Herald on Sunday

Hemp protein cookies on menu once laws change

Emily Miazga says the plant is ‘powerfully nutritious’.

- By Lee Umbers

Three-time Coast to Coast winner and nutritioni­st Emily Miazga found a recipe for success with her Em’s Power Cookies.

Now the multisport champion and West Coast business owner is aiming to serve up a new treat — hemp protein cookies.

With hemp having been approved for use as food in Australia, and New Zealand expected to follow later this year, Miazga plans to launch batches on both sides of the Tasman.

She is talking to New Zealand and Australian retailers about stocking shelves with hemp protein cookies after legislatio­n goes through here. Response had been “positive and supportive”, she said.

Miazga, who has a Master of Science in dietetics and nutrition, said hemp is a “powerfully nutritious superfood”.

It is naturally gluten-free, vegan, low in sugar, high in protein and fibre, has a number of vitamins and minerals and a correct balance of omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids, she said.

And Miazga said customers shouldn’t be confused between hemp used in making foods and other varieties of cannabis which have higher concentrat­ions of the mindalteri­ng ingredient THC.

She wanted to “put a really clear message out there that hemp is a superfood, it’s like a vegetable”. Hemp food “has nothing to do with cannabis [as a drug]”.

It is not possible to get a psychoacti­ve effect from low THC hemp-seed foods, a Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) spokespers­on said.

Food safety authoritie­s here are looking to follow Australia to allow low-THC hemp seed to be used in food by changing regulation­s under the Food Act, the Misuse of Drugs Act and the Medicines Act.

“It is anticipate­d that, subject to Cabinet agreement, amendments to Food Regulation­s 2015 and the Misuse of Drugs (Industrial Hemp) Regulation­s 2006 will be in place by the end of the year,” the MPI spokespers­on said.

Miazga said hemp is a pestresist­ant, environmen­tally friendly crop and can be used for multiple purposes including food, fibre and clothing.

It offered an economic opportunit­y and could create new jobs. “It’s a pretty big industry world wide, and New Zealand can certainly be a big winner in it.”

Miazga, 44, first started baking nutritious cookies as a “sporty kid” growing up in Saskatchew­an, Canada.

“I called them my power cookies because they just gave me power and helped to energise me.”

She went to university in Minnesota on a track and cross-country scholarshi­p and practised as a registered dietitian in Oregon before setting off to travel in 2002 and discoverin­g multisport racing.

In 2004 she entered the Coast to Coast, a 243km run, cycle and kayak from the west coast to the east coast of the South Island. She went on to

become first woman home in 2006, 2008 and 2009.

Miazga showed her gratitude to Kiwis whose homes she stayed at doing her initial race by baking them cookies, which they so enjoyed they suggested she should start selling them.

Determinin­g to stay and “immerse myself in the beautiful nature wonder of New Zealand”, she started Em’s Power Cookies in 2004.

She used her cookies as a tasty boost for her Coast to Coast races. “You have to fuel yourself to get through 13 hours of gruelling racing.”

Other competitor­s started using the energy snacks,

Miazga said.

Em’s Power Cookies has sponsored the Coast to Coast since 2007, she said.

The sustained-energy cookies are sports nutrition products. The planned hemp protein cookies will also be aimed at customers who are “into clean eating and . . . ethical foods”.

Miazga no longer races but having added 4000-5000 native trees to her 32-acre property north of Westport, she keeps fit “scrub cutting and tree planting”.

Drug Free Sport New Zealand chief executive Nick Paterson said hemp prospectiv­ely being used in food or food products here was “new ground”.

“Natural and synthetic cannabinoi­ds are on the [World Anti-Doping Agency’s] Prohibited List and are prohibited in-competitio­n,” Paterson said.

A Carboxy-THC level above 150ng/ml in urine may result in an anti-doping rule violation or “positive test”.

Drug Free Sport New Zealand was not able to say what quantity of hemp potentiall­y allowed to be sold here as food would need to be consumed before an athlete might return a sample above the permitted threshold.

“Ultimately the responsibi­lity lies with the athlete as to what is in their system, but I would note that this is new ground, obviously, and is not yet allowed in NZ.”

“Hemp is a superfood, it’s like a vegetable.” Emily Miazga

 ??  ?? Emily Miazga has plans for hemp protein cookies once the plant is approved for use as food here.
Emily Miazga has plans for hemp protein cookies once the plant is approved for use as food here.
 ?? Photo / Supplied ??
Photo / Supplied

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