Home cooking is associated with improved diet quality. Non-Hispanic Blacks, a population with diet-quality related health disparities, report lower home cooking than other racial/ethnic groups. Factors and subsequent dietary outcomes associated with this cooking disparity are relatively unknown. A secondary analysis was performed using demographic and consumer behavior data from the 2007-2010 cycles of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) to identify factors associated with household cooking frequency of dinner among Non-Hispanic Blacks. Self-reported dietary data were used to calculate Healthy Eating Index-2010 (HEI-2010) to determine cooking related objective diet quality. Lower income, unemployment, and higher perceived diet quality were significantly associated with higher cooking frequency ( < 0.05). For diet quality, higher vegetable ( = 0.031), lower empty calorie intake ( = 0.002), higher dinner time protein ( = 0.004) and lower dinner time dairy intake ( = 0.003) were associated with cooking. Total HEI scores were associated with higher cooking frequency for middle income ( = 0.007), but not higher or lower income categories ( = 0.306; = 0.384), respectively. On average, factors associated with cooking frequency were psychosocial, income, and employment related. Objective diet quality as measured by HEI was variable. Future dietary studies among Non-Hispanic Blacks should include cooking, socioeconomic status and perceived diet quality as particularly relevant factors of interest.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu11092057DOI Listing

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