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European food safety: Mapping critical food practices and cultural differences in France, Norway, Portugal, Romania and the UK

Authors :
Daniela Borda
Pierrine Didier
Lorerdana Dumitrascu
Vânia Ferreira
Mike Foden
Solveig Langsrud
Isabelle Maitre
Lydia Martens
Trond Møretrø
Christophe Nguyen-the
Anca Ioana Nicolau
Cristina Nunes
Thea Rosenberg
Silje Elisabeth Skuland
Teigen Helene
Paula Teixeira
Monica Truninger
Faculty of Food Science and Engineering,'Dunarea de Jos' University of Galati
Sécurité et Qualité des Produits d'Origine Végétale (SQPOV)
Avignon Université (AU)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)
Escola Superior de Biotecnologia [Porto]
Universidade Católica Portuguesa [Porto]
School of Social Science and Public Policy, Keele University
Norwegian Institute of Food,Fisheries and Aquaculture Research (NOFIMA)
Ecole supérieure d'Agricultures d'Angers (ESA)
Instituto de Ciências Sociais da Universidade de Lisboa
SIFO Consumption Research Norway
Oslo Metropolitan University (OsloMet)
Instituto de Ciênsas Sociais da Universidade de Lisboa
H2020 – SFS – 2016 – 2017: Project no. 727580
Silje Elisabeth Skuland
Source :
Silje Elisabeth Skuland. Oslo Metropolitan University, 884 p., 2020, 978-82-7063-506-1, HAL
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
HAL CCSD, 2020.

Abstract

International audience; How is food handled in safe and unsafe ways from retail to fork in European households? This is the overall research question raised in this report. The aim of this report is to contribute to an in-depth, detailed, empirical and nuanced analysis of how food is handled in everyday life in five European countries: France, Norway, Portugal, Romania and the UK. The first chapters (Part 1) describe the food cultural difference and food safety variation between the five countries, theories of practices that underpin the study and the transdisciplinary methods employed for studying shopping, transportation, storage and cooking a meal with chicken and raw vegetables in 75 European households. The first empirical chapters (Part 2) introduce the households in this study (chapter 2.1), discuss the everyday food life the households (chapter 2.2) and describe food anxieties and experiences with foodborne illnesses (chapter 2.3). Part 3 concentrates on food procuring and organising practices in the households and includes three empirical discussions of shopping (chapter 3.1), transportation (chapter 3.2) and storage (chapter 3.3). Part 4 discusses food preparation and comprises five chapters discussing the order of cooking (chapter 4.1), chicken preparation (chapter 4.2), vegetable preparation (chapter 4.3), determining doneness (chapter 4.4) and washing hands (chapter 4.5). Finally, Part 5 discusses the main findings in the report and suggests further research steps.

Details

Language :
English
ISBN :
978-82-7063-506-1
ISBNs :
9788270635061
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Silje Elisabeth Skuland. Oslo Metropolitan University, 884 p., 2020, 978-82-7063-506-1, HAL
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..6f8a7255174819cafa9b5d149c56c433