Where can I find Dr. Jennifer Ashton’s official Ajenda posts or ABC News segments mentioning nutrition or recipes?
Executive summary
Dr. Jennifer “Jen” Ashton publishes her nutrition-focused newsletter and recipe content on her Ajenda platform—primarily at joinajenda.com and its Recipes section—and distributes editions via the “Today’s Ajenda” Beehiiv newsletter; she also regularly covers nutrition and simple recipe ideas during ABC News appearances such as Good Morning America/GMA3 (joinajenda.com; beehiiv; ABC News) [1][2][3][4]. Be aware that viral “gelatin trick” products using her name or image are repeatedly identified in reporting as unaffiliated or scams—Ashton has not endorsed commercial gelatin weight‑loss products [5][6].
1. Where to find Ajenda posts and recipes: the official hub and recipe page
The primary home for Dr. Jen Ashton’s Ajenda content is the Ajenda website (joinajenda.com), which presents her newsletter, wellness perspective, and a dedicated Recipes section that hosts nutritious recipe writeups such as make‑ahead chia pudding and other meal ideas aimed at women’s health and weight management [1][2]. For people seeking packaged recipe posts or an archive, the Ajenda Recipes page is the direct landing spot promoted by the Ajenda platform [2]; the site bills itself as delivering “trusted, expert‑backed insights on women’s health, weight, nutrition, and wellness” [1].
2. Where to find Ajenda newsletter issues and recipe excerpts: Beehiiv and edition links
Ajenda also publishes email newsletter issues via Beehiiv under titles like “Today’s Ajenda,” where specific issues have included recipe content and a promise of science‑backed practical recipes and a five‑day eating plan; archived issues such as “TODAY’S AJENDA ISSUE #4” are publicly accessible and include recipes and eating‑plan material [3]. Those interested in serial Ajenda editions should look for Beehiiv links and edition pages referenced from Ajenda’s site or the Beehiiv newsletter archive [3].
3. ABC News segments: where nutrition and recipes appear on broadcast and video
Dr. Jen Ashton’s nutrition commentary and occasional demonstrations of eating plans have been carried in ABC News programming, including video segments that walk viewers through meals and practical eating plans—ABC News hosts video content such as “A look into Dr. Jen’s eating plan” that presents her taking participants through breakfast, lunch, and dinner [4]. Her role as ABC News Chief Medical Correspondent and GMA3 co‑host means nutrition, weight‑management, and recipe‑adjacent tips frequently surface on Good Morning America/GMA3 and related ABC News platforms [7][8][6].
4. Credibility and credentials behind the guidance
Ashton’s nutrition and obesity guidance is anchored by her formal training—she holds a Master’s in Human Nutrition and is board‑certified in obesity medicine—credentials that ABC and Ajenda materials cite when presenting her wellness recommendations and recipe guidance for peri‑ and postmenopausal women and broader audiences [7][8]. Ajenda emphasizes “no fluff, no fads” expert‑backed insights, reflecting the platform’s pitch and how recipe and nutrition content are framed [1].
5. Caveats: viral trends, misattribution, and commercial scams to watch for
Multiple reporting and blog posts trace a viral “gelatin” recipe trend back to wellness communities and explicitly note Dr. Ashton did not create or commercially endorse gelatin weight‑loss products; some ad campaigns and webpages claiming a direct Ashton endorsement have been flagged as scams or misattributions [5][6][9]. Readers following third‑party sites or social posts about “Dr. Jennifer Ashton’s gelatin trick” should cross‑check against Ajenda’s official pages and ABC News segments because the available reporting shows those commercial claims are not from Ashton herself [5][6].
6. Practical navigation tips and reporting limits
For verified Ajenda recipes and nutrition posts, consult joinajenda.com (main site and Recipes page) and the Today’s Ajenda Beehiiv issues linked from that site; for broadcast pieces, search ABC News’s video archive and Good Morning America/GMA3 segments for “Dr. Jen Ashton” to find meal‑plan and nutrition clips that have aired [1][2][3][4]. This reporting does not include a comprehensive, time‑coded index of every ABC segment that mentioned a specific recipe ingredient, so locating a particular short TV clip may require searching ABC’s video pages or Ajenda’s newsletter archive [4][3].