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Here is a fruit and vegetable color guide to get you started:
Red: Strawberries, raspberries, tomatoes, tomato sauce, watermelon
Orange: Sweet potatoes, carrots, oranges, orange juice, mangoes, cantaloupe, peaches, pumpkin and other orange squash
Yellow:Pineapples, yellow peppers, lemons, yellow grapefruit
Green: Spinach and leafy greens, beans, peas, broccoli, asparagus, green peppers, avocado
Blue and Purple: Blueberries, blackberries, dark beans, purple grapes, eggplant
White: Don’t forget white! Think bananas, potatoes, onions, white beans, apples and cauliflower.
The kids won’t be the only ones having fun… this is an imaginative way for all of us to include more nutrients in our diet. The pigments that make fruits and vegetables so colorful are actually phytochemicals that contain vital nutrients, says James A. Joseph in The Colour Code.
A recent review of his book summarizes the benefits of the colors: lycopene, the red in tomatoes, is linked to lower rates of cancer and heart disease; lutein, which gives spinach its dark-green tint, helps fight certain types of eye disease; anthocyanins, contained in blueberries and other dark-purple and red fruit, aids memory and improves other cognitive problems of ageing, and there are immune-boosters found in white root vegetables like in garlic and onions. (Of course, don’t tell the kids all that!)
Turn some of your favorites into “rainbow recipes”, like fish (colorful fish fillets), veggie stew (ratatouille), or dessert.
And last but not least, don’t miss the song, I Can Eat a Rainbow. It’s a kick!
More Dr. Pat…
Tags: child health, eat a rainbow, healthy diet, recipes
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April 4, 2008 at 9:12 am
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April 18, 2008 at 8:00 am
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August 29, 2008 at 7:00 am
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March 28, 2008 at 2:32 pm
Kerri
I love this! The rainbow is an easy way for me to make sure my little one is getting what she needs (and that I am as well…)