Eating together - even if it's just occasionally - could improve your emotional wellbeing, diet and could also help develop even the fussiest of taste buds. But it's not always easy - especially ...
For thousands of years, humans have come together in small group to feast on food. Why is it important – and why do we still continue the tradition? It's a peculiarly human universal: we like to ...
Less than half of families eat together at mealtimes, new research has found. Research by Readly, a digital magazine and newspaper app, found that only 43 per cent of families sit down and eat ...
The study, published in the journal Couple and Family Psychology: Research and Practice, discovered that families who ate together more often during the pandemic also had more positive ...
Study: How COVID-19 Expanded the Family Dinner Table: Greater Frequency Linked With Improved Quality and New Ways of Eating Together. Image Credit: Josep Suria/Shutterstock.com The study is ...
For example, joining clubs or activities often leads to people eating food together afterward. When you do have to eat alone, Baum recommends engaging in non-technological activities at the table ...