Patricia Chuey

Food and Nutrition Expert | Recipe Developer

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So, you want to create a recipe masterpiece…

June 16, 2016 By Patricia Chuey

 

Scribble Collage

…it’s not actually all about food all of the time.

As a recipe developer I’m often asked where I get my inspiration, how I get ideas.

Although there are books and online resources well worth checking out if you’re an aspiring recipe developer or food writer, much of being creative in the kitchen isn’t learned from a book. It comes not only from the many food experiences you’ve had and conversations about meal challenges for consumers but also simply from within you. The more you allow yourself the freedom to be creative, the more readily the ideas will rise to the surface.  We all have ideas. Some flow freely, some get stuck behind fear or intimidation. Some days we’re a wealth of creativity. Other days we struggle to come up with a single original thought. Artists and musicians often say their best work came after surviving their darkest or most challenging times.

Reading food magazines and blogs is a wonderful way to be inspired with gorgeous food photos and recipes. (If ever taking inspiration from an existing recipe, crediting the source is respectable, professional practice.) Over and above that, the more you take any opportunity to exercise your ‘creative muscles’ the better. Look for situations that allow your brain to wander in new directions. People often say they get their best ideas or make their most important decisions while on vacation, when their brain is relaxed. Not surprising. Unplugging is an important creativity booster. That has been a key for me.

Playing charades or improv games also encourages creativity. Balderdash is a board game in which you have to make up a definition for a real, but unfamiliar word, and then try to convince the other players that your definition is the correct one. I recently gave a group of foodies – dietitians, Home Ec teachers and farmers – the task of defining a few lesser known culinary terms. If they didn’t know the correct term, they were encouraged to make up any definition they like. One of the words was “muddler” – in the culinary world it’s a tool used by a bartender to mash fruits, spices or fresh herbs to release their flavour, such as mint leaves in a mojito. At our session, alternate definitions ranged from “when your non-cook spouse tries to make dinner” to “a beer snatcher”. A “fool”, culinary, is an English dessert in which fruit is made into a custard. Those in the group unfamiliar with the term came up with answers like “a Gr 9 Home Ec student who lies on the floor of the kitchen during class” and “a close-minded person”. Not being a test, participants were encouraged not to care or worry if they didn’t know the correct term but instead to have fun, participate and exercise their creativity in the process of coming up with a definition, real or not.

Another creativity-enhancing exercise they participated in was to draw a masterpiece from a scribble. This is an actual thing. You can google ‘make a drawing from a scribble’ from which you go on to create your own original drawing. We often do this to help pass the time when waiting during travel or appointments. It’s always good for a few laughs. And laughs always seem to release creative energy and ideas. In the exercise, 75 people were given the same scribble as pictured above on the top left. Some immediately started drawing. Some turned the page upside-down and sideways first. Some thought about it for quite a while perhaps wondering what I was up to with this. Each one of them interpreted it differently. Some very simply, some more elaborately as the examples demonstrate. All jumped in with this unfamiliar task and took the opportunity to create and think outside the box. None of the drawings were “right” or “wrong”. With this, the word definition exercise, and a couple other tasks, my goal was to send them off inspired to explore and experiment with their own original ideas in the kitchen.

I’ve had the opportunity to create hundreds of healthy recipes for clients ranging from a supermarket chain and food companies like Kraft to commodity groups like BC Cranberries and BC Tree Fruits – even a few recipes that appear on canned goods and food packaging. My best ideas have come after immersion in creativity-enhancing situations, culinary-related or not.  And, from summer vacation where I’m soon headed.

To continue creating your own culinary masterpieces, I encourage wholeheartedly and fearlessly jumping into any and all creative opportunities you come across.  Laugh a lot and free yourself knowing there is no right or wrong way to do it.

Cheers!

Filed Under: Fresh Ideas Tagged With: Balderdash game, creative food ideas, creative inspiration, creativity, exercising your creativity, food blogger, how to create recipes, laughter and creativity, make a drawing from a scribble, recipe developer, recipe development

6 Meals and 1 Snack I’ll Never Eat Again (but wish I could)

April 6, 2016 By Patricia Chuey

Leftover Meals

This is not about dietary restrictions or being unable to eat gluten.

If trendiness is what it takes to make us think about food waste reduction, this is one instance where being trendy is not only awesome, but very important.

Major awareness campaigns are underway to reduce waste and increase the likelihood of food being available for everyone on this planet we share. Love Food, Hate Waste is a terrific website from which you can glean all kinds of waste-reducing ideas – even for those of us, a surprisingly large group, who don’t believe or realize we waste food too. For example, although composting food scraps reduces garbage, it doesn’t necessarily reduce food waste. The website has cool ideas, many that consumers have shared from their own homes. A few nifty examples:

Preserve the Herb –  chop bits of fresh leftover herbs and freeze in ice cube trays for later adding to soups or other savoury dishes. Same for that bit of leftover freshly-squeezed lemon or orange juice that can be thawed quickly and will come in handy in your next homemade lemon loaf or cranberry orange muffins.

Potato Peel Crisps –  make a fibre-rich snack from the skins of the potatoes you may have otherwise tossed

Best Before Date Wisdom –  learn that “Best Before Date” is the final date on which the manufacturer guarantees the product will taste as fresh as the day it left their facility. It’s not the definitive date on which the food suddenly blows up, expires or will make you sick. But, be informed and safe about it.

Recipe tools  –  use to calculate precisely how much food to make based on the number of adults and kids eating the meal to avoid unwanted leftovers (assuming you actually don’t want them)

Followers of mine will know I am a devoted food waste reducer and wholeheartedly embrace leftovers for the creative opportunity they offer. Even seeing the local wild blackberry bushes go unpicked in the summer months disheartens me because they’re loaded with nature-made, amazing nutritional value that could easily be picked and frozen. (Thanks for that valuable lesson Mom and Dad.) A number of my food waste-reduction ideas were shared in an interview I did for Yahoo a while back.

In our home, we’re all about creative use of leftovers. Sometimes we even come up with a meal made from the remnants that’s more delicious than the original version. I recommend getting leftover food into the fridge promptly after the meal – within 1-2 hours at the most. If you won’t use the leftovers within 2-3 days of the original meal, pop them into the freezer.

To provide some culinary inspiration, here are 6 examples of meals and a snack we’ve had that although amazingly delicious and healthy, we’ll likely never be able to have in the exact same way again because they were the product of a unique mix of leftovers being available at that moment. Yes, we might come close, but they won’t be exactly the same.

  1. Lentil Vegetable Pasta Sauce: I’ve spoken of this before. It’s our Tuesday (hockey practice night) pasta meal that takes on a new form every week. The sauce underway in the red pot in the photo was a recent one where I combined cooked lentils and lean ground beef in tomato sauce as the base. Using the food processor – not all “processed” food is bad – I minced onions, garlic, a couple less-than-crisp carrots and zucchini from the fridge and random leftover cooked vegetables. Turned out deliciously.
  2. BBQ’d Pork and Veggies on Flatbread: I spread a little BBQ sauce on warm flatbread, added a small amount of leftover homemade Korean BBQ pork and grated vegetables. Drizzled it with a quickly thrown together Asian-style salad dressing of rice vinegar, ginger, garlic, lime juice and a pinch of sugar. A bit of green onion and cilantro topped it off. It tasted amazing!
  3. Leftover Grilled Fish (or Chicken) Tacos: ‘Leftover’ and ‘fish’ in the same recipe is not (yet) exactly the way to win the award for Recipe Developer of the Year. Before writing this one off as disgusting, if that fish or chicken is used the very next day in tacos together with a quick coleslaw from that cabbage in the back of the fridge needing a little love, it can be tweaked to be awesome. Add grated carrot, green onion, minced peppers, jalapenos or any fresh veggies you have on hand. Drizzle with a sauce made by whisking  a little mayo, plain Greek yogurt, lemon juice and garlic.
  4. Layered Rotini and Tomato Sauce with a Kale Garnish: Looks pretty gourmet in the center bottom of the photo collage, but it’s actually the leftover pasta and sauce transferred directly from the fridge to the plate by turning it upside-down and emptying. Although many versions with differing shapes of pasta or sauces will show up on our plates in the future, the exact combo as pictured likely won’t.
  5. Tofu (or Chicken) Fried Rice: You’ve heard me proclaim rice as the best possible leftover food before. Fried rice fans will know that leftover rice + bits of leftover cooked tofu or chicken + leftover veggies + an egg + frozen peas + soy sauce = one very tasty meal. We don’t make it that often but no two instances of fried rice here are ever the same. Some call this dish Dirty Rice.
  6. Seafood Surprise Chowder: Little bits of celery, roasted veggies and small amounts of fish or shellfish are frozen and then my hubby makes a mighty yummy chowder. Never the same twice. (Recipe)

Snack – After School Fruit Salad: Because I’m able to be a “Stay-Home-From-Workplace-Mom” (def’n: a Mom or Dad who can participate in their career mainly in the hours when the kids are at school or sleeping), I’m usually around when our son gets home from school and can get this ‘recipe’ made before the fruit passes the point of no return. If half an apple, a few grapes, strawberries or couple bites of banana return home in the lunchbox, I quickly chop them and toss with some frozen berries, a fresh kiwi or canned no-sugar-added peaches, pears or pineapple to make a fruit salad. It always gets eaten. The exact composition of the fruit salad is never the same.

This list of leftover-inspired meals and snacks could be much longer. I predict that a chain of trendy restaurants or even cooking school programs centered on food waste reduction or leftovers become popular. Maybe it’ll be my restaurant? Cookbooks on the subject already exist as do excellent campaigns to embrace so-called ugly vegetables.

I’ll remember these 6 leftover meals and 1 snack not only for their delicious taste but the small victories they represented in reducing food waste. Creative home chefs, I applaud you for celebrating leftovers and the time-savings they represent. Use them before they spoil. Let your amazing meals be a quiet example to the kids of how to respect and be grateful for access to good food.  My parents did just that and I’m grateful.  Share your creations to inspire others and let’s keep doing our part to love food while hating waste. Trendy or not.

Cheers!

Filed Under: Fresh Ideas Tagged With: #lovefoodhatewaste, creative food ideas, food waste reduction, fruit salad, ice cube tray reduces waste, leftovers, lentils, pasta sauce. homemade meals. I.K. Intelligence in the Kitchen, seafood chowder recipe

Patricia Chuey

It has been my life’s work to create peace of mind around food and health. What an absolute joy to connect with so many who have shared, done the work and now reap the benefits of an energized, healthy life!

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Patricia brings vast nutritional knowledge, quick wit and professionalism to every show. She is a pleasure to work with, is a talented dietitian and has a calming presence on and off camera…everyone should have a Patricia Chuey in their lives…we’d all be a little happier and healthier!

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I’ve had the pleasure of working with Patricia for the past 9 years conducting Health and Wealth seminars. Patricia is one of the most captivating and enjoyable speakers I know. Her subtle humour and extensive knowledge of nutrition and well-being amazes her audiences. I recommend attending her highly sought after seminars. You’ll learn the key… Read more “Rhonda Klatik”

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“Patricia was the very first mentor I ever had, and I’ve looked up to her ever since the day I walked into her office.  An extremely accomplished business woman and dietitian, Patricia’s passion for helping people succeed is truly unprecedented.  I’ve had the great fortune of learning from Patricia over the years, and can put… Read more “Tori Wesszer”

Emma Lee

Patricia Chuey was a freelance writer for Urbanbaby & Toddler magazine for 9 years. Her articles were not only accurate and timely but also engaging and well written. In readership surveys, her articles received some of the highest marks from our discerning readers.

Jeff Bohnen

Patricia came back to Intrawest for a return engagement as a guest of our Health & Safety Committee, and was just as great the second time around! Not only is she funny and engaging, but she also has an amazing ability to be a teacher, not a preacher. Her easy-to-remember, common sense approach to nutrition… Read more “Jeff Bohnen”

Ann Collette

I have had the pleasure of working with Patricia Chuey in her capacity as a dietitian, recipe developer, writer and consultant for more than 15 years. Patricia has truly distinguished herself, not only for her comprehensive knowledge of nutrition and contemporary nutrition-related issues but also her empirical knowledge of health in general – attributes that… Read more “Ann Collette”

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This was the BEST lunch and learn I have ever been to. Informative, not lecturing like this topic can sometimes be. Patricia was a very effective presenter and I found it incredibly beneficial to me. She was fantastic; informative, funny and interesting!

Deanie Foley Gillespie

Patricia developed 96 original recipes for BC Tree Fruits. In addition to providing recipe development and nutritional analysis, she also determines if recipes are suitable for low fat, heart healthy and diabetic diets. Patricia always met the challenge of creating recipes that target our numerous fruit commodities as she brings vast industry knowledge to the… Read more “Deanie Foley Gillespie”

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Patricia exudes her own joy de vivre and is always ready to roll. She is graceful and professional while sharing her knowledge and expertise with our viewers. She is someone you can relate to and look forward to seeing. Patricia “invites you in” and you want to stay. She is the perfect expert/co-host.

Karen Stark

Working with Patricia was a wonderful experience, her knowledge, experience and passion for food was very apparent. She worked on several tofu recipes for us and for our tofu cookbook that helped it become a great seller on store shelves

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