What's Cooking At Home

We conducted a survey of food and nutrition professionals to find out what they are doing to promote food and cooking education to consumers.
The two most popular topics are how to read a food label and how to cook and eat more fruits and vegetables. Over 90% say they LOVE to cook at home!Here is what is cooking in their demo kitchens and classrooms:• Healthy fast meals that add variety and take the hum drum out of cooking.• Having children compare the amount of sugar in various products using the Nutrition Facts label and converting that information to teaspoons of sugar.• Focusing on cooking with whole grains and vegetables. Participants view examples of all of the whole grains found in our local stories and then take home a sample to try.• Roasted Veggies—coat bite-sized pieces in a little olive oil and roast in a single layer at 425 degrees until tips are caramelized (about 20 minutes).• Cooking tasty foods with an emphasis on fruits, vegetables, whole grain products and low-fat dairy ingredients is important for MyPlate and Dietary Guidelines messages.• We create low-fat and no-added-sugar dishes and we also teach participants how to modify their own recipes so they can cook healthier at home.• Our favorite and best received classes have included: one pot meals, vegetarian meals and quick meal ideas.• Exotic fruits and vegetables always gather their attention. Healthy stir-fry dishes teach them a way to cook a healthful vegetable-based meal very quickly.• Breakfast for Busy Families, Quick and Easy Meals for your Family, ABCs ofMealtime Fun and Veggie Recipes are constant favorites. Our county wellness program is currently conducting a Salsa Contest.• We are currently teaching Meals in Minutes, Vegetarian Cooking and Heart-Healthy Cooking classes.• For a kids’ cooking contest, we focused on low fat recipes for the American Cancer Society and made a cookbook of the winners. Demos focus on high fiber breads and low-sodium products (canned and jarred tomato products).• We are showing how to incorporate vegetables into more entrees.• We have a day where everyone brings healthy foods and the recipes for them to share.• When I do a cooking demo, I emphasize quick, easy and healthy. I also tend to emphasize the need to plan meals for the week and to buy the food. I try to showcase a food that people are hesitant about trying or they do not know how to cook (fish, whole wheat pasta, tofu, whole grains— millet, quinoa).• I simply bring in different food labels—those that span the market in terms of healthy and unhealthy food. We discuss them and then give them a rating in terms of their nutritional content.• Finding ways to substitute healthier ingredients in class participants’ favorites. This usually means converting high-fat recipes to low-fat, healthier versions.• Have samples of single-sized foods and the typical super-sized versions: cookie, bagel, muffin, french fries (can cut strips of foam rubber and stuff into fry containers), etc. Let participants guess the number of calories in each. Using an electric buffet range (single burner), demonstrate how easy it is to prepare a stir-fry dish using vegetables and poultry.
Judy Doherty, MPS, PCII

Judy Doherty, MPS, PCII discovered her love of cooking at her grandmother's side, stirring raisin oatmeal on a Saturday morning. By 15 she had her first food service job. At 18 she was accepted to the Culinary Institute of America, where she graduated second in her class, then went on to the Fachschule Richemont in Switzerland to study pastry arts and baking. A decade with Hyatt Hotels followed before she founded Food and Health Communications with a single conviction: food that is good for you should taste extraordinary.

Judy holds a Master of Professional Studies in Food Business from the Culinary Institute of America, a Bachelor of Science in Culinary Arts from Johnson and Wales University (Summa Cum Laude), two art certificates from UC Berkeley Extension, and the CIA's Pro Chef II certification. She has earned the American Culinary Federation Bronze Medal, Gold Medal, and ACF Chef of the Year award.

Today she develops every recipe on this site, shoots and styles food through her food photography and motion studio, and publishes nutrition education materials for dietitians, schools, extension offices, and health professionals through nutritioneducationstore.com. She uses the latest nutritional science and Dietary Guidelines to drive her creativity — whether that means a new twist on fajitas or Italian brownies made with toasted nuts and cooked honey. Her mission has never changed: help everyone make food that tastes as good as it is for them.

https://nutritioneducationstore.com
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Science Project: Satiety

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Vegetarian Recipe Modification Demo