Eat In, Not Out: A Comparative Analysis Between at Home Cooking and Restaurant Dining
Description
This creative project seeks to demonstrate the nutritional and financial benefits of cooking in versus eating out to college age students. We sought to determine what factors significantly differentiated restaurant meals versus home-cooked versions, and how we could share this information with our peers to potentially influence them to make a healthy lifestyle change. The first step was to determine the factors that influence college-aged students eating habits, and was presented with a review of relevant literature in several topics. We researched food literacy in young adults, the impact of fast food, social media's role in healthy eating habits, health behavior change in young adults, and the benefits of home cooking to obtain a general baseline of the knowledge of college-aged students. The initial research was utilized to write more effective blog posts that appropriately addressed our targeted demographic and to determine what platforms would be most appropriate to convey our information. These ideas were taken and then translated into a blog and Instagram account that contained healthy, copycat recipes of popular restaurant meals. We wrote 30 blog posts which were made up of 20 original recipes, 8 nutrition informational posts, and an introduction/conclusion. Finally, a focus group was hosted to ascertain the opinions of our peers, and to determine if they would be willing to make a lifestyle change in the form of cooking more frequently as opposed to eating out regularly. We provided them with a pre and post survey to gather their opinions before and after reviewing the findings of our research and project. We concluded that if given the information in an accessible way, college students are willing to eat in, not out.
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2018-05
Agent
- Co-author: Kirch, Jayme Elizabeth
- Co-author: Sanford, Victoria
- Thesis director: Lehmann, Jessica
- Committee member: Martinelli, Sarah
- Committee member: Levinson, Simin
- Contributor (ctb): School of Nutrition and Health Promotion
- Contributor (ctb): School of International Letters and Cultures
- Contributor (ctb): School of Human Evolution and Social Change
- Contributor (ctb): Department of Supply Chain Management
- Contributor (ctb): Barrett, The Honors College