Order Up! Nourish Your Brain (and Your Family’s Too)
A conversation with Amanda Ashcraft and Ann Kent, authors of “The Brain Plate”
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Introducing The Brain Plate: Meal Planning for Mental Health
There are cookbooks, and then there are guides for real life. Our friends Amanda Ashcraft and Ann Kent—both dietitians and moms, one a licensed counselor and the other the founder of Peas & Hoppiness—joined forces to create something we haven’t really seen before: a brain-focused cookbook-meets-meal-plan that gives practical, evidence-based support for mental health through food. The Brain Plate is part recipe book, part supplement guide, part troubleshooting coach for when life (and motivation) gets hard—and it’s designed to help families nourish their bodies and their minds.
We sat down with Amanda and Ann to talk about how the project came to be, what makes it different from other nutrition books, and the simple ways parents can support their kids’ mental and emotional health—starting with what's on their plate.
✨ The Brain Plate is coming soon! Sign up for the waitlist and be the first to know when it’s available.
Learn more about our favorite meal planning app: Peas & Hoppiness, by Ann Kent! It features an easy-to-use customizable app and made-for-you grocery list to save time and money with meal planning. Swap recipe ingredients for dietary restrictions and picky eaters, all while saving time and stress! Recipes are seasonal and delicious. Learn more here & try it out for FREE for 30 days →
We love the whole concept of The Brain Plate. What made you decide to create this book?
Ann: Amanda and I were both seeing a major overlap in our work—nutrition, mental health, and the overwhelm families feel. And so we wanted to bring together both the food and supplement pieces that support emotional well-being, but also the strategy. You could have all the right ingredients, but still be stuck without the tools to pull a meal together or make the connection between what you eat and how you feel.
What made the collaboration work so well was that Amanda came in with this brilliant framework: she had identified the nutrients connected to neurotransmitter production—like serotonin—and laid out the foods that support that process. My brain immediately went, “Great! I can turn that list into real-life meals.”
So we combined our superpowers: Amanda with the clinical and counseling knowledge, and me with the recipes and practical implementation. It’s everything you need in one place, whether you're looking for support around depression, anxiety, ADHD, or just trying to feel more stable and nourished.
Amanda: We kept hearing from people who felt really lost. Like, "I don’t feel like myself, I’m not nourishing myself, I don’t know how to feed my family well." So we built a system: What can you add to your plate to support your brain and body today? The goal isn’t perfection. The goal is progress, grace, and better energy and mood.
We started small—just a guide you could download. But it kept growing. We’d say, “Well, we should probably add more on how supplements work,” or “Let’s help people understand what’s actually happening in their bodies.” It evolved into something much bigger—and more useful—than we originally imagined.
I love working one-on-one with clients and helping them connect the dots around food and brain health, but writing recipes is not my thing! So teaming up with Ann just made it all possible.
Give us a quick overview—What’s actually in the book?
Ann: It’s organized into five sections:
Nutrition and Brain Health - Gain a basic understanding of how nutrition impacts the brain and body, to support mental health.
Meal Planning for Mental Health - Learn to make a non-diet meal plan, navigating busy schedules and mental health challenges, in a way designed for those new to meal planning. Get practical tips to make grocery shopping easier.
Your 4-Week Meal Plan and Recipes - Discover four weeks of seasonal meals and recipes that highlight nutrients to support mental health. These are designed to meet your nutrient needs over the course of a week, understanding there is normal variance from meal to meal. Each meal plan and recipe include adjustments for gluten-free, dairy-free, vegetarian, and vegan needs.
Nutrient & Supplement Guide for Mental Health - Learn how macronutrients, micronutrients, and dietary supplements function in the brain, and discover which may be helpful for your unique needs. Focus on food first, then use this information to decide where you may have nutritional gaps to fill. The dietary supplement fact sheets provide accurate information about the options on the market. Use these in conversation with your mental health team to determine which, if any, may be beneficial for you.
Troubleshooting Guide for Cooking and Mental Health Blocks - Education is only part of the equation; you also need the skills to implement this knowledge in a way that is realistic and sustainable for your life. This section walks you through the most common blocks for different mental health and lifestyle challenges. Choose the sections to read based on your specific needs.
There are over 100 recipes, and every single one has built-in substitutions. It’s truly designed to be flexible and usable for lots of different needs.
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