Practicing
MNT in the Kitchen
Today’s Dietitian
By Victoria Shanta-Retelny, RD, LD
Vol. 6 No. 6 p. 30
Imagine an office where your desk is a chopping
block, your pen is an 8-inch chef’s knife, and your nutrition
assessment plan includes an ingredient list of heart-healthy recipes.
This is a real-life scenario for many dietitians practicing medical
nutrition therapy (MNT) in the kitchen. From educating clients and
students on the DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) eating
plan to comparing restaurant portions to the USDA’s recommended
serving sizes, dietetics professionals are combining clinical practice
with culinary arts.
Whether MNT is for obesity, diabetes management,
hyperlipidemia, or hypertension, healthful eating is the first line
of defense. The challenge is to make it simple and fun. With obesity
and type 2 diabetes reaching pandemic proportions and the United
States alone having an estimated 129 million obese and overweight
adults1 and 18 million individuals with diabetes—a number
that may double by 20302 —dietetics practitioners are forced
to get creative in their efforts to facilitate nutrition change.
What better way to ignite passion and excitement for healthful food
than to demonstrate how easy it is to prepare nourishing meals?
Celebrate Food with Healthful
Cooking
Dietitians are rising to the culinary occasion. In New York City,
Jackie Newgent, RD, CDN, a culinary and nutrition communications
consultant, teaches nutrition-based cooking classes, such as Cooking
for Fitness and Superfoods: Fresh and Fabulous, at The Institute
of Culinary Education. Newgent describes her career path as “a
natural progression.” With a love of food, its parts, and
traditional roots, she knew she wanted to pursue nutrition in the
culinary world. Newgent received a Certificate of Professional Cookery
from Kendall College’s School of Culinary Arts. Becoming a
chef “was a key adjunct to an RD as it added credibility when
working with clients,” says Newgent.
While still in culinary school, Newjent taught nutrition
to the students, which “blended it all together” for
her. She recalls discovering her passion for teaching people about
healthful food preparation skills while working the American Dietetic
Association’s (ADA) “Ask the Dietitian” hotline.
Her nutrition communications training was really honed as ADA national
media spokesperson from 1998 to 2001. These days, she owns a culinary
communications business, which she describes in three tiers: “teaching
nutrition at a culinary school, publishing and writing about culinary
nutrition, and consulting to the food industry.”
Along the same lines, chef Renee Zonka, RD, CEC,
MBA, CHE, a chef instructor at The Illinois Institute of Art Culinary
School, Chicago, has an extensive dietetics, culinary, and business
background. Zonka immersed herself in the culinary world early in
her career. After eight years in clinical dietetics, she gradually
became more involved with foodservice and received much of her culinary
training on the job. After years as a self-taught chef, Zonka became
a certified executive chef through the American Culinary Federation
(ACF) and keeps up with continuing education through a variety of
culinary and dietetics-related associations.
“It is so rewarding to share the knowledge
of everyday eating without faddism,” she explains. Her passion
for culinary education led her to teaching nutrition theory as it
applies to cooking. She stresses the importance of teaching aspiring
chefs “sound, basic nutrition information so that they give
the public credible answers without making fraudulent menu claims.”
With the popularity of the culinary profession and
the masses of chefs vs. dietitians, Zonka’s classes focus
on “the normalcy of nutrition.” She arms her cooking
students with nutrition information, such as gluten-free foods for
celiac disease and tasty soy-based dishes for cancer prevention.
From beginner to advanced classes, the curriculum aims to “expand
knowledge and appreciation for wholesome food, proper cooking techniques,
and acquiring a taste for healthier cuisines,” states Zonka.
A Sense of Community
Every day, consumers are bombarded by national newsmagazines featuring
articles on fad diets and the Food Network airing a perpetual stream
of cooking shows—some healthier than others. Dietitians must
be competitive contenders for public health awareness and are managing
to make names for themselves in their communities.
Naomi Kakiuchi, RD, CD, the founder and president
of NuCulinary in Seattle, is “committed to inspiring community
and culture through cooking.” In 1998, Kakiuchi founded a
full-service culinary business on the principle of fusing cuisine
and life. With more than 20 years of experience in nutrition, foodservice
management, catering, sales, and marketing, Kakiuchi refers to herself
as a “culinary educator.” Although Kakiuchi has no formal
culinary training, her exposure to chefs over the years and sheer
enjoyment in working with food made her a master of the craft. As
a strong proponent of community outreach, she coordinates chef demonstrations
for five farmers’ markets in the Seattle area through the
Seattle Neighborhood Farmers Market Alliance.
NuCulinary’s programming focus is on keeping
the recipes simple, the mood light, and offering a general orientation
to nutrition. Kakiuchi warns, “We keep it simple so that clients
do not lose concentration.” The basic nutrition principles
she employs in her classes are to focus on the whole plate, balance
what is on the plate, and add a variety of colors. “People
find pleasure in nourishing themselves, and our philosophy is that
all foods can fit,” explains Kakiuchi. The cooking classes
range from ethnic cuisine (eg, Sushi, Dim Sum, Japanese, Chinese,
Korean, Philippine, Vietnamese, Italian, French) to cooking with
herbs, bread baking, cooking with chocolate, and wellness-centered
cooking.
The Hands-On Culinary Experience
Is hands-on culinary education really a more effective form of MNT
than traditional office visits? Yes, according to student feedback
from the Calphalon Culinary Center (CCC) in Chicago. CCC started
offering healthful culinary curriculum last year with classes like
Vegetarian 101, Total Body Wellness, and Spa Brunch. The emphasis
is on simple, healthful recipes that fall within the National Heart,
Lung, and Blood Institute’s Step I Diet (=30% total fat, 8%
to 10% saturated fat, =15% monounsaturated fat, and =10% polyunsaturated
fat; =300 milligrams cholesterol; 20 to 30 grams per day dietary
fiber).3 On close analysis of CCC’s postclass comment cards,
students continually rate the healthful cooking classes as “excellent”
and “very good.” Perhaps the most telling indicators
are exclamations such as, “Great information! I learned a
lot!” and “I can’t wait to try the recipes at
home!”
Just as in traditional MNT, where the provider
must build a partnership with the patient, in the culinary education
world, the RD-chef instructor must build a partnership with the
student. The instructor must be a source of general information,
perspective, support, and some measure of guidance3 but cannot make
the student cook healthful recipes at home if the student is not
ready or willing. Because empowering people in the kitchen is the
premise of culinary education, it is important to note that solutions
(eg, healthful recipes, cooking tips, techniques) offered by the
RD-chef instructor do not necessarily lead to the commitment needed
for behavior change. The best solution depends on the person with
the problem reaching a self-reliant landmark4 (eg, buying a healthful
cookbook, new cookware, healthful meal planning). Therefore, the
class evaluation becomes an effective way to monitor behavior change
and outcomes.
Getting Creative with Healthful
Food
The act of cooking is a creative outlet many dietitians explore.
Allison Condon, RD, is currently studying to obtain a degree in
culinary arts. For Condon, the creativity that cooking affords her
is the most rewarding aspect of the process. “Every audience,
client, or person will desire something different, and it takes
creativity to make simple foods visually inviting and taste good
at the same time.” Six years after becoming an RD, Condon’s
rationale for continuing her education in culinary arts was to “expand
her hobby of cooking into the art and craft of cuisine.” By
combining her background in nutrition with culinary arts, she hopes
to increase knowledge of different cooking methods, skills, and
presentation of food to eventually be able to teach cooking classes
and become a personal chef.
Culinary RDs seem to have a creativity gene; chef
Stephanie Green, RD, is the perfect testament to this. As founder
and president of Nutrition Studio in Phoenix, Green is a nutrition
educator who “teaches people that achieving good nutrition
can taste good, too.” Green has gone from working in clinical
dietetics as the chief research nutritionist at the Hospital of
the University of Pennsylvania General Clinical Research Center
to collaborating on cookbooks, media work with local television
stations, and writing various articles in local newspapers and magazines.
Her varied experience lends itself well to Nutrition Studio, which
offers a wide variety of nutritionally focused lectures, cooking
workshops, nutritional research, recipe and menu consulting, health
and dietary analysis, and recipe development and testing.
With classes that rotate monthly, Nutrition Studio
offers programming designed to “blend good food with good
health.” The following nutrition topics are covered: Women’s
Health, General Health & Wellness, Heart Disease, Cancer, Diabetes,
High Blood Pressure, Weight Management, Vegetarian Cooking, Cooking
with Soy, and Exploring Ancient Grains. According to the studio,
the unique aspect of the educational environment allows clients
to learn by doing in a hands-on approach in a real kitchen environment.
Clients learn according to their individual nutritional needs and
with the appropriate culinary skills. Nutrition Studio offers individual
nutrition counseling and education programs. In addition, there
is a Registered Dietitian Referral Program in place to help clients
find a dietitian who will best meet their needs.
Professional Culinary Associations
Entwined in many of the culinary RDs’ professional lives is
a strong link to professional associations, such as Food & Culinary
Professionals (FCP), a dietetic practice group of the ADA. “Not
only is it great networking,” states Kakiuchi, “it’s
a lot of fun to learn what other people are doing in the field.”
FCP is a resource for members of the American Dietetic Association
interested in the culinary arena. Its mission is to increase food
and culinary skills among ADA members, impact the public’s
nutritional status and health, and expand members’ career
opportunities. FCP offers continuing professional education credits
through participation in bimonthly teleforums, culinary symposiums
in exotic places, and international culinary adventures (Ireland
was the most recent stop in May).
The International Association of Culinary Professionals
(IACP) is another organization that caters to the advancement of
culinary education and communication. The IACP is a not-for-profit
group with global membership of nearly 4,000; it is the culinary
stomping ground of the elite in the professional food community.
Food writers, cookbook authors, chefs, and food stylists make up
the strong infrastructure of this association. The IACP is a resource
vehicle and support system for its members with the main purpose
of facilitating career success for culinary professionals. Annual
programming includes educational teleforums and regional and international
conferences for members.
The ACF has been long esteemed as “the voice
of the chef.” Founded in 1929, the ACF is the largest nonprofit
professional culinary organization in the United States. The federation’s
Web site states that it is revered in culinary circles as the first
organization to elevate chefs from service to professional status.
With a host of educational and networking opportunities for culinary
professionals, the ACF sets culinary standards and offers certification
programs and continuing education with videos, cookbooks, and technique
manuals. From exposure to world cuisines to industry trends, the
ACF also sponsors frequent presentations on a variety of subjects,
such as food labeling, nutrition, sanitation, and management.
If culinary education is where your heart is, explore
the possibilities. Enroll in cooking classes, partner with a chef,
gather information on local community food networks, and volunteer
your time. Empower yourself to take MNT to a level where food is
a dynamic source of creativity, not just a static model on your
desk. Bon appetit!
— Victoria Shanta-Retelny, RD, LD, is a
practicing dietitian at Northwestern Memorial Wellness Institute
in Chicago, a freelance food and nutrition writer, and a culinary
spokesperson.
References for this article are available upon request
by e-mailing TDeditor@gvpub.com.
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