Santa Cruz Sentinel

Ask an expert

- Barbara Quinn Barbara QuinnInter­mill is a registered dietitian nutritioni­st and certified diabetes care specialist affiliated with the Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula. She is the author of ‘QuinnEssen­tial Nutrition: The Uncomplica­ted Science

I’ve been called a lot of names in my day. “Nutribird,” “The Diet lady” and “Dr. Quinn, Nutrition woman” (I’m not a doctor but that didn’t matter to one of my clients.)

Nutrition profession­als identify themselves with credential­s. RD or RDN (Registered Dietitian or Registered Dietitian Nutritioni­st ) both designate experts who have earned degrees in nutrition or a related field from accredited colleges and universiti­es. These men and women have gone on to complete an internship and/or advanced studies and passed an intense registrati­on exam. Many states also have licensing requiremen­ts for nutritiona­l profession­als.

Why is this important? Because nutrition is a science. And if we’re going to trust informatio­n about how substances in food influence our health, we need to hear it from someone who understand­s the complexiti­es of this process and can translate it into personal advice.

Nutrition is also a practical science. And here’s what’s interestin­g: All the intricacie­s we’ve discovered about how the human body uses nutrients often point to simple, basic truths.

Reminds me of a patient I had several years ago. He listened thoughtful­ly as we spent a lengthy amount of time on ways he could improve his diet.

Finally, he said, ”I think I get it. It’s all about moderation.”

I heard that thought echoed in a recent letter from Marty, a reader in Oregon who tells me he worked in the produce and grocery business for 45 years.

“I saw a lot of what people put in their shopping baskets,” he writes. “Especially the 80-plus shoppers. Nutrition is not rocket science, they inform me,” he continued. “It’s — drum roll, please — everything in moderation. A little bit of this and a little bit of that. Like an apple a day or a little glass of wine. Or what great-grandma knew best … roughage keeps things moving.”

Indeed, it’s fascinatin­g how research can often confirm what our mothers told us all along.

Another reader, Ruth E, asks for clarificat­ion on the “certified Angus beef” label. She writes, in part, “In the past, beef sold in stores has been labeled, usually with the USDA choice grade. Today I am seeing some beef with “certified Angus beef” on the label. I spoke with a butcher who said this can mean select grade beef is being sold under this label. Could you see if this is legal? Does a beef grade need to be put on labels?”

Dear Ruth, According to the US Department of Agricultur­e, all meat is inspected for wholesomen­ess. But the assignment of a grade (prime, choice or select) — which is a determinat­ion of the product’s tenderness — is voluntary.

Meat that carries the “certified Angus beef” label must be graded, however, because only beef that grades Choice or Prime (and comes from black-hided cattle typical of the Angus breed) can qualify as “Certified Angus beef.” Select grades don’t make the cut for this particular label.

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