Some Healthy Tips – Top 10 Healthy Spring Foods
Eating seasonally is a great way to get the freshest and most flavorful produce around. Here’s a guide to 10 springtime vegetables that you just have to try while they’re in season.
1. Asparagus
Truly fresh asparagus picked at the height of its season has a delicate flavor and a light crunch that works perfectly with eggs, steak, or just about anything else.
2 . Radishes
Raw radishes add a sharp crunch to salads, relishes, and burgers. Cooked, they have a more savory flavor with just a hint of bite remaining.
3. Rhubarb
Rhubarb has a bit of a pucker to it, to put it mildly. It’s not the kind of vegetable you just grab and chow down on. But you also don’t need to drown it in sugar, and in fact, it doesn’t even have to be dessert at all!
4. Spring onions (scallions)
Onions are a year-round crop, but spring onions are best in the earlier months. These are the ones with the long green stems and white bulbs that are just barely thicker than the ends of the stems. They’re pretty mild, and they’re particularly great for people with a FODMAPs sensitivity, because most people can still eat the green stems, even if they can’t eat the white bulbs.
5. Mustard greens
Mustard greens have a slightly peppery flavor, a little bit like arugula, but not quite so intense. Most people like them better cooked than raw; they make a nice change from spinach and kale. You can use mustard greens in almost any recipe that calls for collards or other cooking greens.
6. Fresh apricots
You can get dried apricots at any time of year. But for the best fresh ones, you’ll want to stick with their actual growing season; otherwise, you’re liable to get ones that were plucked before they’re ripe and don’t have much flavor. In the late spring and early summer, apricots are at their most flavorful, so take advantage them as a nice preview of the summertime fruit season to come.
7. New potatoes
Yes. White potatoes are fine to eat. New potatoes are in season in the late spring to early summer. They’re small and tender, and perfect for salads or roasting. They’re slightly sweeter than regular potatoes, and have a firmer texture.
8. Arugula
Arugula, or rocket, is a green with a serious attitude. You can get it spring through fall, but it’s a little bit milder in the spring, so if you’re not totally sold on the full-on bite of summertime arugula, the springtime version is much milder.
9. Strawberries
Strawberries are the early birds of berries, showing up at the start of the season to whet your appetite for the summertime bounty to come. Strawberries are tasty in desserts, but fits very good also in salads or with vegetables.
10. Peas
Peas typically have a very short growing season of just a few weeks and that makes them all the more special. They contain a wide variety of vitamins and minerals including vitamins C and K, and several B vitamins, plus manganese, phosphorus, and protein. This makes them an excellent anti-inflammatory food.
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