Baking is often associated with comfort food. Conjuring up
homemade scones, chocolate brownies, macaroons or cupcakes has become a bit of
a trend of late. But is there therapeutic value that is beneficial to mental
health?
"Baking helps lift my depression. It can't cure it but
it helps," says John Whaite, last year's winner of The Great British Bake
Off.
He was diagnosed with manic depression eight years ago.
Whaite explains that baking is a way to turn manic, erratic
negative energy into something constructive. He found it an effective way to
manage his condition.
"When I'm in the kitchen, measuring the amount of
sugar, flour or butter I need for a recipe or cracking the exact number of eggs
- I am in control. That's really important as a key element of my condition is
a feeling of no control."
Whaite has eschewed prescribed medication but has tried
other traditional treatments including talking therapy and exercise sessions.
He's included a chapter on the recipes he uses to help lift his spirits in his
latest cookbook and he's a supporter of The Depressed Cake Shop - a mental
health charity initiative set up by the specialist food creative consultant
Emma Thomas, aka Miss Cakehead.
The Depressed Cake Shop ran a series of pop-up cake stalls
across the country earlier this month that sold only grey cakes. The stunt
raised thousands of pounds for mental health charities and provided an unusual
platform for people to discuss mental health issues.
Melanie Denyer, the host of London's Depressed Cake Shop in
Brick Lane, says the success of the event was phenomenal.
"For a lot of us involved in this project, mental
illness and baking are linked. A lot of us turn to baking when we're feeling
low. Some of us even started baking because they were ill and needed something
simple as a focus. And there is genuinely something very therapeutic about
baking.
"I have, for years, turned to my kitchen and cooked,
savoury or sweet, because I get some relief in the creation of something that,
in and of itself, is goodness, love, nurture - sometimes even beauty - when all
I feel I am is ugliness, pain and a drain on all around me," she says.
Denyer has struggled with mental health problems for 15
years and was recently diagnosed with borderline personality disorder. She sees
a psychiatrist and has taken anti-depressants.
"Getting treatment has not always been easy. Cooking
and baking have, on occasion, very literally saved my life, giving me an outlet
for emotions I couldn't handle. It has provided me with an alternative to
self-harm."
East London NHS Foundation Trust is one mental health
provider that has experimented in cooking therapies. Earlier this year they
launched Recipes of Life, an integrated talking therapy with healthy cooking
and eating sessions.
Dr Mark Salter, a consultant psychiatrist working in east
London, says baking and cooking are good occupational therapies that help
patients develop planning skills, short term memory and social skills - all of
which suffer in mental illness. He says baking is particularly powerful because
of its symbolism in our culture - associated with nurture and goodness.
But Dr Cosmo Hallstrom, fellow of the Royal College of
Psychiatrists, cautions that it is difficult to measure the precise benefits of
baking as a therapy.
"Any structured non-stressful activity will help
depression and increase well-being. Traditional occupational therapies
generally work on a physical or projection platform.
"For example, exercise sessions increase physical
well-being and release endorphins that combat depression. Art therapy helps a
patient project their depression through creating artwork; thereby helping a
patient to better understand their condition. Baking can be seen as operating
on both these platforms," he says.
There is a physical element to baking - kneading the dough
or cutting out cookie shapes. But there is also a strong creative or artistic
component - the intricate decoration of cakes or biscuits.
Baking can be therapeutic in different ways. Denyer likes to
give away her baked treats. She says the act of making other people happy helps
lift her spirits.