Cooking up healthful chow
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Lauren Vane
When Rosa Olamendi suffered an accident three years ago, she went
into a diabetic shock and lost her eyesight for two months. She was a
size 20 and had high blood sugar, and the doctor said she had to make
a lifestyle change or she would spend the rest of her days in a
hospital bed.
Right then and there, Olamendi decided to start living healthy.
“I said, no you’re not gonna put me in the hospital,” Olamendi
recalled.
Olamendi has owned Olamendi’s restaurant in Laguna Beach for 19
years, and she insists on cooking without unnecessary fats and oils,
to make her food as healthful as she can. Now, several years after
her accident, Olamendi, 54, is a fit size 10 and proof that a
low-sugar diet can work miracles.
On Tuesday, Olamendi will share her healthy recipes by teaching a
diabetic cooking class, the first in a series sponsored by the Laguna
Beach Community Clinic.
The cooking class is part of a new program at the clinic to
educate Latinos living with diabetes. Some of the clinic’s diabetic
patients and their families will participate in the class. According
to the American Diabetic Assn., Latinos are the most likely
population group to develop pre-diabetes, a metabolic syndrome that
is a precursor to diabetes. The American Diabetic Assn. also contends
that Latinos are twice as likely to develop type II adult-onset
diabetes as are non-Latinos.
“What we’re trying to encourage our patients to do is change their
behavior and cook this way for their whole family,” said community
clinic Executive Director Ericka Waidley.
Olamendi, who was born in Veracruz, Mexico, said she wants to help
other Mexicans understand the importance of eating healthy.
“I’m part of the community, and I wanted to help my Mexican
people,” Olamendi said.
Olamendi is not diabetic, but she’s on the borderline, and her
doctor advised her to avoid starches and sugars, she said.
Olamendi has incorporated her healthy eating habits into the menu
of her restaurant. Many of the dishes, such as the chicken fajitas,
are prepared with that in mind. She cooks with olive oils and fresh
ingredients and never uses lard.
“Doing this class will make people comprehend that you cannot play
with diabetes,” Olamendi said.
Olamendi plans to talk about foods and snacks that diabetics can
prepare and how these changes can have both physical and
psychological impact, Olamendi said.
Participants will be invited to bring in some of the ingredients
they cook with and exchange those with healthier ingredients that can
be used in healthier cooking, Waidley said.
“We’re trying a new approach, and that is learning by doing,
rather than learning by teaching,” Waidley said.
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