Celebrating National Eat Your Veggies Day
Celebrating National Eat Your Veggies Day
Happy National Eat Your Veggies Day! This national celebration is intended to encourage people to eat more vegetables or try a new vegetable. Browse our resources for support on this health goal, recipe ideas and inspiration.
If eating more vegetables is a goal, make sure vegetables are available and prepped when possible. Make veggie-centered snacks and meals such as a crudité platter, chopped salads, grain bowls and soups.
Cooking with spices, herbs and heart-healthy fats such as plant oils adds flavor to vegetables. Also, the way vegetables are prepared impacts their flavor. Consider personal preferences, seasonality, time and other factors when choosing how to prepare vegetables.
Vegetables offer vitamins, minerals and fiber, which all contribute to improving overall health. Also, vegetables provide an array of textures, flavors and colors to your plate.
Starchy vegetables include potatoes, sweet potatoes, peas and corn. Starchy vegetables contain more carbohydrates per portion than other vegetables, but their nutrient profile does not negate the health benefits that starchy vegetables provide.
Bottom line: eat a variety of both raw and cooked vegetables. Cooking reduces the levels of some nutrients, but it also increases the bioavailability (how much your body absorbs) of other nutrients. Also, consider your preferred method of preparation for vegetables. The benefits to eating more vegetables outweigh any potential downsides of whether they are raw or cooked.
Some of our favorite vegetable-based recipes are:
Simple roasted veggies (broccoli, tomatoes, cauliflower, potatoes, carrots, peppers, garlic, zucchini, pattypan squash)