Bonita & Estero Magazine

The Arts

Kids in the Kitchen

- BY CATHY C HESTNUT

Cookies aren’t the healthiest item, but they are a yummy and creative entrée into the kitchen for future cooks.

Centers for the Arts Bonita Springs has long offered culinary classes to children ages 4 to 18 during summer and school holiday breaks. And Cookonomic­s—with different themes—is a year-round kids program introducin­g them to something more exotic than cookies, preparing and tasting cultural dishes, transformi­ng fruits and veggies into decorative animals and flowers, for example. The American Classics course spans “New England to Southern comfort, TexMex to Cajun,” says youth education director Alana Nanz.

Regardless of theme, Nanz says the courses are “very popular and usually sell out. The kids love it. Those who are here all summer will try out a variety of things. Some want to try out cooking—maybe they don’t know they like cooking and find out they do,” she adds.

Learning to crack eggs, grate cheese, prepare fruits, measure, mix, blend and set the oven is all good hands-on exposure that helps kids confidentl­y maneuver in the kitchen, skills that

may help them develop healthy eating habits—controllin­g their personal menu and being the masters of their creations. It certainly teaches discipline and introduces a possible career.

And if variety is the spice of life, it’s widely recognized that dietary diversity is more healthful than eating the same things. Eating a medley of healthy foods (mostly fruits and vegetables), in fact, may reduce heart health and cancer risks, according to studies by the National Institute of Health’s National Center for Biotechnol­ogy Informatio­n.

Kalon Lucia Baquero has more than two dozen fruit trees on her Estero property and brings in fresh jackfruit, mango and starfruit for the Cookonomic­s Tropical Paradise class she teaches. “I talk

MAYBE THEY DON’T KNOW THEY LIKE COOKING AND FIND OUT THEY DO.”

—ALANA NANZ, CENTERS FOR THE ARTS BONITA SPRINGS

about how organic and local fruits have been shown to have higher vitamin and health-boosting content than fruits that have been picked while still green, refrigerat­ed and shipped all around,” explains Baquero, a fine artist and seamstress. “I talk about how smart our bodies are, that we are naturally more attracted to good-tasting fruits. The backyard fruits win every time—hands down!”

Cooking combines creativity, nutrition and science, along with soft skills. While having fun, “they also learn to work with each other—teamwork—making food together,” says Nanz. “They are learning about other countries and eating foods they haven’t tried before.

“The older ones are learning skills for life and can cook for themselves at home.”

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Students can prep such dishes as mashed potatoes, an introducto­ry kitchen skill.
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Chefs will make crepes (above), yummy cookie icing and sample dishes from other countries. The most important ingredient in any recipe is fun.
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