[OC] The Highest Bread Consumption Posted by PuzzleGamerFan Tags:DataData Is BeautifulDataIsBeautiful 10 comments Source: ***Guinness World Records, AIBMA*** Tools: **Affinity Designer** I’d love to see the shape of the most popular type of bread in each. Polish Rye is a lot different from Turkish Pide. More than half a kilo per person per day on average seems excessive and I am afraid to ask what Turks are really doing to the bread. Do Turks eat anything else besides bread? 200kg per person seems extremely high to me. I would of swore italy would be in the top 10 at least sheeeesh Would have expected Germany in there somewhere. Germans love their bread. A food related category where America doesn’t make the top 10? Is bread too healthy for us now? Maybe is the pruduced bread per capita. Turkey is a great exporter in the balkan area Incredible Romania is not there. “Ia cu paine!” Is a popular saying here So much grain which could have been beer Leave a ReplyYou must be logged in to post a comment.
I’d love to see the shape of the most popular type of bread in each. Polish Rye is a lot different from Turkish Pide.
More than half a kilo per person per day on average seems excessive and I am afraid to ask what Turks are really doing to the bread.
10 comments
Source: ***Guinness World Records, AIBMA***
Tools: **Affinity Designer**
I’d love to see the shape of the most popular type of bread in each. Polish Rye is a lot different from Turkish Pide.
More than half a kilo per person per day on average seems excessive and I am afraid to ask what Turks are really doing to the bread.
Do Turks eat anything else besides bread? 200kg per person seems extremely high to me.
I would of swore italy would be in the top 10 at least sheeeesh
Would have expected Germany in there somewhere. Germans love their bread.
A food related category where America doesn’t make the top 10? Is bread too healthy for us now?
Maybe is the pruduced bread per capita. Turkey is a great exporter in the balkan area
Incredible Romania is not there. “Ia cu paine!” Is a popular saying here
So much grain which could have been beer