The countertops are spotless. The floors polished. All the equipment has its place in the cabinets.
This is Peggy Hausheer’s kitchen, the place where she devised recipe after recipe for a cookbook that has helped thousands of people eat healthier.
“Don’t let the looks fool you,” Hausheer said. “This is a working kitchen.”
A couple weeks ago, Hausheer retired as executive director of Nutra-Net. Along with a team of home economists and dietitians, Hausheer helped create the non-profit organization that turns 25 years old this year.
The cookbook, called “Whiz, Zip and Zap It” has been the foundation of the organization’s mission to make cooking fun and easy and healthy for all families.
Nutra-Net’s name comes from the two fundamentals of the organization: nutrition coupled with networking.
“I really enjoyed it,” Hausheer said of her time as leader of Nutra-Net. “I loved working with people.”
Nutra-Net started when the professionals came together to develop nutrition lessons for low-income families.
She served on the Community Services League board. She saw people who received food but didn’t know how to prepare it.
They had basic ingredients to make homemade meals. But they lacked information on how to use the ingredients.
Hausheer, a home economist, and about 39 other health professional like dietitians, teachers, and nurses led classes to teach the people who were receiving food.
“We used to go out to all the food pantries, the hospitals and give these demonstrations,” she said. “We decided to develop a program that would get them engaged and involved.”
Hausheer worked tirelessly to build the organization. Now, she’s taking a break but still works once a week for Nutra-Net.
Lisa Medrow, a dietitian with the organization, is the new executive director. There’s also two other staffers who work part-time.
“I look forward to still working closely with Peggy,” Medrow said.
Nutra-Net in recent years has turned the spotlight on childhood obesity, a problem health experts say is reaching epidemic levels.
“When we first started, nutrition was a very hard sell,” Hausheer said. “No one thought there was a problem.”
In 1997, Nutra-Net published two curricula for children – “Storytime Cooks” and “Whiz, Zip, & Zap It!”
The books are easy to follow, with no more than four ingredients. “Look here, there’s fruit kabobs that a 3-year-old can do,” she said, flipping through the cookbook. The criteria for all our recipes is they have to be simple, fast, and easy to prepare using very basic foods and little equipment,” she said. “It must taste good, look good and (be) nutritious.”