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Can You Get More Engaged with Your Food –
and Your Family?
“We’ve
all been led to believe that food is difficult,” said
Chef Michael Smith. But it’s not, he said. “Here’s
the thing: we’re human… and human beings cook.”
Most people know Chef Smith through his TV shows on the Food
Network, and through his five (and counting) cookbooks. Chef
Smith is also the National Sustainability Advocate for Sodexo,
which operates Food Services at the Health Sciences Centre
including inpatient meals and the cafeteria.
Chef Smith visited the Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences
Centre on October 14, and made a presentation to staff and
the public about making healthier food choices.
One of the major points he made was that getting out of touch
with cooking isn’t just a health issue, it is a social
issue too. “Fundamentally, that’s what brought
us together. As human beings, it is absolutely hard-wired
into our genetic fibre. We gather, we prepare, and we share
food. That’s what we do,” Chef Smith said.
The ironic thing is that more than ever, we consume information
about food: cookbooks, blogs, Twitter feeds, websites, magazines,
and an entire TV network devoted to food.
“We have huge amounts of food media… yet at the
same time we have fewer people than ever before cooking before.
How do you reconcile that?”
In fact, it’s not ironic, Chef Smith said. People who
no longer cook themselves are unconsciously trying to live
vicariously through food media and satisfy that genetic need.
There is also no irony in the fact that these revelations
are coming from one of Food Network’s most popular chefs.
“I’m part of the problem – and I’m
part of the solution,” he said, recognizing his role.
It is his celebrity that allows him to talk openly about
eating healthier and try to get people back into the kitchen.
It’s not an easy thing though, and Chef Smith said that
even he has his limits when it comes to getting people to
change their lifestyles.
“I recognize that I can stand here on my soapbox all
day long, throw facts and figures at you, tell funny stories,
and you’ll sit here and nod and be entertained. And
then you’ll go home and go right back to your ways.
I know that,” he said.
Chef Smith challenged them to change just one thing, and
other things will fall into place.
“Really, what I’m asking you to do is just get
engaged. In your own way, get engaged. That’s where
it has to begin; there isn’t any other first step. Any
challenge that we face as a people, it always begins with
‘get engaged’.”
That means making the right choices for you and your family
– especially for your kids who rely on you for their
health. He points to how on his show, Chef at Home, he encourages
his son Gabe to try everything. It’s not as easy as
it looks though.
“I want to assure you that my son is not a nutritional
prodigy. He’s nine years old – he benefits heavily
from editing,” he said.
The bottom line though is that we can all do something to
make changes in our “sphere of influence”, and
let home cooking make us healthier physically and socially.
“We need to get a healthier relationship with our food,”
Chef Smith said. “We’ve lost so much tradition.”
::
Chef Michael Smith: Cheap Food is Killing Us ::
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