
- With Mayo Clinic nutritionists
Jennifer Nelson, M.S., R.D. and Katherine Zeratsky, R.D.
read biographyclose windowBiography of
Jennifer Nelson, M.S., R.D. and Katherine Zeratsky, R.D.
Katherine Zeratsky and Jennifer Nelson
Jennifer K. Nelson, M.S., R.D., L.D., C.N.S.D.
Jennifer Nelson is your link to a better diet. As specialty editor of the nutrition and healthy eating guide, she plays a vital role in bringing you healthy recipes and meal planning."Nutrition is one way people have direct control over the quality of their lives," she says. "I hope to translate the science of nutrition into ways that people can select and prepare great-tasting foods that help maintain health and treat disease."
A St. Paul, Minn., native, she has been with Mayo Clinic since 1978, and is director of clinical dietetics and an associate professor of nutrition at Mayo Clinic College of Medicine.
She leads clinical nutrition efforts for a staff of more than 60 clinical dietitians and nine dietetic technicians and oversees nutrition services, staffing, strategic and financial planning, and quality improvement. Nelson was co-editor of the "Mayo Clinic Diet" and the James Beard Foundation Award-winning "The New Mayo Clinic Cookbook." She has been a contributing author to and reviewer of many other Mayo Clinic books, including "Mayo Clinic Healthy Weight for EveryBody," "The Mayo Clinic Family Health Book" and "The Mayo Clinic/Williams Sonoma Cookbook." She contributes to the strategic direction of the Food & Nutrition Center, which includes creating recipes and menus, reviewing nutrition content of various articles, and providing expert answers to nutrition questions.
Katherine Zeratsky, R.D., L.D.
As a specialty editor of the nutrition and healthy eating guide, Katherine Zeratsky helps you sort through the facts and figures, the fads and the hype to learn more about nutrition and diet.A Marinette, Wis., native, she is certified in dietetics by the state of Minnesota and the American Dietetic Association. She has been with Mayo Clinic since 1999.
She's active in nutrition-related curriculum and course development in wellness nutrition at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., and nutrition related to weight management and practical applications of nutrition-related lifestyle changes.
Other areas of interest include food and nutrition for all life stages, active lifestyles and the culinary arts.
She graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, served a dietetic internship at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, and worked as a registered dietitian and health risk counselor at ThedaCare of Appleton, Wis., before joining the Mayo Clinic staff.
Latest entries
- Safe juicing and blending
May 14, 2013
- Is NEAT part of your weight-control plan?
May 1, 2013
- Exercise, hunger and weight loss
April 25, 2013
- Another look at meat consumption and mortality
April 17, 2013
- Sugar challenge: Cut the sweetness for 2 weeks
April 10, 2013
Nutrition-wise blog
-
Feb. 22, 2012
Why a picture of broccoli is worth a thousand words
By Jennifer Nelson, M.S., R.D. and Katherine Zeratsky, R.D.
Many who know me have heard me tell this story, perhaps selfishly to reassure myself that someday my kids will change their mind about a certain food.
A fellow dietitian made a salad for the evening meal nearly every night of the week. At each meal, she put a small portion of salad on her children's plates. She continued this for years even though her children never ate the salad. When her children became teens, they began helping with dinner. And what did they make? Salad. Better yet, they ate it!
We know from researchers that repeated exposure to nutritious food can increase the quantity of fruits and vegetables children eat. However, it may take upwards of 10 to 15 exposures to a new food.
Recognizing that this may be too tough a task for even the most well-intentioned parents, researchers have looked at whether pictures of fruits and vegetables can achieve the same results. And indeed evidence suggests that exposing toddlers to picture books about fruit and vegetables can increase their willingness to accept these foods into their diet.
It seems logical when you consider the successful marketing of fast food, snack foods and sugary beverages. Do you know any parents who haven't been bombarded by requests for foods their kids have seen on TV?
Why not put this technique to work for you? Give it a try with these tips:
- Read kids books with pictures of fruits, vegetables and other nutritious foods.
- Invite older kids to find dinner ideas by looking at cookbooks or food websites.
- Take kids to the grocery store (when you're not too rushed) and let them explore. Together choose a new whole food to try.
- Decorate with food. Keep fruit, vegetables and grains in attractive containers where kids can see them. Allow kids to choose these foods as snacks.
- Be patient. Don't push food on kids. Instead, put a small amount — a tablespoon — of the target food on their plates. Let them see you eating and enjoying it. Repeat, over and over again. Don't despair. Remember it might take days, months or years to see results.
Please share your stories on how you have won over your child, spouse or other loved one to a particular food.
To our children's health,
Katherine
8 comments posted
August 3, 2012 10:25 p.m.
I loved your article, especially the part that emphasizes patience. It can take many, many years for certain children. All children are different, and go at their own pace. As a former elementary school teacher, I so often hear parents act like authorities on issues when their only experience is their own children. Just as children learn to read at different ages, children acquire tastes differently. Some children learn to read on their own at 2 yrs. old, and others at 7, even though their parents exposed them to the same number of books. Likewise, some children naturally have less aversions to trying new foods and textures. I think it can be discouraging to hear people make broad, unsubstantiated comments about what worked them, because it may not work for others. Also, I hate to see parents take all the credit for their children eating vegetables simply because they used to take them to the supermarket in a sling. Give me a break! I think adding silly biased comments under your article lessens your credibility and weakens the strength of your message.
- Mom
March 18, 2012 5:54 p.m.
Let’s face it, most of our diseases we address every day come from life-style. It is easier to take a pill and eat your ice cream and candy if you are a diabetic versus exercising self control as well as taking accountability of your health. Until we develop a grass root effort in the home it will be an uphill battle trying to change the life-style of the American people. Too many people find it easier to grab a quick meal rather than eat wholesome foods that are not processed! It starts in the home!
- Russ
March 10, 2012 1:10 a.m.
Broccoli's noteworthy nutrients include vitamin C, vitamin A (mostly as beta-carotene), folic acid , calcium, and fiber. While the calcium content of one serving doesn't equal that of a glass of milk, broccoli is an important calcium source for those who don't consume dairy products. Calcium does more than build strong bones. Research shows that this mineral may play a role in the control of high blood pressure, and it may work to prevent colon cancer.
- Steven
March 1, 2012 8:27 a.m.
comment to me from my son who is now a father of a young child: "thanks to the scarcity of sugar in my childhood diet, I still have good teeth."
- irma
February 29, 2012 1:38 p.m.
I didn't so much hide vegetables as incorporate them. Kids seemed to like vegetables with cheese sauce, so I NEVER made mac and cheese without a ton of vegetables. Spaghetti? Chili? Include some corn, some French cut green beans, zucchini, whatever might be in season (or in your freezer) along with the kid favorites. Even nachos can be a healthy snack if you thin the cheese sauce with some yogurt and serve it with apple slices, baby carrots, and snap peas. Probably most importantly, you need to be happy with vegetables yourself! If you don't have kids or if they are still infants, get started now with including as many vegetables, fruits, and plant proteins (beans, tofu, etc.) as you can. You will never sell the kids on foods that Mom and Dad are obviously not enjoying either!
- helen
February 28, 2012 4:13 p.m.
Spousal inspiration is the toughest -- especially when the psychological idea of a certain food leads to refusal! My first tactic was hiding things in dips or soups or stews or sauces, but these can be unhealthy, and one can only be secret to a point -- it's really not right for marriage! So I just experiment with a given nourishing food til I find his favourite way of receiving it. Usually that means buying LITTLE veggies -- not the huge dried out, over-stored ones that are usually in the bins -- and I've discovered that if I start any dish with a truly flavourful olive oil and a little fresh garlic and pay attention to retaining a nice crispy texture -- in the traditional French or Mediterranean ways -- he'll now eat almost anything! Sometimes, I'll add a little honey or milk to tone down flavours. And I'll mix different sauted veggies into a kind of "warm salad" to keep any one flavour from boring him. It's just a matter of finding the right texture and balance of flavours.
- Mairie
February 28, 2012 4:02 p.m.
I kept my little ones in a sling while I shopped, prepared foods, and such. So they were exposed from the start! When I shopped, I let the children enjoy the beauty of the produce aisles -- some stores display the colours, shapes and textures of vegetables in the most beautiful ways! These evolved with age from awe & wonder to choosing and recipe invention. I have a little boy, who is known to beg (!) for salads! His favourite soups are made with celery and little turnips. Our teen turns the table into a work of art with beautiful, nourishing foods, often inspired by recipes designed at ballet schools. Finally, I paid attention to what I seemed to most enjoy during each child's pregnancy, and continued to share those foods -- including strong spices and flavours! -- right through infancy and childhood. The hypothesis: that tastes are cultural. The result: children who love Mexican, Thai, First Nations and East Indian flavours, even when little!
- Mairie
February 28, 2012 3:09 p.m.
Jennifer, Such a wonderful article about how exposure to different foods can affect what we eat. It's important to get the whole family interested in healthy foods, especially having them help make the meal! Thanks for the great post!
- John
Share on:


8 comments posted