SOME people cannot travel without Advil or a neck pillow. Dr. David M.
Eisenberg, an associate professor at the Harvard Medical School and the
Harvard School of Public Health, feels incomplete without his beloved
paring knife and eight-inch Wüsthof cleaver.
He was wielding both with sweaty zeal the other day on the dais of the Culinary Institute of America at Greystone,
demonstrating a stir-fry with perfectly browned shiitake mushrooms and a
heavy dose of sake to the 400 or so pediatricians, endocrinologists,
dietitians and other health practitioners who were spending three and a
half days in the Napa Valley learning how to cook. “This isn’t neurosurgery,”
Dr. Eisenberg said as he whacked a garlic clove with the cleaver. “This
is hearty, affordable, cravenly delicious food.”
The son of a Brooklyn baker, Dr. Eisenberg is the founder and chief officiant of “Healthy Kitchens/Healthy Lives,”
an “‘interfaith marriage,” as he calls it, among physicians, public
health researchers and distinguished chefs that seeks to tear down the
firewall between “healthy” and “ crave-able” cuisine. Although
physicians are on the front lines of the nation’s diabetes and obesity crises, many graduate from medical school with little knowledge of nutrition,
let alone cooking. It is a deficiency that is becoming increasingly
apparent as the grim statistics climb. (By 2050, for example, as many as
1 in 3 adults will develop diabetes if current trends continue.)
To Dr. Eisenberg, flavor is a health issue. Now in its eighth year, the
sold-out event is in the vanguard of a major shift in attitude among a
young generation of medical professionals who grew up with farmers’
markets. Their ranks include students at the Baylor College of Medicine
in Houston, who have hired a chef to teach cooking skills, and a doctor
in suburban Chicago who was so inspired by “Healthy Kitchens/Healthy
Lives” that he went home and installed a demonstration kitchen in his
medical office.
Doctors like Jim Fox, a 51-year-old cardiologist from Traverse City,
Mich., exchanged stethoscopes for chefs’ toques to immerse themselves in
the fine arts of “Mastering Healthy Marinades and Grilling Techniques”
and “Healthy Cooking With Nuts and Legumes.”
“I want to help my patients not need my services,” Dr. Fox said as he
chopped rosemary for a mustard-crusted seared lamb loin. “I’d love to be
put out of work.”
In a place that celebrates perfect pairings (say, a riesling with a
spicy chicken Madras), the combination of James Beard Award-winning
chefs with heavy guns from the Harvard School of Public Health,
including Dr. Walter Willett, an epidemiologist and international
authority on the health consequences of food choices, could at times
feel surreal.
A sold-out session called “Wine: The Latest Research on the Health Impacts Plus a Guided Tasting,” taught by John Buechsenstein, a winemaker, and Eric B. Rimm,
a cardiovascular epidemiologist from Harvard, preceded a tasting of a
Washington State gewürztraminer and other wines accompanied by a geeky
PowerPoint presentation. It detailed an experiment in which mice with
lousy diets were given the equivalent of 8 to 10 bottles of wine a day (they did as well as regular mice). Cheers!
At a knife-skills class, Dr. Kriston J. Kent, a facial plastic surgeon
from Naples, Fla., learned to make incisions in potatoes and celery.
“Easier than avoiding important blood vessels,” he said. He is now
pursuing a public health degree. “The emphasis shouldn’t all be on the
knife,” he said of his practice. “How you look has a lot to do with how
you feel.”
Satiety (rhymes with anxiety) was the mantra of the $1,200 conclave,
which serves as continuing medical education despite pleasures like
chocolate-dipped apricots (a healthy snack) and recipes by well-known
chefs like Suvir Saran,
late of the restaurant Devi in New York. Mr. Saran prepared guacamole
with toasted cumin seeds, a touch he called “the Indian version of bacon
bits.”
“I think they’re hungry,” he said of the medical crowd. “Many doctors
treat food as a clinical procedure rather than the sensual act it ought
to be.”
For Dr. Eisenberg, 56, a passionate cook who spent weekends as a child
filling cream puffs and sprinkling cinnamon and nuts on rugelach in his
father’s bakery, deprivation in the form of low-fat diets and bland
overcooked vegetables is an enemy of doctors and patients. “For years
we’ve told people ‘Don’t eat that’ or ‘Here’s your problem,’ ” he said
of the physicians’ party line. “Sometimes,” he added of his own
thrice-yearly yearning for steak, “you have to feed your inner jerk.”
His commitment to healthy food began when his father, a cake artist who
“always smelled like a cross between a cinnamon stick and a whiff of Old
Spice,” died of a heart attack
when Dr. Eisenberg was 10. An expert on integrative medicine, Dr.
Eisenberg was one of the first United States medical exchange students
to the People’s Republic of China. He started “Healthy Kitchens/Healthy
Lives” in partnership with the Culinary Institute and the Harvard School
of Public Health, based on the radical notion that if doctors could
learn to channel their inner Julia Child (sans butter), they could serve
as role models and cheerleaders for their patients.
It’s not about ego. Over the years, research has shown that doctors who
practice healthful behaviors like exercising, using sunscreen and not
smoking have a greater likelihood of advising patients to do the same. A
study last month in the journal Obesity reported that overweight
doctors may be less prone than other physicians to discuss diet and
exercise with their patients. “We’re all human,” said Dr. Matt Everett, a
now-gangly 55-year-old physician from Marysville, Ohio, who was
inspired to lose weight after seeing patients in their 40s and 50s
having strokes and heart attacks. “We all struggle with the same
things.”
ARTICLE SOURCE:WWW.NEWSPAMA.COM
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