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Griffith relies largely on vegetables (preferably those grown in her own garden) and meat from her local butcher.
Griffith relies largely on vegetables (preferably those grown in her own garden) and meat from her local butcher. (Photo: Nathan Maples)

How This Pro Climber Is Cooking Through the Pandemic

Brittany Griffith says now is the perfect time to have some fun with your diet

Published: 
Griffith relies largely on vegetables (preferably those grown in her own garden) and meat from her local butcher.
(Photo: Nathan Maples)

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Don鈥檛 call Brittany Griffith听a chef. The title makes her uneasy. 鈥淭o me, chef听is almost like a military rank,鈥 Griffith says. 鈥淎 real chef would bristle at people referring to me as a trained chef. I鈥檓 a cook. I love cooking.鈥

Whether she wants to accept the title or not, the fact is, Griffith makes her living by cooking food for other people. She鈥檚 a professional climber, yes, known for knocking out ambitious trad routes all over the globe, including the 5.12 Battling Begonias听in听Yemen,听but she鈥檚 also an ambassador for Patagonia Provisions, the eco-conscious food division of the outdoor brand. Griffith cooks听at events and climbing festivals, teaching customers how to use the ingredients that Patagonia Provisions sources. She鈥檚 even prepared Thanksgiving dinner for the Chouinards, the family that owns Patagonia. The job title of cook,听Griffith admits, suits her better than pro climber.

鈥淐limbing is just exercise,鈥 Griffith says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a way to be outside and have adventures, but I鈥檓 not addicted to it like I am cooking. I have to cook every day. I鈥檇 sooner quit climbing than quit cooking.鈥澨鼼riffith had a talent for food from a young age.鈥淚 always had this weird instinct with putting ingredients together,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hen I was a kid, I just knew a saltine cracker and Velveeta cheese would be incredible.鈥 Since then, preparing meals听has always played an integral role in her climbing adventures. 鈥淔ood is the best way to interact with the community, whether it鈥檚 figuring out what to make with limited ingredients on a mountaintop听or slicing onions with women in a different country.鈥

Griffith started climbing during a 1994 postcollege road trip with her boyfriend at the time. She was a natural听and has spent the last 25 years putting together an impressive r茅sum茅听that includes first ascents in Venezuela, Oman, and Kenya. She鈥檚 a 5.13 sport and trad听climber听who has been living the pro-climber dream for decades with the support of big brand sponsorships.听At 51 years old, Griffith is still very much on the go, usually traveling more than 200 days of the year for climbing adventures and cooking engagements. But like many of us, her work has come to a halt during the pandemic. Instead of panicking or succumbing to anxiety, Griffith is choosing to focus on the silver lining and concentrating听on what鈥檚 most important to her. 鈥淓veryone is always trying to do too much, but now our lives are broken down into just the necessities,鈥 Griffith says. 鈥淓xercise, grow food, eat food. We don鈥檛 have to be distracted by five different things right now.鈥澨

Griffith says her听routine at home in Salt Lake City听isn鈥檛 that much different than her homelife before the pandemic.听Now, though, she has much more time to do the things she loves because she鈥檚 not moving around鈥攁 position that she acknowledges she鈥檚 lucky to be in. 鈥淓ven driving to the climbing gym used to take an hour out of my day,鈥 she says.听

鈥淚 have to cook every day. I鈥檇 sooner quit climbing than quit cooking.鈥

Griffith never bothered putting together much of a home gym, because she traveled so much and relied on Salt Lake鈥檚 climbing gyms while she was home. Now听she鈥檚 been using a luggage scale to find different weighted items around her house and yard鈥攁听chain bike lock that weighs 15 pounds is great for weighted pull-ups. She also hung some old听gymnastics rings in her garage and is using blocks of wood as pinch blocks. Her workout consistsof push-ups, dips on the rings, hanging leg lifts, or just hanging from the two-by-six-inchbeam that supports the whole garage. And she鈥檒l make games out of it all: while听hanging from the beam, she鈥檒l try to touch her toes to the rake in the corner, or do a set of push-ups and then pick some greens in the garden.听

鈥淚 think the key to exercise is to keep it simple and do things you like to do,鈥 Griffith says. 鈥淚 hate running, so I don鈥檛 do it. So much stuff we choose to do is crazy, just because someone says it鈥檚 good for us. Who likes CrossFit? Is that fun for anyone?鈥澨

Griffith takes a similar approach to nutrition, insisting that her diet has been consistent since she was a child. Instead of following a rigorous nutrition plan听or adopting trendy diets, she sticks to one guiding principle: she only eats food that makes her feel good. She relies largely on vegetables (preferably those grown in her own garden)听and meat from her local butcher. She loves the smoked salmon from Patagonia Provisions and says her one true guilty pleasure is chips and salsa. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think hamburgers are bad for you, they just don鈥檛听make me feel good, so I don鈥檛 eat them,鈥 Griffith says. 鈥淓veryone is different. Everyone鈥檚 diet should be different.听I was lucky. I figured out what works for me when I was a kid, so I didn鈥檛 have to go through that Whole30 process when I was an adult.鈥澨

Griffith says the听current situation is a good opportunity for us to figure out which听foods work听and which听we should scrap from our daily routines鈥攚e鈥檙e all cooking our own meals during quarantine, which gives us greater control over the ingredients. 鈥Cooking for yourself听is the root of good health,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 interesting how these ideas of simplicity are coming together right now. You have to stay at home, and you have to make your own food.鈥澨

Although she admits that the prospect can be intimidating for people who have never spent much time in the kitchen, she has some advice: 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 have to go to school or even take a class to learn how to cook. Just don鈥檛 be afraid. Make what you like, experiment.鈥澨

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