Factors Involved in the Food Choices of Diners in a Kibbutz Communal Dining Room Buffet: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Recruitment
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
2.4. Ethical Approval
3. Results
3.1. The Personal Context
3.1.1. Eating as a Task
Healthy eating for me is first of all to eat … it’s not something that you can always manage to do, the tasks, first thing to eat according to what the body needs, according to the body and not following your desire, awareness of the essence of food: fresh food, not-processed foods, food ingredients, carbohydrates, legumes, paying attention to that.(#4)
Sometimes, I do not know what the dish contains … Sometimes, I do not know if the (food) combinations I make are correct in terms of the composition of the meal, if it fits. Because there are those who say you need protein with it … it always confuses me … So sometimes it’s hard, I don’t always know what’s right, what’s wrong.(#1)
Since I choose, and the choice is already based on experience, so I choose what I like. What I choose, ninety-five percent tastes good to me, even very tasty to me … Even at lunch, I usually stick to some carbs, soup, and a main course and fresh salads, which are always delicious to me.(#10)
It’s in the emotional, mental, moods part. A very, very central part is the issue of nutrition, which is related to moods in my opinion. I am very interested in healthy eating, also because of trivial health issues for my age, sixty-three, and for my feeling. To me, this issue is very, very important. Health-related issues of nutrition are central to me … Healthy eating begins with eating at more or less regular times. Lots of drinking, especially unsweetened…and diversity between the various nutrients, carbohydrates, proteins, the foods with vitamins…and the foods for the soul, the sweet ones.(#10)
Food is a very, very, very serious issue, and it definitely affects mood, and emotion. You are more satiated, happier, I ate, I had fun, it was very pleasant. Very meaningful… you are more satisfied, you are calmer, you work more quietly….(#3)
Sometimes you…feel less good, or you are nervous, or you are busy and things like that, sometimes you take more than you need.(#1)
First of all, that the food will be tasty to me. Everything else is less important to me, and that the portion will be large enough. Usually this is not a problem because the portions are quite standard.(#7)
First thing, I check with myself. I already know if I come (to the dining room) hungry or not. Sometimes, I do not come really hungry, so it is easier to choose … I think about whether it is healthy or not, is it fattening, if it has a lot of oil in it … if it satisfies me.(#1)
I choose what I want … meat, a lot of … meat. I do not eat only meat, also carbohydrates, vegetables, and all sorts of things, but I love meat. If you ask about my preferences … also chicken, fish, fish less, chicken, and beef.(#7)
Healthy eating is, first and foremost, having a regular eating pattern, eating in moderation … in moderation in every way. Both the amounts we put in our mouths and the nutritional values we put in our mouths, it goes in both directions, like, neither too much nor too little. Maybe, mostly with thought about what we put into the body. Of course, with the knowledge that we know about what healthy food is, what harmful food is… choosing foods that we know are healthier and that we know are less harmful to the body I would say … eating vegetables, oily foods are very fatty and harmful … I think everything related to margarine is harmful. Everything that is deep-fried in oil, like French fries or schnitzel … In general, everything that is fat, trans-fat, is harmful, and those are present in almost all processed foods. If we are talking about lunches in the dining room, it is the processed schnitzel and pastry with margarine, things like that.(#9)
When I see that food is not aesthetic and that it is floating in oil, I do not approach it at all … Aesthetics speaks very much to me. This unhealthy fat, all the oils there … clog the arteries completely.(#3)
It is important to me that the food is delicious. Sometimes, it’s hard because not always the healthy things are the tastiest, but I have found the healthy things I love. It’s a matter of tasting things, say quinoa, they were eating at my house all the time and I was just now, just on the last diet, I started eating quinoa. And now, it’s really tasty for me.(#1)
3.1.2. Attempts to Control One’s Eating
Usually even if there are bread rolls that look good, I will take a slice of bread … not more than a slice. On the way to the table, I ask myself if maybe I would give up the bread…I come in thinking: “Today I will only eat vegetables and salad.” Lately, I feel I need to lose some weight.(#4)
In the period I keep my diet, I define it as a diet period, I have a preference for fish. But only if the fish is really suitable, and not immersed in oil. Even in the choice of main courses, from a health perception, I avoid beef even though I really like it.(#10)
If there is too much floating oil, I will not choose this dish. I avoid eating red meat, not that I dislike it, but if I see that I have a choice between chicken, turkey, or beef, then I take either turkey or chicken. I try…due to nutritional considerations. I just think it’s better for me to eat…to reduce the amount of red meat … I prefer to take more vegetables, even if the vegetables are cooked. There are things I do not love, so I will not take them. I prefer to take salads that are without mayonnaise … I avoid desserts for lunch, for example. I will leave this privilege until the afternoon … to reduce the amount of sugar and carbohydrates.(#8)
I was debating whether to eat the chicken boiled in water … or the chicken I chose. I try to make it mostly chicken boiled in water. I feel like this week, which is a week I did not meet my diet rules… so I say to myself: I’ve already ruined this week’s diet, so I kind of give up and go for something tasty.(#9)
Borekas (a filled pastry)—if I eat them, I know I’m committing a crime. Puff pastry is a kind of poison. I do not eat large quantities of it. I am aware that it is processed food, but from time to time, it seems fine to me… Willpower, willpower… It was borekas, which I don’t think have any nutritional value that can add anything to me. Sometimes, there is a dish that looks great, for example, creamy pasta, and I hold myself from taking it because it is not something I need.(#4)
I try to pick my food so that it makes more sense. I break down almost every night … (trying) without all the snacks and without all the breads. Bread is one of my biggest loves. I do not succeed. Bread breaks me (Bread is my weakness)—It kills me.(#3)
3.2. The Contextual Aspects of Eating in the Catering System Category
3.2.1. Eating in the Dining Room as a Default
I’m really looking at the options I have. I’m not one that will cook a dish for myself for tomorrow, okay? I do not have the time, I would not do it. This is the best I can get right now. I’m sure that if I could eat at home, then I would be preparing myself a healthier meal. But this is the situation at the moment, so it seems to me that it is better to eat in the dining room.(#13)
Usually, I’m quite happy with our dining room. In my opinion, it functions quite well. There is a pretty large selection of dishes. I have an occasional criticism here and there, but overall, I think it more or less meets my needs. The food in the dining room usually satisfies me. It’s my lunch almost regularly … it’s the food composition I need, and it meets my health needs.(#5)
Because there are things that I already really know how they are, what they taste like, I do not approach them at all. All sorts of things they do not know how to prepare, like whole rice. I am eager to eat it, but it is like stones. So many times I have taken it and added sauce that I know is unhealthy, so I say well, okay, but I know I did not do well. My awareness of choosing food in the dining room is very high, and it is very difficult for me to eat there.(#3)
3.2.2. The Characteristics of the Food Served
I eat every day in the dining room … it happens to me that I take food and tell myself you are putting nonsense into your body. I would choose something else if I had another alternative. There are situations like this, there are not many.(#4)
It should be aesthetic and have less fat. There are salads that have long since prepared. There are the same salads all week…the food should be more delicious, and not at crazy prices that do not fit our budget.(#3)
3.2.3. Routine
There were fries that everyone pounced on, and I did not. I did not even consider it. Even though it was a holiday yesterday, fries are not something I even consider. Yet, I still eat, so-called making a sin occasionally. But it almost never happens at lunches at work … because I am at work. I am in some routine. I put myself in some routine that there is food that is out of bounds. It’s because I force myself… That is also the law, one of the unwritten laws … Friday is the weekend, and I’ll take more. In my defense, if there were not all these rules that I have, then I would eat this delicious food, I would not eat cooked vegetables.(#9)
3.2.4. Personal Versus Public Aspects
The responsibility is only mine. I mean, the dining room can serve a type of food that for me is out of the question. I will not take it. But it is not the responsibility of the dining room. I am responsible for what I eat. I am responsible … There is no doubt that if we think it through, the kitchen of a kibbutz, as in a family, should be more attentive and more responsible for the food, the quality of the food, and the health of the public. But, in the end, the responsibility is on the person himself.(#5)
I think healthy and quality food must be in our consciousness. We have the tools to do it and that would have prevented me from all these dilemmas … I would expect all the main dishes to be home-made dishes. For example, to take out the processed food for reasons of price and health. We have a big kitchen and many workers, so it is possible to cook like at home. I would take out the amounts of oil … I had a world war over it. I do not think the dining room should serve such things. The arguments I had! It’s completely un-necessary … I was upset. They have no mandate to do that. If you think this dish is unhealthy, do not serve it.(#4)
I choose from what (the catering) gives me to choose from, so … you can ask me what I think, it’s not that I can really influence … I do not know if it (the responsibility) is 50–50 because maybe you give me all the best things in the world, and I, in the end, I will not take it. So maybe the responsibility is more on them (the catering).(#6)
I think the right to choose for an adult is necessary, but in both directions, the choice between healthy dishes and dishes that are perhaps a little less healthy … because the adult is mature and responsible for choosing what he eats.(#10)
I think you really have to treat people who do not have the consciousness of what is healthy, or they do not treat it that way. For example, even if the (blood) tests are returned with borderline blood glucose levels, then they continue to drink sweetened juice. This is a problem, educating people. I think what you can do is maybe start with the children’s meals. When young children in primary school and youth come to eat, then children will look at these things and try to make good choices. It really won’t affect me.(#8)
I do not think people should be forced to eat food they do not like or, alternatively, be deprived of food they like because it is unhealthy. It is a personal responsibility of people. I do not think the organization itself, which is supposed to provide food and please the majority of the population, should control these things…How would I feel? I would not feel so good about it, but for me, it would not be so terrible. If it were the opposite, then maybe it would have been terrible … If they had only served unhealthy food.(#9)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Main Issue | Questions | |
---|---|---|
1 | Healthy eating | What do” health” and “healthy eating” mean to you? |
2 | Food choices | How do you choose what to eat in general? What did you choose to eat in the last lunch you had in the dining room? What do you think about your choices? Did you have any hesitation about your choices? If so, please describe them. |
3 | Responsibility for diners’ healthy eating | Who do you think is responsible for healthy food choices? Please explain why. |
4 | Effective intervention strategies | What do you think about strategies such as serving only healthy foods or labeling food? How would you feel if these strategies were implemented in the dining room? Would that change your food choices? What would you expect from such an intervention program? |
Participant # | Kibbutz No. | Age | Gender | Number of Years Eating in the Dining Room | Number of Times Per Week Eating Lunch in the Dining Room |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
#1 | 1 | 22 | F | 16 | 5 |
#2 | 1 | 65 | F | 45 | 5 |
#3 | 1 | 57 | F | 38 | 4 |
#4 | 1 | 54 | F | 30 | 5 |
#5 | 1 | 80 | M | 60 | 4 |
#6 | 1 | 29 | M | 23 | 6 |
#7 | 2 | 44 | M | 23 | 5 |
#8 | 2 | 64 | F | 40 | 3 |
#9 | 2 | 35 | M | 4 | 5 |
#10 | 3 | 63 | F | 55 | 4 |
#11 | 3 | 76 | F | 55 | 5 |
#12 | 3 | 82 | M | 64 | 5 |
#13 | 2 | 37 | M | 8 | 5 |
Category | Theme | Sub-Theme | Sub-Sub Theme | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The personal context | Eating as a task | Experience-based eating | |||
Eating and emotions | |||||
Eating to satisfy physical needs | |||||
Eating according to the diner’s values | Freedom of choice | ||||
Healthy eating as a value | Perception of what is healthy/unhealthy food | Perception of healthy food as not tasty | |||
Attempts to control one’s eating | Weight loss diet | ||||
Morality—Guilt—Remorse | |||||
The contextual aspects of eating in the catering system | Eating in the dining room as a default | Pros: Convenience, fits diner’s needs Cons: Not suitable for all diners | |||
Characteristics of the food served | Availability Diversity Appearance Flavor Freshness Health and nutritional components Price | ||||
Routine | Weekdays versus weekends | ||||
Personal vs. Public | The responsibility for healthy eating | ||||
Freedom of choice |
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Katz-Shufan, O.; Simon-Tuval, T.; Shahar, D.R.; Feder-Bubis, P. Factors Involved in the Food Choices of Diners in a Kibbutz Communal Dining Room Buffet: A Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 1885. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19031885
Katz-Shufan O, Simon-Tuval T, Shahar DR, Feder-Bubis P. Factors Involved in the Food Choices of Diners in a Kibbutz Communal Dining Room Buffet: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(3):1885. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19031885
Chicago/Turabian StyleKatz-Shufan, Ofira, Tzahit Simon-Tuval, Danit R. Shahar, and Paula Feder-Bubis. 2022. "Factors Involved in the Food Choices of Diners in a Kibbutz Communal Dining Room Buffet: A Qualitative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 3: 1885. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19031885
APA StyleKatz-Shufan, O., Simon-Tuval, T., Shahar, D. R., & Feder-Bubis, P. (2022). Factors Involved in the Food Choices of Diners in a Kibbutz Communal Dining Room Buffet: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(3), 1885. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19031885