bread called pandesal is eaten instead, together with cheese, peanut butter, jam, or kesong puti as spreads.[51]
Taiwan
Traditional Taiwanese breakfasts consists of a variety of dishes, usually containing a lot of carbohydrates and proteins to start off the day. In northern Taiwan, shaobing and youtiao are common and usually washed down by a hot glass of soymilk or rice milk.[52] Other popular dishes include scallion pancake, turnip cake, and danbing.[53] Down south, typical breakfast dishes include milkfish congee, eel noodles, tube rice pudding, beef soup and bubble tea.[54]
Europe
European breakfasts are generally lighter than in the United States of America or the United Kingdom, and apart from drinks are often all cold. Bread with boiled eggs, cheese and cold meat slices may be found, and pastries and preserves are normal. Muesli, a Germanic breakfast invention, is popular in many places, and fruit and fruit juices common. Coffee or tea are near-universal.
The apparent lightness of continental breakfast compared to much of the rest of the world and specially the full English breakfast, probably comes from medieval times when breakfast was disapproved of by many clerical and medical writers. The 16th century seems to have marked a change in attitude.
In southeast Europe, in countries such as Bulgaria, Bosnia, Montenegro, North Macedonia and parts of Croatia breakfast usually consists of various kinds of savory or sweet pastry, with cheese, meat or jam filling. The most typical breakfast consists of two slices of burek and a glass of yogurt.[55] Breakfast also often consists of open sandwiches. The sandwich is spread with butter, with toppings added such as prosciutto and yellow cheese.
Continental breakfast
The continental breakfast is a variant of lighter European styles, developed in English-speaking countries by the hotel industry. According to the American dictionary Merriam-Webster, for Americans, a "continental breakfast" usually includes items chosen because they are shelf-stable, and can be served in portion sizes that are appropriate for large groups of people. Typical items include coffee, tea, fruit juice, fruit, and baked goods such as bread, muffins, and pastries, along with packets of butter and jam. The meal may also include cold milk and breakfast cereal, popular among children.
Other possible items include hot water and instant oatmeal packets, a toaster for making toast, and a waffle iron or other means to make pancakes and waffles from batter. The hospitality industry's continental breakfast is influenced by cuisine in France and the Mediterranean, whose breakfasts are lighter and more delicate than the typical full English breakfast, which tends to consist of a large plate of eggs, bacon, sausage, toast, beans, and roasted mushrooms and tomatoes, and American breakfasts featuring eggs, preserved meats, pancakes, potatoes, and toast.
The term originated in Britain in the mid-19th century, first used in 1896 public hygiene book The Sanitarian, in which "continent" refers to the countries of mainland Europe, though the idea had been around for a few decades as American hotels endeavored to appeal to the changing tastes of the emerging middle class and European travelers visiting America. Economy and limited service hotels, which may not have a full restaurant, often include continental breakfast as part of the room price. Continental breakfasts are also more cost-effective for the establishments serving them, because they require fewer staff to prepare and serve them.[56][57]
Albania
In Albania the breakfast often consists of a scone, milk, tea, eggs, jam or cheese. Meat is not preferred during the breakfast and it is usually substituted for seafood such as canned sardines or tuna which is typically served with condiments such as mustard or mayonnaise. Whole grain cereals and pastries are mostly consumed by children. A shot of raki may be added to coffee as in the Italian Caffè corretto.
Croatia
In Croatia the base is a continental breakfast with a variety of pastries with or without fillings (marmalade, chocolate, cheese, ham, nuts, poppy) and fermented milk products (yogurt, soured milk, soured cream). Cold cuts, such as prosciutto, ham, salami, kulen, bacon, and various cheeses, are also favored.[58] Fried eggs or omelet and Vienna sausage with mayonnaise, mustard or ajvar are very often consumed. In continental parts sir i vrhnje (cottage cheese with soured cream and some spices) is traditional. Coffee is much preferred over tea (mostly herbal tea).
Denmark
A typical breakfast in Denmark consists of slices of rye bread (rugbrød) with yellow cheese, a soft-boiled egg – or more rarely – ham, salami or liver spread (leverpostej), or it may consist of breakfast cereals such as oatmeal or corn flakes, with yogurt being a popular alternative. White bread or bread rolls (rundstykker) are eaten with yellow cheese and different kinds of jams, usually made from berries or citrus fruits, and other toppings, all accompanied by coffee or tea.
Weekends or festive occasions may call for Danish pastries (wienerbrød), chocolate, or a shot of bitters, such as Gammel Dansk.[59]
Finland
Breakfast usually consists of coffee or tea with open sandwiches. The sandwich is often buttered, with toppings such as hard cheese or cold cuts.[60] Finns usually do not have sweets on their breads such as jam, or chocolate. Sour milk products such as yogurt or viili are also common breakfast foods, usually served in a bowl with cereals such as corn flakes, muesli, and sometimes with sugar, fruit, or jam. Oatmeal or mixed grain porridge may also be served, usually topped with butter.
France
In France, a typical domestic breakfast consists of a cup of coffee, often café au lait, or hot chocolate, sometimes accompanied by a glass of orange or grapefruit juice. The main food consists of sweet products such as tartines (slices of baguette or other breads spread with butter, jam, or chocolate paste), sometimes dunked in the hot drink. Brioches and other pastries such as croissants, pains au chocolat and pains aux raisins are also traditional, but more of a weekend special treat.[61] Other products such as breakfast cereals, fruit compote, fromage blanc, and yogurt are becoming increasingly common as part of the meal. A traditional French breakfast does not include any savory product, but breakfast buffets in hotels often include ham, cheese, and eggs. French people don't usually eat from plates at breakfast, preferring to savor their croissants or tartines over a bowl of hot chocolate.
French children often eat crêpes or tartines and drink orange juice or hot chocolate for breakfast.[2]
Germany and Austria
The typical German breakfast consists of bread or bread rolls, butter, jam, ham, cheeses, meat spreads, cold cuts, hard- or soft-boiled eggs, and coffee or tea. Cereals have become popular, and regional variation is significant. Yogurt, granola, and fruit (fresh or stewed) may appear, as well as eggs cooked to order (usually at smaller hotels or bed-and-breakfasts).[62] A second breakfast is traditional in parts of Germany, notably Bavaria where it is called "Brotzeit" (literally "bread time").
Greece
Home breakfasts in Greece include bread with butter, honey, or marmalade with coffee or milk. Breakfast cereals are also eaten. Children also eat Nutella type cream on bread. No breakfast at all is common.[63] Various kinds of savoury pastry (Tyropita, spanakopita, and bougatsa) are also eaten for breakfast, also by those eating out, usually accompanied with Greek coffee or Frappé coffee.
Traditional Greek breakfast (hot milk, fresh bread, butter and honey, or yogurt) was also available in special "milk shops" (in Greek Galaktopoleia – Γαλακτοπωλεία γαλακτοπωλείο). Milk shops were phased out between 1970 and 1990 – there are very few left, one is in Athens,[64] and some exist in small towns.
Hungary
In Hungary people usually have a large breakfast. Hungarian breakfast is typically an open sandwich made with fresh bread or toast, butter, cheese or different cream cheeses, túró cheese or körözött (Liptauer cheese spread), cold cuts such as ham, liver pâté (called májkrém, or kenőmájas), bacon, salami, beef tongue, mortadella, disznósajt (head cheese), and different Hungarian sausages or kolbász.[65] Eggs (fried, scrambled or boiled), French toast called bundás kenyér and vegetables (such as peppers, bell peppers, tomatoes, radishes, scallions, and cucumber) may also form part of a Hungarian breakfast. Sometimes a simple breakfast will consist of a cup of milk, tea, or coffee taken with one or more pastries, bread rolls (including crescent-shaped kifli), toast, other pastries with different fillings (sweet and savory), butter, jam, or honey and a bun or a strudel[66] or cereal like muesli, yogurt, kefir, and perhaps fruit.
Iceland
A typical Icelandic breakfast in 1900 included oatmeal porridge, skyr, black pudding, rye bread, and coffee.[67]
In modern times, oatmeal porridge and orange juice are popular[67][2] but the most common breakfast is a simple combination of bread and coffee.[67] In 1995, over 90% of people had soured milk or skyr for breakfast with added cereal, notably Cheerios or corn flakes.[67] Around 2000, Iceland was the world leader in Cocoa Puffs chocolate cereal consumption.[67] Cod liver oil is commonly had with breakfast as a dietary supplement.[67]
Italy
The modern breakfast in Italy often consists of a caffè latte (hot coffee with milk) with bread or rolls, butter and jam – known as prima colazione or just colazione. Fette biscottate (a cookie-like hard bread often eaten with hazelnut chocolate spread or butter and jam) and biscotti (cookies) are commonly eaten. Hot coffee may be sometimes replaced by hot tea, depending on personal taste. Children often drink hot chocolate, plain milk, hot milk with barley coffee, or hot milk with very little coffee. Cereals, yogurt, and fruit juices are also common. If breakfast is eaten in a bar (coffee shop), it is composed of cappuccino and cornetto (frothed hot milk with coffee and a pastry).[68]
Latvia
Typical Latvian breakfast usually consists of open sandwiches with toppings made of vegetables, fish, eggs, or cheese. As in Finland, they are often buttered with margarine. Curd mixed with vegetables and salt as well as other sour milk products are very popular as well. Very often light oat porridge is eaten too.[69] In general light, sour, and salty tasting food is common for morning meal. Latvians usually drink coffee for breakfast.
Malta
On the island of Malta, breakfast integrates both British and continental elements. Usually the Maltese start their day with a bowl of cereal mixed with milk, sometimes with a cup of coffee or tea. Marmalade/jams or even chocolate spreads are also common on bread or toast. Today cereal bars are also becoming a common type of breakfast on the island. The traditional English breakfast of eggs, sausages, and fried bacon was also popular among the Maltese, especially on Sundays, due to the strong British influence on the island, but this has diminished almost completely, as locals have rediscovered a more Mediterranean and continental diet over the recent years. Hotels usually serve both a continental as well as a full English breakfast. Prayers are often said before breakfast in order to bless the meal.[70]
Netherlands and Belgium
For breakfast, the Dutch and Belgians typically eat sliced bread with butter or margarine and various choices of toppings: dairy products (numerous variations of cheese), a variety of cured and sliced meats, or sweet or semi-sweet products such as jam, syrup (from sugar beets or fruit), honey, Kokosbrood (a coconut product that is served thinly sliced like sliced cheese) or peanut butter. Another type of sweet toppings are the chocolate toppings; the Dutch have chocolate toppings in all variations: hagelslag (chocolate sprinkles), chocoladevlokken (chocolate flakes) (both typically Dutch), and chocoladepasta (chocolate spread).[71] Children may eat chocolate-topped bread or colorful fairy bread, which is called vruchtenhagel.[2] Tea, dripolator coffee, milk, and juice are the most popular breakfast beverages. Breakfast may also include raisin bread and fried or boiled eggs. On special occasions, such as Easter, Christmas, Mother's Day etc., breakfast is usually the same, but with a wider range of choices (i.e. premium cheeses, special ham, hot buns, croissants etc.).
A 2012 opinion poll concluded that the Dutch believe that breakfast should be a more important meal than it is and that more time should be spent on it; almost three-quarters of those polled ate their sandwiches in less than fifteen minutes, and blame for an all-too quick breakfast was placed on "fast" breakfast products. A perfect "weekend breakfast" for the Dutch contained coffee or tea, fresh-baked bread rolls (and croissants), and a boiled egg. The poll also concluded that men are more interested than women in having breakfast with their partner.[72]
Norway
80% of Norwegians eat breakfast (frokost) daily, mostly at home. The most common breakfast is open sandwiches (smørbrød), often whole wheat bread, with cheese, often Jarlsberg, Norvegia or brunost, cold cuts,[73] leverpostei, jam, mackerel in tomato sauce, etc. Common drinks are water, filter coffee, milk and juice. Another common breakfast is breakfast cereals like corn flakes eaten with milk, kulturmelk, or yogurt. Whole-grain porridges (primarily oatmeal) with regular milk or butter are also eaten by some. More ample breakfasts may include fish, a diverse array of cheese, eggs, bacon, breads, and hot and cold cereals eaten in various combinations.[69] Pastries bought on the go, such as croissants or pain au chocolat have become increasingly common since the 1990s; as have vegan alternatives and replacements to traditional spreads.
Poland
The traditional Polish breakfast is a large spread with a variety of sides eaten with bread or toast. Sides include various cold cuts, meat spreads, the Polish sausage, tomatoes, cheese, and sliced pickles. Twaróg, a Polish cheese, is a breakfast staple and comes in many forms. Twaróg can be eaten plain, with salt, sugar, or honey, or it can be mixed with chives into a cream cheese-like spread. Eggs are served often as the main breakfast item, mostly soft-boiled or scrambled. For a quick winter breakfast, hot oatmeal, to which cocoa is sometimes added, is often served. Jam spreads are popular for a quick breakfast, including plum, raspberry, and black or red currant spreads. Breakfast drinks include coffee, milk, hot cocoa, or tea. Traditionally, the Poles avoid heavy-cooked foods for breakfast.[74] For the most part, one will not see fried meats or potatoes in a classic Polish breakfast. Emphasis is placed on a large variety of foods to satisfy everyone at the breakfast table.
Romania
The traditional Romanian breakfast is milk, tea or coffee alongside (toasted) bread with butter or margarine and on top of it, honey or fruit jams or preserves. Sometimes the buttered bread is served savory instead of sweet, in which case the Romanians add cured meats, salami, or cheese. Another option is to spread on a slice of bread some liver pâté. In recent years, Romanians have also started to serve cereal with dried fruits and milk instead of the traditional breakfast, though that is not yet very widespread.[75] According to a 2014 study, 35% of Romanians eat cooked dishes such as omelet or fried eggs and 15% eat sandwiches. Most people drink coffee and 67% serve Turkish coffee (made in an ibrik), though more and more people are starting to use drip or filter coffee.[76] While crêpes served with fruit preserves, jams, or cheese have traditionally been served as desserts, in recent years more Romanians have started to have them as breakfast during weekends.[77]
Russia
Traditional Russian breakfast are concentrated on kashas, or porridges – the most important staple in Russian nutritional culture, with buckwheat and oat, as well as semolina, serving as the three most important bases of such dishes, usually cooked using water or milk, as well as consumed with or without milk. Breakfast foods also include pancakes or oladushki.[78] Oladushki are made from flour and rise on yeast. Blini, or crepes, are also popular for breakfast and are also made with flour, but without yeast. Sirniki, is a cheese form of pancake. Sirniki are made of tvorog (quark cheese), which can be eaten separately with honey for breakfast. Also, a popular dish is buterbrod, open sandwiches with cold cuts and cheeses.[79]
Serbia
In Serbia, breakfast may include eggs in different forms (e.g. omelet with bacon, onion and feta cheese), canned fish or opened sandwiches with prosciutto, ham, bacon, salami, feta cheese, Serbian traditional chese and salad (e.g. pickles) filled with sour cream or mayonnaise. Serbian traditional products such as kajmak and ajvar are very popular even in these days, after hundreds of years. Fried Mushrooms are also very popular for breakfast.Different types(e.g. proja, gibanica,burek) are also served as the main dish.[58]Bakery products such as pogačica, kiflice, projarice and paštete are ofently eaten. Yogurt, coffee, milk and tea are preferred breakfast drinks.
Spain
In Central Spain there is a special breakfast known as chocolate con churros – hot chocolate with Spanish-style fritters, which are extruded sticks of doughnut-like dough with a star-shaped profile covered in sugar. The chocolate drink is made very thick and sweet. In Madrid, churros are somewhat smaller and shaped like a charity ribbon. This meal is normally served in cafeterías but it is not a regular or usual breakfast at Madrid homes. The usual one is the same as in the rest of Spain: coffee with milk or Cola Cao, orange juice, biscuits or toasts, with butter and jam.
In the North, East and West it is more common to have a cup of coffee (usually with milk) or Cola Cao and a toast with a choice of olive oil and salt, tomato and olive oil, butter, jam, pâté, jamón serrano (cured ham), and other options like sobrasada (a raw cured spiced sausage that is easy to spread),[80] and in Andalucia, pringá. Freshly squeezed orange juice is widely available in most places as an alternative for coffee. The breakfast is not often larger than these two items, because usually in late morning there is a break known as almuerzo when there is a snack. Sometimes, toast is replaced with galletas (a type of cookie made with flour, sugar, oil, and vanilla flavour), magdalenas (a Spanish version of the French madeleine made with oil instead of butter) or buns.
Sweden
Breakfast in Sweden is usually an open sandwich of soft bread or crisp bread, cold cuts, smörgåskaviar, cheese, cottage cheese, cream cheese, eggs, scrambled or boiled, pâté (leverpastej) with pickled cucumber, tomatoes or cucumber, or a toast with marmalade or maybe honey, juices, coffee, hot chocolate or tea. Breakfast cereals or muesli with milk, yogurt or filmjölk, currants, and fruits are popular or warm whole-grain porridge with milk and jam (for example lingonberry jam).[81] Bilberry-soup (blåbärssoppa) and rose hip soup are also possible breakfast alternatives.
Switzerland
Swiss breakfasts are often similar to those eaten in neighboring countries. Traditionally, zopf (or züpfe) is eaten on Sunday mornings and New Year's Day.[82] A notable breakfast food of Swiss origin, now found throughout Europe, is muesli, (Birchermüesli in Swiss German), introduced in 1900 by Maximilian Bircher-Benner for patients in his hospital.[83]
Turkey
In Turkish cuisine, a typical breakfast consists of bread, cheese (beyaz peynir, kaşar etc.), butter, olives, eggs, tomatoes, cucumbers, jam, honey, and kaymak. Sucuk (spicy Turkish sausage), pastırma, börek, simit, poğaça and soups are eaten as a morning meal in Turkey. A common Turkish specialty for breakfast is called menemen, which is prepared with tomatoes, green peppers, onion, olive oil and eggs. Various soups (çorba) are also very common and traditional for Turkish breakfast; mainly chicken broth, lentil soup, and a national delicacy, tarhana soup (Turkish cereal food consisting of flour, yogurt and vegetables fermented then dried; it is consumed as a soup by mixing it with stock or water) are most well known soups. Tripe soup, trotter soup, and sheep's head soup are also traditionally very common all over Turkey for breakfast. The Turkish word for breakfast, kahvaltı, means "before coffee," (kahve, 'coffee'; altı, 'under').[84] but after the First World War, during which the Ottoman Empire lost its coffee-producing territories, tea has displaced coffee as the everyday hot drink in Turkey. In the Sirkeci neighborhood of Istanbul, pide is a popular morning meal.[85]
United Kingdom and Ireland
In the contemporary UK and Ireland, a weekday breakfast may involve a cereal dish, such as muesli, porridge or cereal, or toast or simply bread spread with jam or marmalade. Tea and coffee remain equally popular accompaniments. Marmalade, originally a Portuguese confection, had been a popular British spread to consume in the evening, before the Scots moved it to the breakfast table in the 18th century.[86] It is however becoming very common to 'skip breakfast' entirely or take coffee or pastries on the morning commute. Portable quick snacks such as granola bars, ready-cut fruit and warm takeaway foods are becoming increasingly commonly consumed away from home and are sold at commuting points and newsagents and local shops in all urban areas.
The traditional breakfast most associated with Britain and Ireland remains, however, the full breakfast of eggs (fried, scrambled, or poached) with bacon and sausages, usually with mushrooms, tomatoes, baked beans, fried bread, black pudding or white pudding, and toast. Dating from a time when hard labour was more common, calorie intakes were necessarily higher, and servant labour was more available, it is nowadays regarded as a meal for the weekend or holidays when time is available for preparation, prepared by parents to welcome children, or as a special occasion such as a birthday or anniversary, or following a night of drinking. A healthy and nutritious version consists of grilling the protein and using poached, rather than fried, eggs, and variations based on one egg, one protein, and toast abound. It remains by far the most common choice on brunch menus and breakfast cafes across the region. The "full Scottish breakfast" tends to omit pork sausages and have beef sausages or lamb haggis instead. At its most extensive it consists of eggs, square sausage, fried dumpling, potato scone, tomato, mushrooms, bacon beef links, and fried bread. Originating in the British isles during the Victorian era, the full breakfast is among the most internationally recognised British dishes.[87]
Another traditional British breakfast consists of porridge, although now associated with Scotland, it has been consumed across Britain as a staple food since at least the Middle Ages. The breakfast cereal Scott's Porage Oats was produced in Glasgow in 1880.[88] Before the arrival of American-style breakfast cereals in the early 20th century, dried bread soaked in hot milk or tea and porridge (boiled oats) was the common daily breakfast, while leftover vegetables (often, cabbage) and potatoes not eaten the night before were often served re-fried becoming 'bubble-and-squeak';[89] in Ireland the dish is known as colcannon. Traditionally, breakfast would be served with a small amount of fruit, such as a slice of orange, believed to prevent the onset of scurvy.[90] Also traditional, but now less popular breakfasts included fish in the form of kippers (smoked herring) with poached egg and toast, and kedgeree (a Scoto-Indian smoked haddock, egg, and rice dish originating in Colonial India). Most British breakfasts are consumed with tea, coffee, or fruit juice.[89]
In Old English, breakfast was known as morgenmete, meaning "morning meal".[91]
A continental breakfast in UK and Irish hotels normally consists of baked goods (fresh bread, toast, pastries such as croissants or pain au chocolat etc.) slices of cheese and cold meat, cereal, yogurts, fruit and drinks like coffee, tea, or fruit juices.[92] Although this is the traditional breakfast in parts of continental Europe, elsewhere these breakfasts are common only in the hospitality sector (particularly in economy and limited service hotels with no restaurant, as they require little preparation).
North America
As with other continents around the world, breakfasts in North America vary widely from country to country, depicting variations of both American and Continental breakfasts.
Canada
Traditional Canadian breakfast foods include pork sausages, bacon, maple-cured bacon, fried potatoes, maple-infused beans, eggs, toast, cereals, pancakes (or French toast) and maple syrup, or hot oatmeal.[93] Peameal bacon is also a Canadian breakfast food.[94] Coffee, tea and fruit juice of many varieties are widely consumed in Canada during breakfast.
Costa Rica
In Costa Rica the most common breakfast is called "gallo pinto", which is made up of rice and beans (red or black) previously cooked. Sautéed in a pan with chile, onions, culantro (an herb typical to the region) and bean stock for color. It is accompanied with fried egg, cheese, and fried plantain or cooking plantain. Black coffee or coffee with milk are traditional drinks. As this is the most common breakfast of the country, in Limón Province they prepare gallo pinto with coconut milk instead. Another popular breakfast food is the "chorreadas" which are savory sweetcorn pancakes; they are usually accompanied by cheese or a type of sour cream called "natilla".
Cuba
Breakfast in urban areas traditionally consists of café con leche that is sweetened and includes a pinch of salt. Toasted buttered Cuban bread, cut into lengths, is dunked in the coffee. In rural Cuba, farmers eat roasted pork, beans and white rice, café con leche and cuajada sweetened with caramel.[95]
Dominican Republic
In the Dominican Republic, breakfast varies depending on the region. In the interior of the island it is accustomed to have breakfast with a side of vegetables, the green plantain or cooking plantain being the most popular. It is served boiled or mashed known as Mangú. In the capital, breakfast is more light. It includes coffee with milk or hot chocolate, along with bread, butter, and cheese. Normally accompanied by orange juice and other juices of fruits typical to the region. Milk punch (milk, egg, nutmeg, and malt) boiled eggs with "harina de negrito" or some other type of corn starch. Traditional breakfast bread is a water-based bread.
El Salvador
A typical Salvadoran breakfast comprises fried or scrambled eggs, refried beans or casamiento (rice cooked with black beans), fried plantains, cheese or crema, and thick Salvadoran-style tortillas (or bread). Sometimes sausage (Chorizo)or avocado will be included on the side. Breakfast may be enjoyed with coffee or fruit juice.[96][97][98]
Guatemala
In Guatemala, breakfast consists of one or two eggs either fried, scrambled, or boiled accompanied by baked/fried beans with coffee. With this comes fresh cream, fresh cheese, and fried plantains (or cooking plantain). It is common to add hot sauce made out of "chiltepes" (a type of pepper). They are prepared raw or boiled, then they are ground with some vinegar, chopped onions, and chopped cilantro to make the hot sauce. A traditional egg dish prepared with both green and red sauces is called "huevos divorciados". In the eastern part of the country, specifically in Zacapa, you can find "huevos a caballo" or (eggs on a horse) which is basically two fried eggs over roasted steak.
Other types of breakfast include milk cereals. The most common drinks are orange juice or other fruits, milk, atol (a milk pudding with chocolate), and corn starch. The coffee is normally served with sweet bread also called "pan de manteca" (or butter bread).
Honduras
In Honduras it is typical to start the day with homemade bread, with coffee or a glass of milk. Then, a plate of food with beans, alongside eggs that can be scrambled or sunny side up, slivers of fried plantain (or cooking plantain), corn, tortillas, cheese, and butter. Versions of egg preparation vary: "estrellados" which consists of just cracking the shell, in "torta" or omelette (beaten with some salt), scrambled or boiled. Another typical breakfast are the baleadas and tortillas with cheese; sometimes they are fried together with cheese in between. In the "garífuna" culture, coffee is accompanied by "mínimo" bread (banana bread) or coconut bread.
Jamaica
A Jamaican breakfast includes ackee and saltfish, seasoned callaloo, boiled green bananas, and fried dumplings.[99]
Mexico
Breakfast in Mexico is usually served in large portions and is sometimes the main or the second largest meal of the day. Some common dishes during breakfast are: huevos rancheros, chilaquiles, quesadillas, entomatadas, tamales, tlayuda, birria, atole, molletes, pambazo, huevos a la mexicana, enchiladas, barbacoa, menudo (soup) and carnitas.[100]
Nicaragua
In Nicaragua the typical breakfast consists of "gallo pinto" (national dish made out of red beans and rice), eggs, cheese, corn tortillas, and sweet plantains. Meals are normally accompanied by different juices and coffee. On Sundays, nacatamales are the traditional breakfast. These consist of a mass of corn with rice, potatoes, pork or chicken and sliced onions wrapped in plantain leaves and is usually accompanied by cacao as a drink.[101]
Panama
In Panama, breakfast is a heavy meal, especially in the interior of the country where hard labor requires it. It always includes black coffee (tinto) or with milk (called pintado) with any of these sides: corn tortillas, traditional white cheese (or queso del pais), another type of tortillas or "torrejas" made of wheat flour known as "hojaldres." Another traditional breakfast side is "bollo" made out of either corn, white corn, or coconut that is wrapped in corn leaves and "preña'o" (meaning with child) that means it's filled with some type of meat.
As protein, a large serving of beef liver with onion, scrambled or fried eggs, beef stew or "tasajo" (a type of beef jerky), pork rinds and different kinds of sausages like chorizo or morcilla are the most popular. These are also accompanied by: slices of green plantain or cooking plantain, "patacones" (double fried plantain), carimañolas (yuca filled with meat), as well as different bread pastries both savory and sweet. These large breakfasts are normally reserved for special occasions while everyday breakfasts consist of more traditional food from the west like toast, ham, cheese, jam etc.
It is important to mention that the prolonged US presence has also influenced urban areas of Panama by introducing meals like cereal with milk as well as pancakes with syrup as traditional breakfast meals.
Puerto Rico
Puerto Rico, being a commonwealth of the United States, has adopted many American staples such as pancakes, waffles, bacon, English muffins, yogurt with fruit and nuts, French toast, eggs and steak. Pancakes and waffles can be made with plantain flour or breadfruit flour popular in the south. A Jibarita is a typical breakfast item much like buttermilk-banana pancakes but with sweet plantains and coconut milk. Crêpes are quite popular as a breakfast food filled with fresh fruit, jam, meats, or cheese.
Cremas come in many versions. One version is flavored with vanilla, clove, cinnamon sticks, brown sugar, star anise, orange peels, ginger, coconut milk, and butter.
Pan de Agua is a bread served aside coffee, jam, and butter.
Revoltillo is a Puerto Rican style scrambled eggs mixed with local cheese, milk, sofrito, squash, ham, shrimp, and other ingredients. Backed or roasted sweet potato or sweet plantains are cooked with its skin on. When done it is split down the middle and top with butter, sugar, cheese, and cinnamon and served with chorizo or longanisa and eggs.
Sorullos are sweet corn fitters made with cornmeal, flour, milk, sugar, corn kernels, stuffed with cheese, rolled in to small logs and fried. They are sometimes compared to mozzarella sticks. Sorullos are served different depending on the time. For breakfast they dunked in coffee or hot chocolate.
Orange and papaya juice are standard for breakfast with some other restaurants and eatery having other options like mango, guava, apple, and other fruits. Punche de Malta is malta beverage shook with ice, eggs, evaporated milk, condensed milk, and cinnamon. Cow milk, goat milk and plant milks are also part of the breakfast. Hot chocolate and chocolate milk is enjoyed by kids and adults with breakfast.
United States
The average starting time for breakfasts in the United States has been found to be 8:12 a.m, and varies from 8:08 a.m. in the South to 8:17 a.m. in the West.[102]
Traditional
There are two main types of breakfasts: traditional and quick. Traditional breakfasts, often eaten on weekends, consists of any combination of eggs, preserved meats, and breads such as pancakes, waffles, toast, or biscuits. Variants of the full breakfast and continental breakfast (see above) are also common. In the Southeastern United States, biscuits and gravy are popularly eaten at a traditional breakfast.[103] In some regions, such as the Northeast, bagels are a common breakfast item, and are often served sliced in half, toasted, and spread with butter or cream cheese or other toppings. Another popular breakfast item in the United States are doughnuts, which are often consumed exclusive of other breakfast foods, and commonly eaten with coffee.
Breakfast sandwiches are also a common choice. Typical sandwiches are composed of egg, cheese, and cooked preserved meat such as bacon or sausage, between bread slices or on a roll, although regional varieties are common. In New Jersey, bacon is often swapped out of the breakfast sandwich and replaced with a processed meat called pork roll. Other areas alter the breakfast sandwich medium with regional favorites, such as biscuits. A variation is the breakfast burrito, which originates from Southwestern and Tex-Mex cuisines.
In the early 20th century breakfast was served at the table, each place set with a breakfast doily, between nine and 12 inches square, with doilies serving as coasters for coffee and water glasses. Coffee was served on silver trays with pot, hot water pitcher, cream, milk and sugar. Different napkins were used for breakfast than for dinner. Breakfast napkins were smaller and usually made of linen, fringed or hemmed by hand. For more elegant napkins, borders of heavy lace or white embroidery decorations were added. Breakfast (served with coffee) could be as much as six dishes of salt fish or meat, omelette or other types of eggs, warm bread, pancakes or waffles, coffee cake, fruit or cereal.[104]
Quick
Quick breakfasts are often eaten on weekdays, before school or work, when there is no time or no need for a large breakfast. This type of breakfast includes foods like oatmeal, grits,[103] breakfast cereal, fruit and granola bars. They are often eaten with beverages such as juice or coffee. Toast, often buttered, is popular as well.
Drinks
Coffee is a common beverage, as is tea. 65% of coffee is drunk during breakfast hours.[105] Fruit juices, especially orange juice, are also common. Milk is also widely consumed, drunk either plain or prepared with various flavorings, such as chocolate, as coffee milk (especially in the Northeast), or strawberry.
Oceania
Australia
Prior to the Second World War and the widespread adoption of household refrigerators, the traditional Australian breakfast consisted of grilled steaks and fried eggs, mainly because of the ready availability of beefsteak during that period.[106] Although this is still eaten in the bush, very few urban Australians today would recall this breakfast format.
The majority of urban Australians eat commercially prepared cereal with pasteurised milk or yogurt and toast with preserves such as jam or vegemite[107] for breakfast.[108] Two of the most common cereals are cornflakes and a type of biscuit made from compressed toasted flakes of wheat, called Weet-bix. Fruit is also common at breakfast, either on the cereal or eaten separately. Cereals with added sugar and marketed largely to children include Frosties, Nutri-Grain, Rice Bubbles, Froot Loops and Coco Pops.[109]
While not unusual, a cooked breakfast is more likely to be eaten on weekends or on special occasions either at home or at a café.[110] A cooked breakfast can include eggs, bacon, sausages, breakfast steaks, mushrooms, tomato, hash browns, mashed avocados (locally known as ‘smashed avo’)[111] and pancakes, similar to both the British and American cooked breakfast.
Breakfast habits differ more between age groups or families than between cities.[112]
Fiji
In ethnically Fijian villages, breakfast may be tea served with milk and sugar, and food made out of flour: tovoi or babakau (a type of fried dough), pancakes, bread or biscuits with butter.[113] Sometimes a starch, such as cassava, taro in coconut milk, or rice, is served instead. Leftover fish or meat from the previous night's meal may be served as well.[114] Tea made from lemon leaves (called draunimoli)[113] and fruits such as pineapple, banana, papaya, plantain, and watermelon are also occasionally served.[115] In urban households, tea and cereals are often consumed.[113] Breakfast foods eaten by Fiji Indians often include a vegetable curry with roti and sometimes differ from the above.[113] Fijians living in Rotuma sometimes eat nuqa fish in tarotaro (fermented coconut yogurt), with fresh tropical fruits.[115]
New Zealand
Breakfast in New Zealand is similar to that in Australia. The range of processed breakfast cereals is vast, and children are more likely to eat those that contain added sugar.[116] During winter, porridge is commonly eaten. Porridge is typically served with milk, brown sugar, fruit or yoghurt. Toasted bread served with butter or margarine, preserves, spreads such as marmite and vegemite, or eggs is also common. Eating breakfast at a cafe or restaurant was very uncommon in New Zealand until the 1990s; cafes which serve breakfast or brunch until midday, or even all day, are now common.[117]
A type of large cooked breakfast, commonly known as a Big Breakfast, is one of the main breakfast items at cafes and restaurants, being similar to the British cooked breakfast except that it seldom includes black or white pudding or fried bread; as in Australia, it may contain a small strip of steak instead. Other common menu items include various egg dishes, such as eggs benedict, beans, minced beef or avocado on toast, sweetcorn fritters, pancakes, cereal and yoghurt, fruit salads and smoothies. Breakfast in New Zealand often includes tea or coffee, with children often drinking milk on its own, with cereal, or mixed with milo. Concern has been raised about the cost of milk in New Zealand and some families being unable to afford it.[118]
Some NGOs and charities, such as the New Zealand Red Cross, provide breakfast to primary school children from low-income families.[119] Survey results released in 2013 claim that nearly half of all New Zealanders skip breakfast at least once a week with almost a third of those skipping breakfast up to three times a week.[120]
South America
Argentina
In Argentina, breakfast is simple: tostadas, often topped with butter, marmalade and dulce de leche, or medialunas, usually served with milk coffee and orange juice.[121]
Brazil
Breakfast in Brazil tends to be lighter as "Brazilians consider lunch to be a more important meal".[122] It is called café da manhã in Portuguese, which translates to "morning coffee", and consists of a combination of bread, butter, jam, fruits, cheese, ham, eggs, cereal, pão de queijo, cakes, yogurt, coffee, milk, and fruit juice.[122] Regional differences also exist.
Children may drink milk mixed with a small amount of coffee with their breakfasts.[2]
Because of the huge German immigration to the south of the country in the 19th century, many hotels, restaurants and coffeehouses there (specially in the state of Santa Catarina) offer the so-called café colonial ("colonial coffee" or "colonial breakfast"). It consists of a rich table composed of various breads, mainly homemade, which can be of the sourdough type, pão francês, pão de queijo, and sweet breads such as schnecken. A variety of pies and cakes, such as cuca, corn cake and cornbread. In addition to foods such as butter, schmear, cheeses, ham, sausages, wiener sausage, bock sausage, pork, crackers and biscuits, ricotta and honey, among others. Accompanied by drinks such as milk, coffee, hot chocolate and even wine.[123][124]
Uruguay
The most traditional breakfast in Uruguay is to just drink mate early in the morning, usually served with torta frita. Nowadays people also prefer coffee, usually prepared with milk. Young kids tend to prefer chocolate milk and a more American-style breakfast, like breakfast cereal with milk or yogurt. Another common food is cheese, as Uruguay's per-capita yearly consumption of milk derivatives is around twice the global average[125] and cheese is the top choice. Bizcochos (margaritas, croissants, etc.) are probably the most common choice to serve with mate or coffee.
See also
Notes
- The World Bank wrote that a progressive elimination of imported coffee seems common in poorer areas of Senegal as a result of the global recession of 2009: a Senegalese restaurant owner stated, "We weren't used to consume [sic] the Tuba Coffee for breakfast, but since the crisis people drink it a lot, also children."
References
- "Breakfast in Africa". mrbreakfast.com. Retrieved 31 August 2010.
- Whitaker, Hannah (8 October 2014). "What Kids Around the World Eat for Breakfast". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 8 January 2020.
- Special Events (18 July 2013). "The Art of Moroccan Cuisine – Cooking Classes in Morocco | Fes Cooking and Cultural Tours". Fescooking.com. Retrieved 23 August 2014.
- "Africa :: Nigeria". cia.gov. 2 March 2023.
- Dosti, Rose (25 February 1988). "Nigerian Bean Cakes Make a Hearty Breakfast". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 15 January 2012.
- "Foods and Drinks". Motherland Nigeria. Retrieved 15 January 2012.
- Heltberg, Rasmus; Hossain, Naomi; Reva, Anna, eds. (2012). Living Through Crises: How the Food, Fuel, and Financial Shocks Affect the Poor. New Frontiers of Social Policy. Washington, DC: World Bank. p. 223. doi:10.1596/978-0-8213-8940-9. ISBN 978-0-8213-8940-9. OCLC 769421434. Retrieved 4 January 2013.
- Cherruau, Pierre. Reportage: Le café Touba fait battre les coeurs, PressAfrik, Dakar, 25 November 2009. Retrieved on 21 November 2012. (in French)
- Mayer, Julie. "Breakfast in Ouakam, Dakar, Senegal" Archived 25 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine, 22 July 2011. Retrieved on 21 November 2012. (in French and English)
- "A taste of Senegal: exotic and tantalizing,..", Prepared Foods, May 2008
- Abdullahi, pp. 111–14.
- Mohamed Diriye Abdullahi, Culture and Customs of Somalia, (Greenwood Press: 2001), p. 113.
- Little Business Women
- "Porridge". Retrieved 27 March 2014.
- "Katogo". Monitor News paper. Retrieved 27 March 2014.
- "Chinese Cuisine". Retrieved 28 June 2012.
- "Cha chaan teng cheat sheet: What to order at the most popular eateries in Hong Kong". travel.cnn.com. Retrieved 30 December 2013.
- "A Taste of Chinese Breakfast". Retrieved 28 June 2012.
- Jaffrey, Madhur (2015). Vegetarian India. New Delhi: Penguin Random House. Retrieved 28 April 2017.
- "Soft Idli Of TamilNadu". Retrieved 6 February 2013.
- Regional Indian Recipes. Jaico Publishing House. 1 January 1970. ISBN 978-81-7224-035-6.
- "Types of Parathas". Archived from the original on 3 February 2013. Retrieved 6 February 2013.
- Chire Bhaja or Fried Flaked Rice (East Indian-vegetarian) Archived 6 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine
- "Methi Thepla of Gujarat". Retrieved 6 February 2013.
- "Thalipeeth". Archived from the original on 15 December 2014. Retrieved 15 December 2014.
- "Soft and Spongy Idli". 20 December 2020. Archived from the original on 13 January 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2020.
- "Mengulik Data Suku di Indonesia". Badan Pusat Statistik. 18 November 2015. Retrieved 12 February 2020.
- "Indonesian food." Archived 10 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Belindo.com Archived 7 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed July 2011.
- Tan, M G (2008). Etnis Tionghoa Di Indonesia: Kumpulan Tulisan. Yayasan Obor Indonesia. p. 115. ISBN 978-9794616895.
- "The best nasi uduk in Kebon Kacang". Jakarta Post. 27 December 2016.
- Cut Raisa Prillya (23 January 2013). "Yuk, Sarapan Pagi Lezat Nasi Gurih Bu Ros". atjehpost.com (in Indonesian). Atjeh Post. Archived from the original on 27 February 2013. Retrieved 22 August 2013.
- "Nasi Lemak". Delectable Asia. Archived from the original on 30 May 2015.
- I Made Asdhiana (19 July 2011). "Nasi Liwet Gurih Dijamin Ketagihan" (in Indonesian). Kompas.com. Retrieved 19 August 2014.
- "Papeda, Maluku: Bubur 'Lem' Segar Bergizi". Femina (in Indonesian). Retrieved 9 March 2015.
- Gagnon, Lynn (15 May 2016). "The Israeli breakfast – Best in the world!". BonVoyageurs. Retrieved 19 May 2016.
- Dubois, Jill; Rosh, Mair (2004). Cultures of the World: Israel. Singapore: Marshall Cavendish. p. 122. ISBN 9780761416692.
- Marks, Gil (2010). Encyclopedia of Jewish Food. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 9780544186316.
- "Typical Israeli Breakfast: Bountiful". CBSNews.com. New York City. 6 November 2009.
- Torgerson, Dial (6 September 1979). "Israeli Breakfast ... is being replaced by the continental breakfast: coffee and a roll". Sarasota Herald-Tribune. Sarasota. pp. 8–CF. Retrieved 7 April 2013.
- Deane, Daniela (10 August 2012). "Smart Mouth: The delectable nature of Israeli breakfast". The Washington Post. Washington, DC. Archived from the original on 28 July 2013. Retrieved 7 April 2013.
- Ashkenazi, Michael; Jacob, Jeanne (2003). Food culture in Japan. pp. 119–20. ISBN 9780313324383. Retrieved 29 June 2012.
- Akiyama, Nobuo; Akiyama, Carol (1999). Learn Japanese (Nihongo): the fast and fun way. p. 123. ISBN 9780764106231. Retrieved 29 June 2012.
- "About". Archived from the original on 2 January 2016. Retrieved 2 December 2013.
- "Traditional breakfasts in Singapore". Travelfish.org. Retrieved 15 March 2020.
- Dutta, Madhurima (21 February 2018). "What Makes Singapore's Coffee Culture So Unique?". Culture Trip. Retrieved 15 March 2020.
- Kong, Foong Ling; Ming Tsai; Chiong Liew (2002). The Food of Asia. Tuttle Publishing. p. 24. ISBN 978-0-7946-0146-1.
- Lane, Jo (28 February 2012). "A taste of Yangon: 6 must-try Burmese dishes". Travel Wire Asia. Hybrid News Limited. Archived from the original on 29 April 2012. Retrieved 29 April 2012.
- Tin Cho Chaw (22 May 2009). "burmese paratha". Retrieved 29 April 2012.
- Köllner, Helmut; Axel Bruns (1998). Myanmar (Burma). Hunter Publishing. p. 215.
- "Everything You Need to Know About Filipino Breakfasts". Saveur. 8 February 2019. Retrieved 8 October 2019.
- Thorington, Lance. "A Typical Filipino Breakfast". Foodeditorial.co. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
- Tchea, Michelle (14 September 2021). "Starting my day with a Taiwanese breakfast sandwich". fooddrinkdestinations.com. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
- "5 Most Popular Taiwanese Breakfasts". tasteatlas.com. 13 January 2021. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
- Hoffman, Amber (1 February 2022). "8 Taiwanese Breakfast Dishes You Must Try". fooddrinkdestinations.com. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
- Molokhovets, Elena (1998). Classic Russian Cooking. Indiana University Press. p. 331.
- Goldfarb, Anna (18 January 2018). "What Is a Continental Breakfast, and What Makes It Continental?". Kitchn.
- "Continental Breakfast Centers". Mount Holyoke College. Archived from the original on 30 December 2013.
- Slavic Cuisine ISBN 9781156606315
- "Danish Food Culture: Breakfast". Denmark.dk. Archived from the original on 30 December 2008. Retrieved 28 February 2009.
- www.vesijalanjalki.org: liha Archived 27 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine
- Escoffier, Georges Auguste (2002). Escoffier: The Complete Guide to the Art of Modern Cookery. New York: John Wiley and Sons. pp. Foreword. ISBN 978-0-471-29016-2.
- Austrian Cooking and Baking, Gretel Beer, ISBN 9780486232201
- Do we Greeks eat breakfast? Eleftherotypia newspaper Archived 3 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine
- "Hidden milk shop in Athens(in Greek)" (in Greek). Dailysecret.com. Retrieved 28 March 2012.
- Gundel's Hungarian Cookbook, Karoly Gundel, p. 34
- József Venesz ISBN 963-13-0219-9: Corvina Press 1977.
- "Morgunmatur Íslendinga í gegnum tíðina". Morgunblaðið (in Icelandic). 10 February 2017. Retrieved 8 October 2020.
- The Silver Spoon ISBN 88-7212-223-6, 1997 ed.
- And the New Scandinavian Cuisine Marcus Samuelsson ISBN 0618109412
- Darmanin, Francis (September 1997). A Guide To Maltese Cooking. Malta: Jumbo Productions. p. 14. ISBN 99909-79-00-6.
- Wintle, Michael (2006). "Diet and Modernization in The Netherlands During the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries". In Wilson, Thomas M. (ed.). Food, Drink and Identity in Europe. Rodopi. pp. 63–84. ISBN 9789042020863. Retrieved 28 December 2012.
- "Nederland wil ontbijt terug op de kaart" (in Dutch). Nu.nl. 16 October 2012. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
- Vil bevare brødskiven på frokostbordet Archived 2 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine Byavisen.net (in Norwegian)
- Polish Cooking Marianna Olszewska Heberle Penguin 2005 ISBN 9781440624759
- "Micul dejun în lume - unde și ce se mănâncă dimineața". Știri pe surse. Bucharest. 20 May 2015.
- "Ce consumă românii la micul dejun. Studiu Ipsos Research". economica.net. Bucharest. 14 February 2014.
- "Clătite la micul dejun, noul trend în nutriție". 30 August 2013.
- Iosebashvili, Irakli (4 December 2009). "Russia's national cuisine: Oladi pancakes". The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 23 April 2012.
- "The Gastronomical Me". Archived from the original on 22 August 2012. Retrieved 20 September 2012.
- Unesco, The Mediterranean diet
- Rutiga kokboken, 2002, ISBN 91-534-1950-2
- "Zopf: the Sunday joy". MySwitzerland.com, Switzerland Tourism. 2018. Retrieved 18 February 2018.
- MacEacheran, Mike (14 August 2017). "How Switzerland transformed breakfast". BBC Travel. Retrieved 18 February 2018.
- "Coffee Drinking Habits in Turkey". Lexio Philes. 24 September 2008. Archived from the original on 17 December 2013. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
- Hasnat, Karim (1 June 2015). "World Breakfasts: Pide". www.savisto.com. Instanbul: Savisto. p. 52. Archived from the original on 17 August 2016. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
Home and kitchen essentials
- "Spread over centuries". No. 19 August 2003. The Age. 10 June 2015.
- Spencer, Colin (2003). British Food: An Extraordinary Thousand Years of History. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-13110-0.
- "Scott's Porage – Our Heritage". Scott's Porage Oats. Archived from the original on 23 September 2010. Retrieved 19 October 2010.
- Caroline Conran, Traditional Cooking (British Cookery)1978 ISBN 0233 97053 3
- Dr E. J. C. Kendall, (1955) Scurvy during some British polar expeditions, 1875–1917 Polar Record, 7, pp. 467–85
- Anderson, Heather Arndt (2013). Breakfast: A History. AltaMira Press. ISBN 0759121656
- "Difference between Continental and English breakfast". Travelwebdir.com. 8 October 2007. Archived from the original on 2 November 2011. Retrieved 28 March 2012.
- McCullough, J.J. "Foods". The Canada Guide. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
- Scroble, Devon. "The History of Canadian Peameal Bacon". Food Network. Retrieved 12 July 2019.
- Grupo 2:—Span201.002 – Patterson
- Galdamez, Eddie (14 October 2020). "Typical Salvadoran Breakfast. Traditional food from El Salvador". El Salvador INFO. El SalvadorInfo.Net. Retrieved 3 January 2021.
- "Eating". Lonely Planet. Retrieved 3 January 2021.
- "Menú típico del desayuno salvadoreño". Recetas del Salvador. Retrieved 3 January 2021.
- Deborah S. Hartz Authentic Jamaican breakfast 1 August 1991 Ocala Star-Banner p. 44
- "Desayunos típicos alrededor del mundo". Retrieved 5 February 2014.
- Hubbard, Kirsten. "Nicaragua Food and Drink". Archived from the original on 6 October 2011. Retrieved 6 February 2014.
- Larson, Robert B. (2002), "When is Dinner?", Journal of Food Distribution Research, vol. 33, no. 3, pp. 38–45, doi:10.22004/ag.econ.26834, ISSN 2643-3354
- Charles L., Cutler (2002). Tracks that speak: the legacy of Native American words in North American culture. US: Houghton Mifflin. p. 28. ISBN 0-618-06510-5. Retrieved 26 September 2012.
- Reed, Myrtle (1916). The Myrtle Reed cookbook.
- "Specialty Coffee Statistics". e-importz.com. Retrieved 25 March 2012.
- "Steak and eggs glorified in poem - Australian food history timeline". Australian Food Timeline. 16 September 1920. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
- (A condiment that generally involves a series of steps prior to consumption. The most common method of preparation is to spread butter first, after which only a small amount of vegemite is spread lightly across the toast. Vegemite is a yeast byproduct with a strong salty and bitter aftertaste. In recent years it has become a ‘trend’ or dare for non-Australians to eat a spoonful of the preserve, only to exhibit disgust at the taste.)
- Australia. Lonely Planet. 2004. p. 72. ISBN 1-74059-447-9.
- "Do you market to children? Kellogg's Australia". Archived from the original on 28 March 2020. Retrieved 20 April 2020.
- "What Do Australians Eat? Discover Australia Favourite Foods". Start-a-new-life-in-australia.com. Retrieved 28 March 2012.
- "Bill Granger: 'Godfather' of avocado toast". BBC News.
- "What Australians eat for breakfast: an analysis of data from the 1995 National Nutrition Survey". Retrieved 29 June 2012.
- A. A. J. Jansen; Susan Parkinson; A. F. S. Robertson, eds. (1990). Food and Nutrition in Fiji: Food production, composition, and intake. Suva, Fiji: Department of Nutrition and Dietetics, Fiji School of Medicine. pp. 180, 183, 196, 234 241, 242, 255, 263, 311. OCLC 180559487.
- R. R. Nayacakalou (1972). Tradition and change in the Fijian village. South Pacific Social Sciences Association in association with the Institute of Pacific Studies. pp. 5, 146. OCLC 478256695.
- Seeto, Lance (24 November 2013). "Weekend Food". The Fiji Times. p. 10.
- "Report Shows Eating Breakfast Helps Children's Adademic Performance" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 January 2012. Retrieved 29 June 2012.
- New Zealand. Lonely Planet. 2002. p. 79. ISBN 1-74059-196-8.
- "Fonterra takes fresh look at school milk – National – NZ Herald News". Nzherald.co.nz. 15 December 2011. Retrieved 28 March 2012.
- Children offered breakfast to start school day Retrieved April 2013
- Back to work, back to school ... back to breakfast!
- "Argentinean breakfast: tostadas and medialunas". therealargentina.com. 6 August 2010. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
- "What Brazilians Have for Breakfast". The Brazil Business. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
- Colonial, Bela Vista Café (27 November 2019). "Café Colonial: saiba a história dessa típica refeição do sul do Brasil". Bela Vista Café Colonial - Gramado (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 12 July 2022.
- ""Cadernos - Paraná da Gente nº1 - Pratos Típicos Paranenses"" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 November 2020. Retrieved 19 August 2008.
- "Uruguay consume per cápita, por año, el doble de lácteos que el resto del mundo". Portal Lechero (in Spanish). 5 July 2022. Retrieved 6 October 2022.