Is it still healthy when you cook the vegetables in bacon fat, cover them in cheese, deep fry them, then cover them in cheese and bacon again?
Now that I've read the article... Um... There is a great lack of source data which leads me to believe they've basically added up how many kilos of vegetables a country produces/imports and divided by estimate populous. In other words, with no evidence to the contrary, they're including vegetables used in manufacturing/production of non food goods. Think of all the corn "consumed" by making biodiesel.
Sure they take the time to include a broken link where they define vegetable, but they need to also define consume. (See the biodiesel example)
You think so? My impression of the Netherlands is that the staple food is fries with mayonnaise, maybe with some broodje kroket in between. In general the diet consists of a lot of butter, white bread and sugar. To me it does not seemt surprising at all that they eat least vegetables in Europe.
Breakfast and lunch usually consist of whole grain bread with cheese or meats. The most common dinner is AVG (boiled potatoes with vegetables and meat), a pasta or a dish with rice.
Sure, fries are the most common street food, but it sure isn't as bad as you seem to think.
That's how I see it too, I can't believe that Germans eat so few veggies, all Germans I know are vegetarians or just really fans of the veggie beside the meat. Peculiar.
Don't know about the methodology, but this interestingly contradicts what "health food" culture would have you believe, esp. USA vs. Western Europe, and the relative place of countries like France.
In general, poorer and less connected to global economy means more vegetables? More affluent people people can't help the convenience of other foods? The other variable would be agriculture, and depth of living in capitalist economy including the older generations (which excludes Eastern Europe). I suspect in some places relatively "silent" and unpublicized demographics, like older people in the east, can skew the stats. I wonder who eats vegetables in the US (disclaimer, never been there) and what comes to mind is poor people outside metropolitan areas.
That Europeans, specifically those around the Mediterranean Sea, are healthier than Americans because of a greater degree of vegetal nutrition. Like any complex system, there are more factors involved, I’d wager.
Just because y’all have medicine, active lifestyles, balanced diets, less workplace stress, and reasonable portion sizes doesn’t mean anything in the face of our diet that contains enough corn and tomato to put us at eating slightly more vegetables than many of you.