| Literature DB >> 25769862 |
Sarah Daniels1, Ignace Glorieux2, Joeri Minnen2, T P van Tienoven2, Djiwo Weenas2.
Abstract
One of the most fundamental, but also controversial, food trends of the past years is convenience food. This article investigates the underexplored relationship between the heterogeneity in (convenience) food consumption (a feature of a food culture's cuisine) and meal patterns (characteristics of a food culture's structure). This study hopes to illustrate that convenience food can be interpreted both as a means to maintain a food culture's structure and as a means to overturn it. Latent Class Cluster Analysis is performed using data from the HBS 2005 survey on families' food expenditures to conceptualize convenience-orientation and to examine the relationships with families' meal behaviors. Whereas outsourcing cooking is most prevalent among single-person households; two-or more-person households are most likely to buy unprocessed and natural foods and to spend most time cooking and eating in. A higher consumption of convenience food is also more likely to affect individuals' kitchen than table habits.Entities:
Keywords: Convenience foods; Household food consumption typology; Latent Class Cluster Analysis; Meal preparation and consumption habits; Time- and Household Budget data
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25769862 DOI: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2014.09.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Sci Res ISSN: 0049-089X