The program features healthy lifestyle and competition elements, with each episode featuring two competing chefs who each develop their own healthier versions of the featured family's recipe. The winning dish is determined by a panel of certified nutritionists and the family featured in the given episode. Each dish is rated on a categorical score from 1 to 10, based on the total percentage of total fat, saturated fat, cholesterol, sugar and sodium content reduced in the "rehabbed" recipe in comparison to the original; the ease and length of preparation between the two "rehabbed" recipes ; and the taste of the healthier dish. These scores are combined into the maximum cumulative score of 30, determining the chef with the episode's winning recipe. The YouTube format was an eight-minute program featuring two of three chefs – Daniel Boome, Laura Vitale and Mareya Ibrahim – who alternated depending on the episode. The television version is a 30-minute format, which initially saw Boome reassigned to hosting duties with three new chefs – Calvin Harris, Candice Kumai and Tana Amen – being brought into the rotation. After the show moved from Litton's Weekend Adventure to the CBS Dream Team in 2013, the program became hosted by Evette Rios, with Richard Rosendale and Vikki Krinsky serving as the competing chefs. Episodes also feature multiple-choice trivia questions at the end of the first and, in some episodes, second segments regarding a particular element ofnutritional value, as well as "food fact" graphics at the bottom of the screen during the preparation segments that pertain to the nutritional value, origins and uses of a particular ingredient used in the recipes. Both formats show the preparation of each dish by the two chefs – who are given either 45 or 60 minutes to prepare the dish depending on the ease of the individual recipe, with the segments condensed due to time constraints – during each episode; the preparation segments encompass the first two segments of the television format. In the television format, the third segment features the family preparing the dish with the ingredients and certain food preparation utensils used in the chef's recipes. Deviating from the regular competition format, the television version occasionally features special "ask the chef" episodes, featuring questions submitted to one of the chefs by the children of various families that have participated in past and upcoming episodes during the taping of the at-home cooking segments about healthy food alternatives, and demonstrations of recipes preparable in approximately ten minutes.
History
Recipe Rehab was first launched on YouTube on April 2, 2012 as a co-production of Everyday Health and Trium Entertainment, with the initial episodes made available on the video sharing website's Everyday Health channel. The program was one of several web series directly funded by YouTube as a part of its initiative to provide premium original video content. Everyday Health wanted to move Recipe Rehab to broadcast television to allow cross-promotion between the two versions, and entered into a partnership with Litton Entertainment to produce the show as a television series. Upon its debut on October 6, 2012, the television version of the show initially aired on Litton's Weekend Adventure, replacing a self-titled series produced by Everyday Health on the block's now-defunct "Health and Wellness Hour" ; this version expanded the program's format to 30 minutes. An executive for Everyday Health indicated that it was expected that Recipe Rehab would earn more revenue from product placements and similar arrangements than from advertising sales. Litton moved Recipe Rehab from Weekend Adventure to the CBS Dream Team upon the block's launch on September 28, 2013, for the series' second television season. Recipe Rehab was among the two programs that were not included on the CBS Dream Teams fall 2015 schedule when it was announced on July 30, 2015.