Healthy Kitchens, Healthy Lives

 

20150206_20150205_Napa-Berkeley_0027
Dr. David Eisenberg with his son and daughter demonstrating healthy cooking.

I recently attended the 11th Healthy Kitchens, Healthy Lives Conference put on by the Harvard School of Public Health and the Culinary Institute of America. It was a literally delicious combination of lectures from physicians, dieticians,  chefs, and others.

20150206_20150205_Napa-Berkeley_0023
Chef Adam Busby of the Culinary Institute of America

There were 411 people registered for the course, coming from 35 states, and internationally from 29 countries. Including spouses, faculty, chefs, and exhibitors, more than 550 people attended. For those registered, 59% were physicians, 11% nutritionists, 5% nurses & nurse practitioners, 5% masters of public health, and 20% others (chefs, psychologists, physical therapists, exercise trainers, physician assistants). The majority of physicians were internal medicine and family medicine, but also pediatrics, OB/GYN, sports medicine, psychiatry, anesthesiology, cardiology, endocrinology, and surgical specialties. A diverse group, indeed.

We had lectures from top notch physicians, dieticians, chefs, and others. Many were book authors. I already made a couple of recipes from Suvir Saran autographed book.

20150206_20150205_Napa-Berkeley_0035
Dr. Eward Phillips talking about exercise.

They fed us well, with something like 350 different healthy dishes to try.

20150207_20150205_Napa-Berkeley_0054

20150206_20150205_Napa-Berkeley_0030 20150206_20150205_Napa-Berkeley_0033

20150208_20150205_Napa-Berkeley_0060

We also had a hands on kitchen session, then ate our own cooking.

20150207_20150205_Napa-Berkeley_0047
Chef Thomas Wong

20150207_20150205_Napa-Berkeley_0041

20150207_20150205_Napa-Berkeley_0048

Now the challenge is how to use all the information and get my patients to eat healthier. As a start, I’ve posted some healthy recipes on Pinterest.