What is Nutrition?
Nutrition is the science of what your body needs from food. When you cook, you're not just making something taste good β you're combining nutrients like proteins, carbohydrates, fats, vitamins, and minerals that help your body grow, stay healthy, and have energy.
Understanding nutrition helps you design meals that are both delicious and nourishing. It's a crucial skill in Design & Technology because cooking is about solving real problems: How can I make food that tastes amazing AND keeps people healthy?
Why It Matters for Your Health
Every time you eat, you're fuelling your body like filling a car with petrol. Different foods do different jobs. Proteins (found in chicken, beans, eggs) build muscle and repair your body. Carbohydrates (bread, rice, pasta) give you energy for running around and thinking at school. Fruits and vegetables contain vitamins and minerals that keep your immune system strong and your bones healthy.
Think of it like building with Lego: proteins are the special connector pieces, carbs are the large colourful blocks for structure, and vitamins are the tiny details that make everything work perfectly together.
Making Better Food Choices
When you understand nutrition, you can make smarter decisions about what to cook. You'll know that a meal with grilled chicken, brown rice, and broccoli will keep you feeling full and energised longer than just eating sweets. You'll understand why water is better than sugary drinks, and why eating oily fish (like salmon) twice a week helps your brain work better.
This knowledge also helps you cook for other people. If you're making dinner for your family, understanding nutrition means you can create meals that are healthy for everyone β whether they're a growing teenager, a busy parent, or a grandparent.
Nutrition and Design Thinking
Good cooking combines creativity with practical knowledge. A designer needs to think about what their product does AND how it affects people. When you cook with nutrition in mind, you're being a proper designer. You're creating something that solves a real need (hunger), tastes good (design challenge), and makes people healthier (functionality).
The best chefs know about nutrition because it helps them create meals that make people feel amazing β not just for those few minutes while eating, but for hours afterwards.