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HEIDI SNYDER, 46, of Port Townsend, Wash., is a certified nutrition consultant and a holistic health educator. She is fabulously versed in both the constituents and the wholeness of food, as I rediscovered when we both attended the Society of Food Addiction Professionals conference recently in Houston. Before we parted on Sunday, I asked her to play my typical short-question interview game, in which the questions — and, by my request, the answers — are 10 words or less. Remember, please: No counting. It’s a goal, not a rule.
Something you wanted to be when you grew up: “Magician, teacher, author.”
Favorite dish: “Some kind of delicious soup.”
What kind? “Homemade, with fresh, seasonal ingredients.”
A morsel of eating wisdom: “Eat real food, chew it well, enjoy every bite.”
An encouraging sign in American nutrition: “An increase in community gardens, and that nutrition is in the news. Jamie Oliver is an encouraging sign.”
A discouraging one: “The infiltration of Monsanto into agriculture and nutrition policy.”
A voice on nutrition whom you follow: “Dr. Elizabeth Lipski, a digestive expert and nutrition pioneer.”
A voice on food policy you admire: “The Institute for Functional Medicine.”
One thing you would change in the food system: “Refined and fast food’s dominance.”
Sweet or savory: “Definitely savory.”
Salt or pepper: “Unrefined sea salt.”
Whole or organic: “I’d say whole, because organic doesn’t always mean whole.”
Portion size or type of ingredients: “Quality of ingredients.”
What do you wish everyone would get right: 1) "Question blind consumerism." 2) “Read ingredient labels.” 3) “Use your turn signals."
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