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Alice Giusto

Based in Beijing, China

  • Certified Health Coach and Founder of Well Being Nourish
  • An expert in Healthy Lifestyle, Lifestyle Improvements, Detox, Energy Breakdown, Dietary Counseling
  • Member of the American Association of Drugless Practitioners (AADP)

 

  • Certified Health Coach and Founder of Well Being Nourish
  • An expert in Healthy Lifestyle, Lifestyle Improvements, Detox, Energy Breakdown, Dietary Counseling
  • Member of the American Association of Drugless Practitioners (AADP)

 

Alice GIUSTO is a Certified Health Coach based in Beijing and Founder of wellbeingnourish.com. As a Health Coach, she creates a supportive environment that will motivate and enable her clients to achieve their current and future health goals.

She has studied the major dietary theories and use practical lifestyle coaching methods to guide her clients in discovering which approach works best for them. Her main aim is to educate her clients on how to improve their health and well-being through food and lifestyle modifications. Instead of creating lists of restrictions and good and bad foods, she coaches her clients to create a happy, healthy life in a way that is flexible, fun and free of denial and discipline.

Giusto received her training at the Institute for Integrative Nutrition-New York (IIN) and is a member of the American Association of Drugless Practitioners (AADP). She has obtained Continuing Education from Venice University, Beijing Capital Normal University, Taipei University, Peking University and has been living in China for the past 7 years. Giusto leads regular talks and workshops on nutrition and offers Individual and Group Health & Nutrition Coaching, including an Ayi Healthy Cooking Program.

She also co-leads the activities of Slow Food Beijing and enjoys to bring her clients out of the town for organic farm tours during the good seasons.

Giusto speaks English, Chinese, Italian, and is able to deliver speeches bilingually.

Italian native Alice Giusto is a certified health coach and holistic nutrition consultant living and working in Beijing, China. Her company, Well Being Nourish, serves foreigners and locals alike in Beijing, as well as clients around the world. We caught up with her in February to find out what the state of buying not only organics, but healthful and safe food is like in the capital of the People’s Republic of China.

Organic food sales are on the rise in China, following years of scandals involving the safety of the food supply. It’s a burgeoning market, and PLMA hosts an annual private label food show in Shanghai.

Alice faces several challenges in eating well and in serving her customers, but we found that ultimately, a consumer in Beijing is able to find the goods he or she seeks, though it is obvious there is room for more products and outlets for purchasing those products there.

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Q: Alice, how did you come into this line of work? Were you a health coach before moving to China?

A: I arrived here in China in 2006 to study Chinese, and I lived here in Beijing for six months. Before I realized it, I gained six kilos and once back home, they asked me if I was the one who had eaten the cute Alice while in China. I couldn’t believe it: I was a vegetarian, how could it be possible I gained so much, in such a short amount of time? The answer was glutamate. And a lot of jiaozi & baozi [Chinese dumplings and buns] of course.

When I came back here after [a] few months, I said to myself that couldn’t happen again. Moreover, since I had skin cancer when I was only 21, my diet changed drastically. I was treated by an amazing doctor, who taught me a lot about the healing properties of food, and I started to follow a vegan diet first (for two years) and a vegetarian diet later (still on it). I decided I could not throw [out] all my efforts like this, and I started to become more curious about what China could have to offer to me, if I wanted to stay healthy.

I found myself going around and checking every corner in order to find some good food that I could eat. Somebody said I was driven by my passion, but I like to call it survival. That passion/survival flow hasn’t left me since, and at a certain point I decided I wanted to know more about food – that’s why I got enrolled at the Institute for Integrative Nutrition-NY. I’ve been trained on more than 100 different diets and now I work on individuals (mostly women) and families who want to reach their health goals and feel more energised. In a city like Beijing, it is indeed very difficult to remain healthy. Especially for expat families, who often have a Chinese maid (ayi in Chinese) making only Chinese food and who most of the time prefers quantity over quality.

My goal is to educate my clients on how to make healthier choices for themselves and their loved ones. That’s why I developed the “Maid Healthy Cooking Program,” which is becoming quite popular.

This is my 6th year in China (cannot believe it myself!) and I hope I’m going to bring something innovative and beneficial to the local community.

Q: Alice, where do you buy your food in Beijing? Conventional Chinese supermarkets, specialty stores for foreigners, fruit stands, farmer markets, discount retailers?Screen Shot 2014-04-11 at 4.13.17 PM

A: I have to say that since I’ve been here for six years now, I started to miss my Italian style diet after a while, so now I’m cooking a lot of western food at home, and when I feel I want some Chinese, I just go out and grab some. I like to cook and experiment a lot when I have time, so when I go shopping my list is usually divided into veggie, meat (my boyfriend needs to eat as well) and imported products. We are pretty lucky since we live in the city centre, close to Sanlitun [an area in Beijing containing many international stores and the Embassies], so this area has almost everything we need. Close to our place there is a market called Sanyuanli, pretty famous among foreigners. Here you can find veggies, fruit, fresh meat & fish, and there are also some small stores nearby where you can find imported products, such as passion fruit puree or 100% pomegranate juice. I usually go there shopping during the weekend, because I know the quality of the products is good then (a lot of local and international restaurants purchase here too) and it is also convenient: no need to run from one place to another. But it happens sometimes I need something more specific (let’s say vanilla extract for my baking) and that’s when Jenny Lou’s or April Gourmet can save your life! These chain stores are the so-called “expat saver.” Here everything cost the double of the normal stores, but you can find products from all over the world –and your muffin will have their deserved vanilla flavor.

For more info on Sanyuanli, you can check my post on it at my site.

Q: Because China does have a reputation for unsafe food supplies, I would assume it to be a challenge on some levels. Or is that a fallacy?

A: Food safety is a big issue here, due to the scandals that happened in the last years. Even though China got a new Food Safety Law back in 2009, I personally think it still has a long path to go. It is very important to say that Chinese people are also becoming more conscious about what they eat. They start asking questions and want to know more about what they purchase in the supermarket. The government is conscious of that and introduced some new regulation about food safety, which proves the interest of improving the current situation.

Because I co-lead the Slow Food Chapter here in Beijing, promoting good, fair and clean food, I can say that we have many requests to join and have attracted a lot of interest from the local population, who want to know more about the movement and the activities we are running in the city, all at no profit. I think the Slow Food Network is a good way to put in touch the many local farmers that are present in the surrounding area of Beijing with the local citizens, who otherwise would not know about this great and new way of shopping they have just to their next door.

Q: What are the farmers markets like in terms of organics – can you trust them, is there a certification process, and how do you know? I understand that old methods of farming are still common in China. Is spraying also common, however?

A: Thanks to my connection with Slow Food, I came in touch with some local farmers who do not use pesticides and grow their products organically.

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Unfortunately, since the “organic label” is very expensive and the small farmers cannot afford to get it. It is quite impossible for them to prove the “organic” method of farming they use. That’s why they are involved in the Beijing Farmer’s Market, which promotes them on a weekly basis in different areas of the city. They are also in touch with Slow Food. We help them to get connected with the citizens, organizing small events and activities there, such as creating fruit/veggie events, or Farmer’s Day. In this way people can go there, taste their food and see with their own eyes what these farmers really use, or don’t use, in growing their foods. And of course, then start purchasing from them. Many of these farmers have their own “club,” so you are required to buy a six month to one year membership card, and you get a weekly delivery of products to your home. These farmers usually run a small family business, and most of the time they cannot afford full time employees, so they rely on summer workers. Life is hard for them, since they are not well structured and even delivery can be difficult to deal with, if the food purchase is not worthy in terms of order size, because farms are really far from city centre.

This is also the method used by the few CSAs (Community Supported Agriculture) who have arisen in the last two years. It is asked that the customer share the farming risks with the farmer, by making a payment in advance. I need to say both of these new farming ventures are getting a warm welcome among citizens, both foreigners, and more and more, the Chinese.

Recently I‘ve been approached by some farmers who have achieved the official organic label . Even if I do not check their farm in person, I realize they have a big structure behind them. One such farm delivers products every day from Yunnan province, and has a sales force of 40 people only in Beijing! It is therefore easier for them to purchase the officially recognized organic label than it is for a single farmer. For this reason, their products are even more expensive that the ones sold by the normal farmers.

Q: How do you know for sure what you are buying? Do you have a relationship with any of the farmers you buy food from? How can you know what you will get?

A: It is simple: you cannot. Unless you know the farmer – and the farm… where you get the food from.

I am lucky because, thanks to Slow Food, I know many farmers and I can visit them and see how they grow their product, so I am sure that if I buy from them, I’ll get good food.

And that’s the whole point of Slow Food here: building trust. Unfortunately, in a country like this, where corruption is still very common on every level of the society, we still have a lot of work to do. And even if I see every day a new farm that calls itself “organic” I still prefer to check with my eyes before believing everything they tell me. It is very sad, but since Chinese are very good business people, and they have learned just how much money you can make in the organic market, I cannot guarantee they will always follow the rules.

Q: What do you look for at each of the stores you shop in? For example, produce in one or two places, dairy in another place, meat in another? Since you don’t eat dairy or meat, where would you go if you did? 

A: As I mentioned, when I go for the veggies, I get some from the farmers I know, or from a local market close to my house. As for the imported food, I always go to April Gourmet/Jenny’s Lou, who are focused on international stuff. For meat, my boyfriend relies on a German store who raise their own animals, in Shandong province, according to EU [European Union] standards: very costly, but worth every cent, he says. It is called Schindler.

Q: Is there a certification symbol in China for organics on packaged goods? What about declaration of GMO ingredients on packaged goods? I did read China has laws stating GMO (genetically modified) foods must be labelled as such. We don’t even have that law in the US, sadly.

A: Yes, there is a organic certification [in green, see previous page], and also a “conversion to organic” [in brown] label. I personally run into the green one may times, but never into the brown one. You can find these labelled products in many high-end supermarkets, located mostly in the residential area, where a lot of families live, and the products are quite costly… especially fruit and vegetables. I’ve never seen the GMO label on food – but I’ll look for it!

Q: What is the general availability of processed organic foods (frozen, cheese, canned, boxed cereals, flours, cookies, snack bars, nut milks, soups, spices, refrigerated items, etc.) Are processed foods easily found in the better supermarkets and local places like Jenny Lou’s? Say a mother wants to feed her child organic oat cereal from a box with organic almond milk and include organic snack chips in his bag lunch for school: are those kinds of items available? Organic applesauce?

A: From what I see during my everyday shopping and my research activity, organic products are still at the start point, so it is not possible to have a kid “100% grown organically”. You can now find a quite limited amount of organic products, and they include mostly fresh vegetables, some fruit, one brand of milk and yogurt and a few fresh juices. What consumers do now – if they want good quality products- is looking for imported products. Let’s say I’m a mum who wants to grow my kids with good food, I’ll look for Swiss milk, US (fortified or not) snacks, multivitamin juices from Australia, Canadian maple syrup, and so on. And I’ll purchase fresh organic vegetables, some meat (chicken and eggs, and goose mostly – since they have a lower management cost than pigs and beefs) and fruit from the farms that have them, or from the big chains where I can find these foods.

I am not sure if you know it, but: Walmart is one of the first who started purchasing from farmers fresh vegetables and got “organic” labelled food in the Chinese stores – making a lot of money out of it!

Q: Walmart sells organics in the U.S. as well. Are organic processed foods available labeled in Chinese for Chinese consumers, or only via import and in English at the specialty/foreign markets?

A: From my personal experience, I would say that when I find an organic product, 90% of the time I find both Chinese and English language on it. Anyway, the places where you can find organic labelled food now are very limited: or the big chains (like Walmart) or the imported foods’ stores and markets – that’s why you also find English language on the food products.

Q: Are American brands accepted in China?

A: I personally don’t buy a lot of them, but from what I see in the stores (always talking about the imported goods stores of course), every food category is well represented by some US brands. I notice an increased number of Chinese customers in the stores where before only foreigners used to go; this means they are starting to buy imported food too.

Originally by Dena Rash, Source: March 2013 Newsletter from Organic Foods International LLC 

MG_9063Nutritionist Alice Giusto shows to families how to have their ayis cook the healthy food at home.

Alice Giusto,营养师。意大利威尼斯人,9年前患皮肤癌,康复后开始关注营养学,完全改变了饮食习惯。在纽约综合营养学校(Institute for Integrative Nutrition) 学习了营养学,健康指导和预防保健理论,完成了专业健康教练的培训。现居北京,是专业的综合营养师(Integrative Nutrition Consultant),健康教练(Health Coach),和阿姨健康烹调培训师。今年9月将在北京大学传播学院攻读博士学位,研究食品安全传播(Food Risk Communication)。

采访爸爸 AJ

我和太太工作都很忙,周末愿意带孩子出去玩,很少做饭。很多年都是阿姨做什么我们吃什么。没什么计划。如果不爱吃,就不吃,某种程度上,是阿姨训练了我们,而不是我们教阿姨。我以前也试着教阿姨一些西餐,但她习惯做自己拿手的,花样也不多。

Alice 中文很好,态度也温和。她不是简单地命令阿姨,而是耐心地讲解,这让阿姨心里舒服,也学习了很多食品知识,打个好基础。Alice 手把手地教阿姨尝试了很多新菜谱,做过一遍,阿姨记得牢,也更有信心自己动手。阿姨还学会了提前计划一周的菜谱。我们现在知道哪天会吃牛肉,哪天会吃鸡肉。孩子们习惯了固定的一天会有面条吃,他们很兴奋,总是盼着。

阿姨不想花钱买有机食物。她从小习惯省钱过日子,现在就想为这个家庭省钱。我一方面感激,一方面很想说服她,我愿意买质量更好更有营养的食物。阿姨不太理解也不愿意做。她也不知道去哪里买。微博网络上很多人说有机食物不见得有保障,各种标准不一,让人很为难。

Alice是专家,经常去各农场走访。她带阿姨去市场买菜。会告诉阿姨从哪个摊子上买什么。有机农场会有不稳定的情况,需要随时检查。如果一家送货有问题,比如虫太多,叶子烂了,就换一家,慢慢找到适合的几个农场。这让我们有了信心,不会因为一两次的问题就放弃有机食物。阿姨现在习惯了。虽然有时还是想砍价。

我们对待阿姨就像家里人。她们没有机会受很多教育。Alice的培训课,对阿姨来说,就像不用出国,就有了‘到海外读研究生’的体验。

现在,我觉得身体很健康,太太也更苗条了。午餐有阿姨准备的健康盒饭,不用去街上吃,早饭晚饭阿姨照顾得很好。

在孩子们这边就难一些。他们从电视上看到广告,在学校看到同学带来的零食,在商店里,五颜六色的垃圾食物向他们招手。有一次,我的儿子看到同学都带了面包到学校,就哭了,说爸爸不让他吃这种面包。然后学校就打电话给我,说面包很有营养,是食物金字塔的一个重要部份,为什么你不让他吃等等。孩子还小,我很难让学校改变,也不想让孩子因为和别人不一样就受到很大压力,所以就让学校提供他们认为健康的食物吧。孩子的早餐晚餐由家里来好好管理。

我们非常关注诸如空气污染,食品安全,清洁水等话题。住在北京,我们接受这个城市的生活现实,但这不意味着什么都不能做。我们能决定买什么食物,喝什么水,可以去找研究这些领域的专家,像 Alice 这样的,多听他们的意见,争取把家庭受到的影响降到最小,尽力保护孩子。这,就是我们的解决办法。

采访妈妈 杰米

我家的早上时间就像打仗一样,孩子要赶校车,我要赶班车,老公要开车上班。早饭基本是快速填点儿东西。有时就做个饭盒让孩子到校车上吃。这样,一天刚开始就感到很累了。

Alice来了以后,仔细询问了每个人爱吃什么,让阿姨晚上预备好早餐放在冰箱里,我早上热一下。或是前一天弄好水果酸奶,我早上打个奶昔就5分钟。这样一家人开始吃上美味的早餐了。慢慢地,孩子们晚上就会去冰箱里探询一下,看明天会有什么吃,很期待。也愿意起早了,一家人可以坐下来一起吃,早餐变得更有滋味,自己也感到很有精神。

Alice认为很多调料含有不健康成分。她教阿姨把坚果磨碎,加入新鲜香料,再拌上橄榄油来调味。食材也要质量好的,这样很简单地就做成一道大餐。我们觉得新奇,也很好吃。以前做菜总是酱油醋等很多味道加进去,现在越来越喜欢肉和蔬菜本身特有的味道了。

我们也不是所有菜都爱吃,有些青菜的做法比较西化,味儿淡,还是接受不了。Alice 听到有不爱吃的,如获至宝 -“这样才可以按你们的需要做调整嘛”。所以,和Alice交流“餐后感”,很爽快。阿姨也学会了照顾每个人的口味。以前孩子不爱吃,我们会说,为什么不珍惜大人辛辛苦苦做好的饭菜。Alice则认为一定要让孩子高兴地吃,按他们的喜好做调整,尽管这意味着要多费功夫。孩子们总是问Alice 哪天来,说一想到Alice 在家里和阿姨琢磨怎么做好吃的,就觉得很幸福。

Alice经常夸阿姨学得认真。这让阿姨很起劲儿。回家还和家里人讲今天学了什么。家里老公说,你在学做匹萨吗,那我们也买个烤箱吧。我感到这次培训,给阿姨的生活也带来不少快乐。

Alice对《菁kids》说:

关于阿姨健康烹调培训

我遇到的阿姨一般都很有经验,会买菜,一天的家务事安排得很好,比如陪孩子们玩,买菜,做饭等。

所以,培训开始的时候会比较困难。阿姨会想,“这个老外是谁?为什么我要跟她学?我已经会做饭了啊,我年龄还比她大呢!”我就和她聊,让她明白我的工作是帮助这个家庭吃得更有营养,更多样化,她也可以学习新的烹调方法,尝试新的菜谱。一段时间后,阿姨就慢慢明白了。做菜时也学会考虑哪些菜健康,如何搭配。阿姨们也想让一家人吃得开开心心的。有一次我教阿姨用食物风干机。她觉得麻烦,不太想学。但看到孩子们特爱吃做好的苹果片,吃完一罐还要一罐,阿姨也来了劲头儿。现在她简直成了食物风干机皇后,蔬菜水果都能做!

阿姨们一般都是当天决定晚饭要做什么。这样比较随性,对家庭营养不太好。我的要求较高,会教他们计划一周的食谱,每天换花样,营养搭配,这样买菜也方便。

非常重要的是家庭也要配合。我最喜欢的概念叫“生物独特性(Bio-individuality)”. 这是指每一个人都有其独特的饮食和生活方式。这个人的美食可以是另一个人的毒药。我鼓励家庭根据他们独特的需求,独特的生活方式,喜好,和家族背景来改变。我会深入地了解每一个人的健康目标和口味喜好,经常和他们交流,新菜谱的口味如何,阿姨有没有变花样,孩子们是否喜欢,有没有不爱吃的菜,身体感觉如何等等。只有不断反馈才能有满意的效果。

关于孩子的营养

早餐应该给孩子力量,要很有活力地开始新的一天。所以需要蛋白质,比如奶昔,果汁,坚果类,豆类。蛋白质也会让饱腹的感觉持久一些,有助于培养良好的进餐习惯。对于上班族来说,早上赶着上班或送孩子上学,提前预备早餐是关键。

对孩子来说,重要的是经常换花样,如果老是一种食物,不管什么美食,他们都会很快厌倦。孩子们很好奇。如果想让他们尝试新食物,就要放在他们看得见拿得到的地方。孩子们不喜欢吃青菜或水果的话,一定要继续努力,不要放弃。

北京的气候很干躁,污染也较严重。喝干净水很重要。自来水需烧开再喝,这样能杀掉细菌。最好买瓶装的饮用水。如果孩子们不喜欢喝清水,可以在水里放一些柠檬片,水果片,蔬菜片,做成加味水。这样不仅有孩子喜欢的甜酸味,还有更多矿物质。清早起床和睡前半小时各喝一杯水,收益无穷!

放学回来时,孩子们像饿坏了的小老虎一样,这时给他们准备水果串,或是加各种水果的奶昔,或是香蕉草莓加一点点可可粉,肯定爱吃。

我建议家庭烹调用红糖之类的自然糖来代替加工糖。也不要买含有加工糖的食物放在家里。这样孩子们就吃不到。

我认为保健品不能替代食物,也不能弥补不健康的饮食习惯。孩子有时会厌食偏食,或对食物过敏。大多医生都同意,只要不超过RDA的量,每日用少量维生素或矿物质补充孩子的营养,不会对孩子造成伤害。

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平时买菜

我家离三源里市场很近,经常去。那里的本地菜质量不错,也有进口食品。我也经常从天福园,三分地等农场订购。

我鼓励家庭多尝试新的蔬菜和香料。最好是按季节,买本地出产的菜,品种多,味道也更好。当农民的出产不用长途跋涉,保质期可以较短,盈利要求低些,他们就可以自由地尝试小型的多样化的水果蔬菜种植。这类小作物可能不会被大超市采购。超市销售的往往是大批量生产的“名牌”食品,味道不见得好。

很多家庭买冷冻食物。因为物流链上的质量控制不到位,需要特别注意检查包装,不买过期产品,也不要购买已解冻或没有放在冷冻柜里的冷冻食品,颜色有异常,有味道,或者包装里有一点水,都说明该产品已经解冻过,就不要买。

关于中餐

中餐里油炸的食物很多,希望能少一些。油炸后食品营养价值降低,油脂高,不宜消化,还会刺激胃肠黏膜,诱发胆道痉挛。

在炒菜时,可以尝试用低钠蔬菜汤来替代油或黄油。这样不仅加点水份,也让菜的味道更鲜美。另外,最好不要吃肉皮。三盎司的鸡胸肉,连皮有150卡路里,去掉皮只有100卡路里,营养不少,又不会变胖。

中国菜里,我最喜欢云南菜、新疆菜和四川菜。

我在北京最爱吃炸酱面。我是意大利北方人,和中国北方人一样爱吃面,不爱吃米饭。

最爱吃的本地蔬菜是南瓜,南瓜子,南瓜汤,南瓜皮还可以烤成片,太好吃了。

最喜欢的中国香料是花椒,放在蔬菜或肉里都很香。

最喜欢的北京早餐是茶叶蛋。

最想念的意大利小吃是意大利炸冰激凌,在中国找不到!

采/文: 竞波, 原载:7月23日,菁Kids, Originally in Chinese

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“Alice is good at pointing out what we could try to change, and how we could do it, by making me think it is my idea. I also learnt a lot in the process about why we might feel hungry, new food I could incorporate, new recipes… But overall it is the method, and the support, that is very important to me. It helped me eat cleaner and cleaner, and go back to exercise, even more than I was dreaming to do!

I am cooking more, from 0% to 25% of the meals, and we are using a lot of the recipes provided by the coach, we experiment some new things, discover some new tastes that are very good! We added more vegetables and unprocessed foods to our diet.”

Gaelle C., Shanghai, 6-month program with Alice

“Thank to all the healthy food at home, I was able to loose 20 pounds. I gained a lot of energy that I forgotten I once had. My Aiyi began to make a wide variety of new and tasty food no longer limited to only Chinese and high carbs choices. I didn’t need to eat out at restaurants anymore to enjoy the food I ate.

Using Alice  as a Health Coach was a great decision for my family…Over the three months that Alice came to our home, the Aiyi’s became very awareness of the kinds of food I wanted her to cook and how to cook these new dishes….Today, my kitchen is totally reorganized and healthy.

AJ W. Beijing, Ayi healthy Cooking Program with Alice

(winner of WHS 12 Week Challenge: Mr. Amazing 2012)