YES
a balance diet is one with three or more food groups in your meal or diet. c;
Appetizers.
A food chain is more relative. A food pyramid is more empirical. The food pyramid is more useful in determining food groups and needs.
bone meal is like food for saplings, it makes trees grow to get more. Materials
Food and wine, when paired appropriately, compliment each other and make the whole meal more satisfying.
A balanced meal has food from all parts of the food pyramid in good proportions, while a snack is usually a small amount of food that is not a full fledged meal but something to keep you full for a small amount of time. A snack can be more fattening sometimes of also very healthy. It depends on the food you are snacking on.
to eat more then one of the food groups :) (: :) (:
It is! Being balanced means trying to get a majority of each food group in the meal. With your meal, you've got: Grains (rice) Meats (Chicken) Vegetables (Salad) and potentially: Oils (Salad dressing) You're just missing dairy and fruit, but it is easier and more important to try and balance your diet throughout the day or even week rather than every meal, so don't worry about trying to fit EVERYTHING in one meal, just have the missing groups in a later meal!
The larger the food group size, the more one should eat in a diet.
'Totemo ii meshi'. 'Food' in more general meaning would be 'tabemono' and you can replace it with 'meshi' (meal, food) if you want.
The National Institute of Health (NIH) and the U.S. National Library offer an excellent online tool including a tutorial. The online tool is available at http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/tutorials/diabetesmealplanning/htm/index.htm.