The Progress of Invention in the Nineteenth Century. by Edward W. Byrn
CHAPTER XIX.
825 words | Chapter 66
FOOD AND DRINK.
THE NATURE OF FOOD--THE ROLLER MILL--THE MIDDLINGS PURIFIER--
CULINARY UTENSILS--BREAD MACHINERY--DAIRY APPLIANCES--CENTRIFUGAL
MILK SKIMMER--THE CANNING INDUSTRY--STERILIZATION--BUTCHERING AND
DRESSING MEATS--OLEOMARGARINE--MANUFACTURE OF SUGAR--THE VACUUM
PAN--CENTRIFUGAL FILTER--MODERN DIETETICS AND PATENTED FOODS.
If called upon to name the most important of all factors of human
existence, that which underlies and sustains all others, even to life
itself, everyone must agree that it is _food_. A remarkable fact in this
connection is that all animal life lives and thrives by eating some
other thing that is or has been alive, or is the product of organic
growth. The vegetarian may pride himself upon his higher ideals of
living, but after all his fruit, vegetables, and cereals belong to the
great category of living organisms, and are to a certain extent sentient
and conscious, for even the plant will turn to the sun. The beasts of
the field and fowls of the air live by preying upon other weaker animals
and birds, these upon plants and grasses, and the plants and grasses
upon the decaying mosses and organic mould of the soil, and the mosses
upon still lower organisms. The big fish of the sea eat the little fish,
the little fish the small fry, and these in turn live upon worms and
animalcula, and so on all the way down to protoplasm. Omniverous man, in
spite of his boasted civilization and enlightment, not only eats them
all, flesh, fowl, fish, grain and plants, but lives exclusively upon
them. But he can _only_ live on that which has been produced by the
mysterious agency of life, and this furnishes a significant suggestion
for the philosopher, for it may be that life itself is only an
accumulated active power or unitary force regenerated in some
metamorphic way from vital force stored up in the bacteria of organic
food, and necessarily connected therewith in an endless chain of
reproductions, and if this be true, the hope of the scientist as to the
synthesis of food from its elements must ever remain a philosophic
dream, because the scientist cannot create a bacterium.
It has been said that when a man eats meat he thinks meat, and when he
eats bread he thinks bread, and when he eats fruit he thinks fruit. It
is not clear that the quality or character of man’s food is so closely
correlated to his thought, but that it has its influence cannot be
doubted. It would be safer to say, however, that when a man eats meat he
acts meat, and when he eats bread he acts bread, for the muscular energy
and aggressive potentiality appear to be much more closely related to
the quality of his food than are his thoughts. May it not be that the
powerful achievement of the British Empire was directly related to its
roast beef? Is not the listless apathy of the Chinese due to a diet of
rice? Is not the dominant and masterful power of the lion or the eagle
related to a carniverous diet, and the mild and placid temper of the ox
the reflex expression of his vegetable food? It is quite true that our
potentialities are largely represented by what we eat, and our food
therefore becomes a most interesting topic, not only by virtue of its
indispensable quality, but by reason also of the possibilities of
development in the betterment and elevation of the human race.
From the earliest times even down to the present day man’s food has been
the same--flesh, fish, cereals, fruits and vegetables. The development
of the present century has not extended this category, but it has been
directed to an increase in the supply, an improvement in quality, the
preservation against decay and waste, and its intelligent selection and
adaptation to the special needs of the body. Progress manifests itself
in the great field of agriculture, in improved processes and machines
for milling; in butchering, packing and handling meats; in preserving
and drying fruits; in the preparation of canned goods, in dairy
appliances, in cake and cracker machines; in the manufacture of sugar;
in the great advance in cookery; in the science of dietetics, and in
thousands of minor industries.
In agriculture the raising of grain has extended in the Nineteenth
Century to enormous proportions. More than ten thousand patents for
plows, as many for reapers, and a proportionate number of planters,
cultivators, threshers, and other implements and tools represent the
extent to which inventive genius has been directed to the increase of
the yield in the harvest field.
This yield in the United States for the year 1898 was:
Corn 1,924,184,660 bushels
Wheat 675,148,705 bushels
Oats 730,906,643 bushels
Rye 25,657,522 bushels
Barley 55,792,257 bushels
Buckwheat 11,721,927 bushels
Potatoes 192,306,338 bushels
[Illustration: FIG. 164.--ROLLER PROCESS OF MAKING FLOUR, WEGMANN’S
PATENT.]
For converting the grain into flour, the inventors of the Nineteenth
Century have made revolutionary changes. Milling processes within the
last twenty-five years have been completely transformed by the
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