I see this is an old post but...
First of all, I DO have to do all my food growing on one acre, and I live in zone 6 (West Virginia). My leasehold is probably 10 to 12 acres bur my land, like that of everyone else I know around here, is 90% steep wooded hillside. I have a one-acre clearing on the ridge.
Second I'm in strong agreement with the several people who questioned the obsession with calories. Yes, you need a certain amount of calories but you also need protein, fat, vitamins and some trace elements. Cindy Conner's book Grow a Sustainable Diet goes into this--and she's in VA, maybe zone 7.
i grow about half the food for my two person household, and I don't use the whole acre--I have a main garden that is 40 X 65 feet, and flat space for growing corn and sorghum and rotations of tomatoes (the only part that gets tilled) that is about 25 X 50 feet, and another plot with six more 12 foot beds (the main garden has 24 of these). In addition I have a chicken coop and an orchard, some persimmon trees--some wild and some grafted. The surrounding woods supply firewood and the shade is good for one crop--mushrooms.
I consider the most important staple crops to be potatoes, because they're full of nutrients (including calories), easy to store, and can be cooked so many ways. Sweet potatoes are also high calorie and very easy to store. Tomatoes are important for us, we eat a lot of spaghetti and pizza. The chickens are close to a must. I also grow onions and garlic and other alliums; hot and sweet peppers; bok choy and kale; dent corn mostly for the chickens; pole beans and sometimes dry beans; cowpeas; strawberries; lettuce, spinach and radishes; sugar snap and snowpeas; summer and winter squash; celery; swiss chard; sunflowers, for the chickens, plus I grow a few herbs and allow some wildflowers to remain in the garden (I also have a flowerbed). I have blackberries and raspberries at one end of the flat plot. I have a few apples and pears and peach trees, and have had problems with squirrels stealing the fruit. I've had no success with any kind of nuts except peanuts--I expect if I did get a crop the squirrels would take them. I also have two goumis in the orchard, partly for nitrogen fixing. Wild birds take some but my chickens don't see that interested. I use them for syrup.