|
Post by American hist on Nov 27, 2024 0:49:32 GMT
a Taft breakfast As this is about breakfast and steak, America's fattest president, William Howard Taft, the same president who got stuck in his bathtub, had a 16-ounce steak every breakfast but also enjoyed this meat for lunch and dinner. Taft enjoyed toast and coffee for breakfast. This man didn't grow up poor or middle class; however, his family was well-to-do. Taft's wealth did grow as he went to Yale, an Ivy League school. Of course, Taft, as president, had servants to cook him his meals. However, lts take a look at these presidents favorite breakfast foods www.heraldtribune.com/story/news/2012/09/05/presidents-and-their-breakfasts/29118935007/ Cornbread can certainly be a breakfast food Jimmy Carter points out cornbread as a breakfast food, which is certainly a Southern colonial breakfast food. However, to be fair, soup in the United States is typically not considered a breakfast food either, nor are baked beans or goulash. oldeuropean-restaurant.com/breakfast-food-in-colonial-america-what-did-they-eat/ popcorn and milk is cerial may have been around since they colonial times however this cereal isn’t well documented but that doesn’t mean people didn’t eat it as there were many illiterate people during the 1600-1700
|
|