Eat Like Monica

A Pinecrest dietitian teaches her clients—including the Miami Marlins—to eat and live well

Miami-based dietitian Monica Auslander follows one rule: Eat when you’re hungry, and stop when you’re full. The 28-year-old Pinecrest native is the founder of Essence Nutrition, which provides nutritional services for individuals, groups, businesses and restaurants.

“I’m always the 28th dietitian that a client has seen,” she says with a laugh. “They’ve been dieting for years, but diets don’t work. They’re temporary, limiting and make you feel guilty and food crazy.”

Among her current roster of clients, you’ll find her coaching the Miami Marlins, offering interactive presentations at Soho House and representing Fresh Del Monte Produce.

Auslander never planned to dive into the world of food and nutrition. At the University of Florida, she studied linguistics and French. But during the economic downturn in 2008, she thought, “How am I going to get a job?”

She enrolled in a few science and nutrition courses. A month after graduation, she began at Florida International University’s master’s program in dietetics and nutrition. Her first job was as an inpatient clinical dietitian at Jackson Memorial, where she worked with teams of doctors to provide medical nutrition therapy for pediatric and adult patients with cancer, trauma, burns and organ transplants.

“I felt creatively confined,” she says. “I wanted to do more to reach a broader audience. I decided to open my own practice. At first, it was just private clients. But then I started writing e-books, working with corporations and teaching at the University of Miami. I’m developing an app right now, too, and working on cooking demos with local chefs.”

Regardless who Auslander is coaching, whether a private client or a fitness buff, she teaches a concept called “intuitive eating,” in which a client honors their hunger, respects when they’re full and never labels food as “good” or “bad.” Auslander’s theory at Essence rejects quick fixes, cleanses and 21-day diets. Instead, she guides clients to make sustainable lifestyle changes as a means for leading a more-balanced life.

“People aren’t dogs,” she says. “I’m not going to feed them a half a cup of broccoli or kale. That doesn’t honor someone’s culture or how they grew up. It’s OK to have pizza or a croissant. It’s just about getting to a place where some days you eat vegetables, and other days, you don’t.”

Even for clients concerned with losing weight, Auslander forgoes scales in her office.

“Weight loss is the smallest part of nutritional science,” she says. “We don’t really care what people weigh here. If you’re sticking with the tools we provide, you’ll feel the difference. There are people who are very slender but eat like 12-year-old boys. It’s about honoring your organs and nourishing your body.”

Auslander provides nutrition plans based on lifestyle: general nutrition, pregnancy, bridal, menopause and diabetes. She also works in performance nutrition geared toward professional athletes, in which Auslander helps fuel players to increase performance. For all her clients, she offers services such as pantry makeovers, supermarket tours, individualized meal plans, seminars and support.

“With the Marlins, it’s very regimented. They have all these different game times, and it’s important to focus on pre- and post-game nutrition,” she says. “They’re training hours and hours every day. It’s totally different. But with everyone, it’s about getting to a place where you’re in tune with your needs and hunger.”

Since opening in January 2016, Auslander hasn’t taken much time off. She’s been featured in national publications including O, The Oprah Magazine; Reader’s Digest; Women’s Health; Self and Elle. She also consulted for Shannon Allen and her husband, basketball player Ray Allen, before the couple opened the healthy, fast-casual restaurant Grown.

“Nutrition doesn’t rest,” she says. “People are always eating.”

Essence Nutrition

Location: 3250 NE First Ave., Miami

Contact: 305.280.1316; essencenutritionmiami.com

Eat Like Monica: Five Essential Tips

1. No alien foods. That means the foods we can’t immediately recognize. They’re typically in processed foods, like frozen meals, sauces and condiments. Eat real foods, where you can identify every ingredient.

2. Have a “yay” meal. Have one or two slices of pizza and put some vegetables on top. Balance it out. It’s about enjoying but also choosing things that are good for you.

3. Do the math. It’s important to think about nutrition in terms of numbers: if you eat 21 meals a week and two are horrible, you still get a 92 percent. Nutrition and health are about numbers and time. It’s not about one week—it’s about all 52 in the year.

4. Put the “fun” in functional. When you choose to eat something, make sure it has a function. There’s got to be some protein and fiber in there. Look for functional foods. If you’re set on having some chips, add some hummus or guacamole to fill it out.

5. Rest and refresh. Don’t feel guilty about eating terribly yesterday. Try to talk about it and find out why it happened and how you bounced back. It’s about resetting and refreshing and understanding where you are coming from when you make food choices.

You May Also Like

Leave a Reply

Twenty Years in Heels

Glam-A-THON’s founder, Tammy Gail, reflects on survival, dignity, and the power of turning celebration into 20 years of support

Read More
A group of women in matching pink shirts, hats, and sunglasses march together holding a "High Healers" banner for Broward Health at an outdoor event, celebrating Twenty Years in Heels while raising awareness and carrying pink accessories. Lifestyle
Where to Eat this Easter

A curated guide to the region’s most festive Easter dining, from rooftops to waterfronts.

Read More
A festive table setting with a striped tablecloth, a colorful floral centerpiece, wrapped gifts, painted eggs, and place settings with napkins and cutlery, creating a vibrant spring or Easter celebration atmosphere. Lifestyle
Inside Our March Cover Party at the New Palm Garden Event House

Lifestyle and South Florida Business & Wealth celebrate their latest covers with an evening of photos, friends, and familiar faces.

Read More
A smiling woman in a gold sequin crop top and denim shorts poses with one arm raised next to a large Las Olas Lifestyle March Cover Party magazine cover. The scene is set against a green leafy wall at Palm Garden Event House. Lifestyle
Proof of Brotherhood

From goal lines to oak lines, Mike and Maurkice Pouncey craft Twin P Whiskey with backbone

Read More
Two men smiling at a bar, holding cocktails. One is seated in a white shirt and blue tie; the other, standing in a blue shirt, pours a drink. Colorful bottles, stained glass windows, and music reminiscent of Hall & Oates set the scene. Lifestyle
Other Posts
Beyond Hall & Oates

With a new band, nine solo albums, and a return to his roots, John Oates is still writing the next chapter.

Read More
A man wearing glasses, a scarf, and a leather jacket holds an electric guitar in front of geometric wooden panels, bathed in warm orange lighting—a scene reminiscent of classic Hall & Oates album covers. Lifestyle
The Galleria Reimagined

A multi-billion-dollar reinvention could reshape Fort Lauderdale’s skyline

Read More
Aerial view of a reimagined coastal city with tall glass buildings, green rooftops, lush trees, and a marina near the Galleria, boats dotting the waterway, with the ocean and more high-rises in the background. Lifestyle
Flesh and Canvas

From Brasília to Bad Habits, Artist Diego Dellarte’s work blurs the line between tattoo and masterpiece.

Read More
A smiling man with a beard and shaved head wears headphones and a black t-shirt with a colorful "Z" logo, sitting indoors with a microphone clipped to his shirt, ready to discuss topics like Flesh and Canvas. Lifestyle
Soundtrack to the Shore

Live performances, whiskey-forward dinners, and a music-inspired spa ritual anchor a new Gibson partnership at The Ritz-Carlton, Fort Lauderdale.

Read More
A blue electric guitar sits among plates of steak, oysters with lime, biscuits, and cocktails, atop a rustic wooden surface with decorative netting—blending coastal decor vibes with a Gibson guitar case for a modern coastal touch. Lifestyle