Benefits of a Variety of Fruits and Vegetables

Options
HealthyChanges2010
HealthyChanges2010 Posts: 5,831 Member
edited September 2024 in Food and Nutrition
**Benefits of a Variety of Fruits and Vegetables**

Fruits and vegetables provide a variety of nutrients not found in vitamin and mineral supplements.

We know we need to eat a minimum of 5 servings of fruit and vegetables everyday. Actually now, to prevent cancer, 8 to 13 servings per day are recommended. A serving is one cup of raw fruits or vegetables, or ½ cup cooked. At a recent lecture I asked a lunch audience to raise their hand if they had at least one fruit or vegetable already that day. No one in that group raised their hand. This is not uncommon. Our processed and convenience foods contain very few fruits and vegetables.

To prevent chronic diseases, fruits and especially vegetables are very important. Vegetables especially have the antioxidants, minerals, and phytochemicals in the correct combination that help keep the blood sugar in balance, create better energy in the body, and along with fruits build up the immune system.

Each color found in fruits and vegetables focus on building the immune system in its own way. It is important to get a variety of colors, so that you will get a full range of phytochemicals (beneficial plant chemicals) in your daily diet. Research is finding that eating whole fruits and vegetables gives you many more nutrients than you could possible add to a vitamin and mineral supplement. There are over 12,000 phytochemicals, and I have yet to see a supplement, unless it has whole fruits and vegetables in it, have all of the 180 different vitamins or minerals that are required by our body to function daily.

The different colors in fruits and vegetables help our immune system react to different stresses in our daily life. So look at the different colors in your diet. See if they include each of the colors listed below. This is one way to know that you are getting the full benefit of nutrients possible in your diet.

Green Foods – broccoli, kale, leaf and romaine lettuce, spinach, cabbage and Brussels sprouts.

Green foods are especially good for the circulatory system. They contain many minerals and B-complex vitamins. Some phytochemicals found in green foods are sulforaphane and indoles that are very powerful anti-cancer compounds. Researchers have tried to use these as isolated phytochemicals but find that they only work while in the whole food form.

Red Foods – tomatoes, watermelon, red cabbage.

Red foods contain many phytochemicals that reduce free radical damage. The phytochemical called lycopene is especially helpful to prevent prostate problems, and reduce the effects of sun damage on the skin. Lycopene is the phytochemical that make the red foods get their red color.

Orange Foods – carrots, pumpkin, squash, sweet potatoes, apricots, cantaloupe.

The orange foods have the carotenoids the help prevent cancer by repairing the DNA. As our mothers told us, carrots, and other orange foods, are especially good for our eyes, and help with night vision. The deep orange foods help our bodies get the vitamin A we need, without getting excess that can lead to osteoporosis.

Green/Yellow Foods – yellow corn, green peas, collard greens, avocado and honeydew melon.

This combination of green and yellow foods contains the carotenoids lutein and zeaxanthin that help reduce the risk of developing cataracts and macular degeneration. These foods are also helpful in reducing the risk of osteoporosis.

Orange /Yellow Foods – oranges, pineapple, tangerines, peaches, papaya, nectarines

These foods that are orange and yellow in color are high in antioxidants, especially Vitamin C, and help to improve the health of the mucus membranes and connective tissue. They help prevent heart disease by improving circulation and preventing inflammation.

White/Green Foods – onions, garlic, celery, pears, chives

White and green combination foods contain a variety of phytochemicals. Garlic and onions contain allicin, the anti-viral, anti-bacterial, and anti-fungal phytochemical, and they can act as a poor man’s antibiotic. Add garlic and onions in your meals to reduce the effects of potential toxicity of high fat meats. Celery has many minerals, especially organic sodium, that keeps the fluid in the joints healthy.

Red/Blue/Purple Foods – red apples, beets, blueberries, strawberries, cranberries, prunes, concord grapes, blackberries.

These dark colored red/blue/purple foods are very rich in powerful antioxidants called anthocyanins that protect again heart disease by improving circulation and preventing blood clots. They have many anti-aging phytochemicals that keep the blood circulating reducing the effects of the Standard American Diet rich in trans fats and processed foods.

When you make a salad make sure you have a variety of different colors. Strive to get at least 5 colors on your plate. Use fruits to balance the rest of the colors needed. This way you will get closer to the 8 to 13 servings of fruits and vegetables required, and you will get the variety of nutrients you need daily.

RESOURCE : Jane Oelke, N.D., Ph.D. is a Traditional Naturopath and Doctor of Homeopathy in southwest Michigan. She is the author of Natural Choices for Fibromyalgia” and “Natural Choices for Attention Deficit Disorder

Replies

  • July24Lioness
    July24Lioness Posts: 2,399 Member
    Good article!!!

    I really wish they would switch the focus though to emphasize Vegetables over fruit. Fruit should really be eaten in small quantities................
  • sorellabella
    sorellabella Posts: 133 Member
    Thanks for this info.
  • HealthyChanges2010
    HealthyChanges2010 Posts: 5,831 Member
    I was pleased when I found this as I knew the colors represented certain nutrition factors but couldn't recall which ones. Had read something about it long ago.

    Thought it was a pretty good article and wanted to share it.
    Becca:flowerforyou:
  • July24Lioness
    July24Lioness Posts: 2,399 Member
    I was pleased when I found this as I knew the colors represented certain nutrition factors but couldn't recall which ones. Had read something about it long ago.

    Thought it was a pretty good article and wanted to share it.
    Becca:flowerforyou:

    That is true!!! I buy a huge variety!!

    I recently joined a CSA and next week starts my first weekly pick up. I can't wait to get some of my favorite veggies and fruits and get to try new ones also!!!

    However, I am giving the Rhubarb away, YUCK!!!
  • HealthyChanges2010
    HealthyChanges2010 Posts: 5,831 Member
    I was pleased when I found this as I knew the colors represented certain nutrition factors but couldn't recall which ones. Had read something about it long ago.

    Thought it was a pretty good article and wanted to share it.
    Becca:flowerforyou:

    That is true!!! I buy a huge variety!!

    I recently joined a CSA and next week starts my first weekly pick up. I can't wait to get some of my favorite veggies and fruits and get to try new ones also!!!

    However, I am giving the Rhubarb away, YUCK!!!
    Oh Cora! You will love being part of CSA! I've gotten my 3rd week box now and each week the veggies just thrill me, picked that very day, fresh, fresh, fresh, organic and such a variety! So glad I joined, this upcoming Monday is garden cleanup so no box but that's alright it's fridge clean up time here. lol

    Last week we got the very best sweetest strawberries I'd ever tasted. Oviously since the ones in the grocery stores aren't picked fresh that day and picked local, they don't compare. I've simply fallen in love with sugar snap peas, they are definitely a new veggie to me, lots of varieties of lettuces, yummy radishes, so much more. We can trade out what we might not use and take something extra from the cooler.

    This past week there were tons of beautiful wild flowers to be had, they look so lovely in the kitchen. It was like Heaven when I heard about the program and started up. Something I'll definitely continue, I believe it's through Oct/Nov each year.

    Enjoy all your goodies each week, definitely beats anything from the typical grocery store!!:drinker:
    Becca:flowerforyou:
  • Ummmm.....what's CSA?
  • hiddensecant
    hiddensecant Posts: 2,446 Member
    Community Supported Agriculture
  • HealthyChanges2010
    HealthyChanges2010 Posts: 5,831 Member
    Ummmm.....what's CSA?
    Most definitely worth checking into if you have it in your area and most do, unless you live in a very small area?

    Supporting small farms and begining farmers to help them be able to continue to grow and produce more. It's a win-win for everyone involved!:flowerforyou:
  • HealthyChanges2010
    HealthyChanges2010 Posts: 5,831 Member
    bump
  • nikhil_c8
    nikhil_c8 Posts: 100 Member
    Nice Article...Thanks for sharing
  • danazsweet
    danazsweet Posts: 52
    Eating Whole Food is the way to true health. Fruits and vegetables literally saved my life. The nutritional powers at be say we need to be eating 7-13 servings a day... I take a whole food supplement backed by research to help me meet that goal everyday, it's totally changed health. I see it in my skin, my hair, my nails and my energy, and I haven't had to use antiobiotics in the last 6 years. I'd say that's proof positive that fruits and veg really make a difference to your health. I ofcourse eat as many as i can, but you can only eat so much everyday and I usually eat the same ones over and over. Variety is key... eating a rainbow everyday. Read my story at www.WholeTruthServices.com
  • lilmissy2
    lilmissy2 Posts: 595 Member
    Great article :) Some of the most interesting research I ever looked at showed that people who consumed vitamins and minerals from fruit and veg had far greater levels of these nutrients in their system than those that took the same amount in supplements. It's thought to be due to bits and pieces in the food that we eat that we don't even know are there!
  • godblessourhome
    godblessourhome Posts: 3,892 Member
    awesome. thanks becca!
  • ropsnik
    ropsnik Posts: 68 Member
    Thanks for sharing. Can you provide the web link for this article? Thank you!
  • HealthyChanges2010
    HealthyChanges2010 Posts: 5,831 Member
    bump
  • HealthyChanges2010
    HealthyChanges2010 Posts: 5,831 Member
    bump
  • selbyhutch
    selbyhutch Posts: 531 Member
    Very nice article, Becca. Thanks!
This discussion has been closed.