Sunday Times

Mpho Tshukudu

Dietitian, functional-medicine practition­er and co-author of Eat Ting.

- Anna Trapido

When I was a little girl, cooking was my favourite household chore. And then at school I was good at maths and science so when I discovered that there was a discipline that covered both my areas of talent and interest I was delighted.

Even now, after all my academic training and despite the fact that I work with food and diets all day, I still love to cook. I still enjoy working with beautiful, healthy ingredient­s. I find it endlessly fascinatin­g.

When I was a child my mother often complained that I was always asking so many questions. I am still like that. It is just the way my mind works and think it is the basis of what I do with my patients. Also, I suspect that the fact that I have food allergies myself has given me empathy with my patients. I have a practical understand­ing of how difficult such problems can be to deal with at first but also the experience to know that it can be done.

My first profession­al surprise came when I was doing my community service in a rural area. I discovered that a lot of what we had been taught in university was unsuited to the people and places in which I was working. The lists of healthy foods I had learnt were unfamiliar and alienating to the majority of patients. I had to engage with the reality of people’s lives and explore ingredient­s that were available.

There was a time patients were worried about being judged if they said that they liked indigenous ingredient­s and heritage foods. They thought people would think they were oldfashion­ed. Now I see more and more patients who are wanting to use the traditiona­l food that they grew up with to improve their health.

My inspiratio­n for my book ‘Eat Ting’ grew out of wondering. When I studied functional medicine and was taught all about the ways that traditiona­l European and Asian foods could be part of disease management, it made me wonder about how African ingredient­s could fit into that model. I teamed up with writer/anthropolo­gist Anna Trapido because I wanted to interweave my understand­ing of the healthy, organic, free-range, gluten-free, low GI indigenous and traditiona­l African ingredient­s with an understand­ing of the history, sociology and anthropolo­gy of why we eat the way we do.

There are so many wonderful indigenous ingredient­s I love but if I have to pick just one I think I will cheat a little bit and say morogo. We have over 60 varieties in Southern Africa, all very high in antioxidan­ts, easy to grow, waterwise, delicious, cheap and versatile. They can be cooked in so many different ways —salads, soups, dried, fresh, crushed as powders, in baking — the possibilit­ies are endless.

There was a time patients were worried about being judged if they said that they liked indigenous ingredient­s and heritage foods.

On Women’s Day I almost always end up working as it’s an opportunit­y to give back. This year I am visiting a pre-school where the teachers have invited all the parents to come in on the holiday for a session about nutrition.

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