VEGETABLE BASICS
by
Lawrence Wilson, MD
© December 2010, The Center for Development
Vegetables are officially defined as
edible roots, stems, leaves and flowers. Vegetables number in the thousands,
though most people deprive themselves of the delicious tastes, colors and
textures of most of them by just eating a few. Vegetables have been eaten for as long as mankind has been on
earth. Hopefully this article will
have you trying at least 10 more varieties.
DEFINING VEGETABLES
Fruits
versus vegetables.
Vegetables are the leaves and more fibrous roots and other parts of
plants. They are to be
distinguished from fruits, which are defined as expanded ovaries of plants. Fruits are generally sweeter, and
contain seeds while vegetables do not.
Some foods that are considered vegetables are, in fact, fruits from a
botanical point of view. This is
important to know in nutritional balancing science, because we do not prefer
these foods. They include:
1.
All nightshades: These include all tomatoes, white and
red potatoes, eggplant, and all peppers – both sweet red, yellow and
green peppers and hot chile peppers of all varieties,
of which there are hundreds.
2.
All squashes, such as summer, winter, spaghetti, butternut, acorn, zuccini,
pumpkin, and others. These are all
rather yin, although the winter varieties such as acorn, butternut, and
spaghetti squash are acceptable to eat more often, as they are less yin than
the others.
3.
Others, such as cucumbers, okra, green beans and peas. The latter two, however, (green beans
or string beans, and peas) are not very yin and are excellent vegetables for
everyone.
Herbs
versus vegetables.
Vegetables differ from herbs and spices in that vegetables can be eaten
in large quantities on a daily basis.
Herbs and spices include many leaves, stems or roots of plants. However, they either have very strong
flavors or they contain slightly toxic substances that make them unsuitable for
everyday eating, except in very small quantities. Vegetables differ from grains in that grains are actually
the seeds of plants, not the leaves, stems or roots.
VEGETABLES AND YOUR HEALTH
The
cruciferous vegetables.
Much research lately has focused on the health benefits of
vegetables. One of the healthiest
families of vegetables are the crucifers.
All are rich sources of sulfur of a particular kind, along with hundreds
of other nutrients and phytochemicals. These vegetables include broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage,
Brussels sprouts, kale, bok choy,
turnip root and greens, rtabaga, arugula, radishes
(many types), watercress and wasabi.
These amazing foods contain substances that can help prevent cancer and many
other life-threatening conditions.
Onion,
garlic, and ginger root family.
These are very powerful vegetables that help kill parasites, are very
nourishing, contain a lot of selenium, and more.
Lettuce
family. Lettuce,
dandelion root and leaves and others are helpful for the liver.
Vegetable
juices. Cabbage juice
may help stomach ulcers. Carrots
and carrot juice have long been advocated to help regenerate the liver and for
cancer therapy.
Books
such as Raw Vegetable Juices by
Norman Walker describe which vegetables or juices may be of help for various
health conditions. However,
do not overdo on juices.
The main problem with juices is they are very yin or cold in Chinese
medical terminology. This is not
helpful today. That is why I
prefer people eat whole and cooked vegetables most of the time. However, 10-12 ounces of carrot or
other vegetable juice is excellent daily for all adults. For much more on this topic, read Carrot Juice on this website.
Harmful
vegetables. Vegetables can
occasionally aggravate health conditions.
For example, I suggest avoiding completely the nightshade vegetables – white and red potatoes, tomatoes, all
peppers, including hot peppers, red and green peppers, and eggplant. Eating them can aggravate joint pain in
some people, and they all contain a poison called solanin. Your digestion will improve if it is
weak, as it is in most people, by eliminating these vegetables.
FIBER
Fiber
is an important component of vegetables.
Most of it is cellulose, an insoluble fiber that we cannot digest. Fiber helps keep food moving through
the intestines and helps prevent constipation, diverticulosis,
diverticulitis and even cancer.
Fiber also assists in the production of vitamins in the intestines and
can support the proliferation of friendly bacteria.
If
one does not eat many vegetables, the diet may lack fiber. This is especially true if one eats
mainly refined grains such as white flour, white bread, white pasta and white
rice, all of which have had their fiber removed.
Fiber
can, however, impair the absorption of nutrients from vegetables, since many
nutrients are locked inside the stems and leaves. It is essential to chew your vegetables. Another way of unlocking the goodness
of vegetables is to cook them.
This breaks down the fiber and makes it much easier for the body to
absorb the minerals and other nutrients.
One can also place vegetables in a juicer or even a powerful blender to
assist nutrient absorption.
MINERALS FROM VEGETABLES
Vegetables
are an essential source of minerals such as calcium, potassium, selenium,
germanium and many others. The
mineral content varies greatly depending on where and how the vegetables are
grown. Cooking the vegetables greatly
enhances the availability of the minerals in most vegetables by breaking down
the tough vegetable fibers and often by concentrating the food so that more can
be eaten easily.
Iron. Iron is found in dark leafy greens and
in beets. While they contain
significant amounts of iron, it is not quite as absorbable as the iron found in
meats.
Magnesium
and chlorophyl. Leafy vegetables are rich in chlorophyll, a fascinating substance
that plants use to generate energy from sunlight. Its structure is very similar to hemoglobin, the molecule in
our blood that carries oxygen to all the cells. The only difference is that hemoglobin contains an atom of
iron in the center, while chlorophyll contains an atom of magnesium. This difference causes chlorophyll to
be green while hemoglobin is red.
Leafy
green vegetables are rich in magnesium.
These include lettuce, spinach, kale, Swiss chard, mustard greens, beet
greens, watercress and cilantro.
Sulfur. The radish, onion and cabbage
families are excellent sources of sulfur, another important trace mineral. These include white, yellow, red and
green onions, chives, garlic, broccoli, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts, red and
green cabbage and Chinese cabbage.
Iodine
and sea vegetables. These contain many trace elements,
plus a lot of iodine. They include
kelp, dulse, and Irish moss. Less well-known sea vegetables are wakame,hiziki and nori. Sushi often comes wrapped in nori leaves, which feel like a piece of thin paper and have
a pleasant taste. Sea vegetables
are extremely rich sources of minerals, but contain higher amounts of toxic
metals because the oceans are somewhat contaminated. Kelp is unique because it contains a substance called
alginate that helps prevent the absorption of toxic metals. In fact, it helps our bodies eliminate
these metals. Therefore, I mainly recommend kelp, which is an excellent
vegetable to eat in granules, or preferably capsules since it does not taste
great. One can also buy the leaves
and cook them, though this is more work and not really necessary. For more information, read Kelp on this website.
THE ROOT VEGETABLES
Root
vegetables deserve special mention and are too often ignored. Carrots, onions, turnips, parsnips,
rutabaga, daikon (white radish), celery root, garlic,
ginger root, red beets, golden beets, black, white and red radishes, burdock
root and others are among them.
They
have been staple foods in many civilizations for thousands of years. Although the potato is a staple food in
many groups, it is not actually a root, but a tuber. It belongs to a different class of vegetables, the
nightshades. These can cause joint pain and other symptoms for some
people. I prefer sweet potatoes
and yams to the regular white potatoes.
Roots
are more yang in Chinese medicine, as they grow under the earth. This quality is beneficial for many
people. They also store very well,
which helps if you do not enjoy shopping every few days.
Roots
are starchy vegetables, which means they will fill you up quite well if you eat
enough of them. Yet they are far
easier to digest than starches such as breads, and far more nutritious than
most bread as well. Most roots
require cooking for 30-40 minutes to help break down their fibrous parts and
turns their starches into sugars.
True,
the roots are less beautiful than the greens and in some instances like celery
root, downright ugly. Let this not
deter you from eating them regularly.
Roots are among the most concentrated sources of vitamins and minerals
available to us. They are also
delicious steamed or stir-fried, or in soups or casseroles.
ORGANICALLY GROWN ARE USUALLY BEST
Organically
grown vegetables tend to contain less pesticide residues than commercial
produce and are usually much richer in minerals and some vitamins. A study published in the Journal of Applied Nutrition tested
organic and commercial produce purchased in Chicago stores. Compared to the regular produce, the
organic food had an average of twice the levels of minerals. Organic foods are often fertilized with
more trace elements than commercial produce. Other studies have shown the same thing.
Eating
organic also sends a message to farmers that you prefer we not poison the earth
with toxic sprays. Organic
vegetables often taste better, especially carrots, potatoes and celery. Eating organic may turn a non-vegetable
eater into a vegetable lover simply because organically grown tastes better.
Note
that organic food may still contain some pesticide and herbicide residues since
toxic sprays can blow from one field to another. Also, pesticides used in past years may still be present in
the soil used to raise the organic produce.
The
variety of organic vegetables available in markets is growing fast. Indeed, this is the fastest growing
sector of the agricultural marketplace.
They cost a little more, but prices are coming down and they are worth having
if you can find them and afford them.
Sometimes supermarkets sell organic produce without even marking it as
so, because the organic food has a longer shelf life. This is just another advantage to the organic or sustainable
method of agriculture.
FRESH, FROZEN OR CANNED?
The
best way to enjoy vegetables is to eat them fresh. They will have the most
nutrition in this form and will often taste best. However, if you are unable to shop often, frozen vegetables
are the next best alternative. If
vegetables are frozen when they are very fresh, they will retain many of their
nutritional qualities. In fact,
sometimes freshly frozen peas, green beans and others are better than fresh
ones if the fresh ones have been shipped long distances and are not that
recently picked.
Canned
vegetables are much better than none at all. However, they are less desirable, as they may be old and
they may suffer more damage in canning than they do when frozen. Cans that are soldered may leach lead
into the food. Cans that are crimped
to close them are better. Some
cans are lined with toxic plastic liners, but others are not.
COOK ALL OF YOUR VEGETABLES
Cooking
all vegetables is best. I know
this flies in the face of many doctorÕs recommendations. Here are the reasons:
1.
Better mineral absorption.
While cooking destroys a few vitamins, it makes the minerals in the
vegetables much more absorbable.
In raw salads, the minerals are locked into the fiber, which is hard for
human beings to digest in most cases.
Cooking softens the fibers, making the minerals more readily available.
2.
More yang. This is
extremely important today. All raw
food is more yin, which is not desirable.
Read the article entitled Raw Foods and Yin And Yang Healing to understand this
better.
3.
Cooking often concentrates the food so you can eat much more of it. This is particularly
the case with greens such as spinach and other leaves.
4.
Kills millions of germs that may be on the produce. This is a problem with salads of all
kinds today, especially if you donÕt wash the vegetables yourself, as occurs in
restaurants.
5.
More soothing and easier to digest in other ways. In addition to softening the fibers,
warming the food to near body temperature assists a damaged digestive tract,
which is the case with almost everyone today. In contrast, cold food is a little harder on the digestive
tract as it must be warmed up inside oneself.
Vegetable
preparation. The right
equipment makes preparing vegetables more pleasurable. Buy a vegetable knife. These have a wide, thin blade made for
slicing. Mac is one excellent
brand of knives.
Steaming
vegetables. A great idea is to buy a vegetable steamer. It
makes cooking vegetables very easy.
Just load them into the steamer and set the timer. Cleanup is simple as well. You can also use a simple vegetable
steamer that fits inside a saucepan.
This is a non-electric device that fits into most saucepans and turns
the pot into a steamer.
Alternatively, steam vegetables by just putting a small amount of water
in a covered saucepan and adding your vegetables. Drink the cooking water in this case, as it will contain
many minerals.
Stir-frying vegetables. This is another popular method for
cooking vegetables. Just put
vegetables in a frying pan and add a little butter, olive oil or just even
water and stir often. Do not use
much coconut oil, as it is too yin.
A Chinese method of stir-frying uses a wok, a pan specially shaped for
lightly cooking vegetables in a little oil.
Roasting vegetables. This is also popular, as it can be done
on the stove-top, in the oven, or on a barbeque. It gives the vegetables a flame-roasted appearance and taste
that many people love.
Crock
pot vegetables. This
is also very popular. Buy a crock
pot, which usually costs less than $20.00 USD. Vegetables can be placed in it without cutting them up at
all, in most cases, which saves time and keeps all the tasty juices inside. They cook slowly and usually wonÕt
burn. You can set them in the
crock pot at bedtime and they will be cooked and ready to eat when you wake
up. You can also set them in the
crock pot before you leave home for work, and they will be cooked and ready to
eat when you arrive home later.
You can add chicken or meat and have a complete meal, all cooked for you
with very little effort.
Baking vegetables in the oven. This is also a good way to make certain
vegetables such as carrots, onions and others.
Vegetable soups. Eating whole cooked vegetables is
probably best, as they are chewed, and this begins digestion in the mouth. The best soups are very thick
soups. Soups with a lot of liquid
are not as good because the extra liquid can impair digestion, especially in
some people.
Vegetable
soups are simple and tasty, and usually do not require stirring or other
attention. Most can be made in 30
to 45 minutes. Just a few
vegetables are often best. Onion
and celery will add sweetness, if needed.
Try to start with excellent ingredients, and it will taste
delicious. Do not overseason it, as it is usually not needed.
If
you are in a huge hurry, two options are 1) powerful blenders like the Vita-Mix
and Ninja types will actually cook a vegetable puree soup in about 5 minutes, I
believe, by spinning the vegetables extremely fast. This may not be as good as gentle cooking, but it is very
fast. 2) Some excellent frozen
vegetable soups are also available at most supermarkets. You just place the bag of frozen
ingredients in a pot of boiling water and the soup is ready in five or ten minutes.
Seasoning
vegetables. They can be
seasoned with a little oregano, rosemary, thyme, curry powder, or any of a
dozen other simple mild herbs and spices.
Fancy cooking skills are not required. Be sure to start with excellent quality vegetables and they
will have wonderful flavors.
Leftovers. While fresh is best, to save time you may cook enough for
two days. It is best not to keep
leftovers more than a day or two, as they will deteriorate somewhat, but on
occasion it is fine. You can
freeze leftovers, as well. If
possible, make them fresh every day.
You can make a lot of vegetables in the morning, and then take some to
work and eat them all day.
HOW MUCH?
I
find that everyone needs loads of cooked vegetables to obtain oneÕs basic
nutrition. Eat about 70% of your
diet as cooked vegetables. This
amounts to about 9-10 cups of cooked vegetables for an adult. This may seem like a lot, but it is not
that difficult with a little practice.
Eat vegetables preferably three times daily, and at least at two meals
daily. For example, breakfast can
be a bag of frozen peas or green beans.
These take only a few minutes to prepare and are quite tasty.
Preferably
keep your meals very simple for best digestion. Have just two or three foods at a meal, or even just one
food per meal. Make one of these
foods cooked vegetables.
USE TOPPINGS IF YOU DO NOT LIKE SIMPLE COOKED VEGETABLES
To
help you eat your vegetables, and especially to help children to eat them, make
it fun. Have a dozen or more
toppings ready to put on your vegetables.
Here are some suggestions for toppings:
Fresh cream, whipped cream or butter
Olive oil
Some plain yogurt
Grated cheese, preferably raw, full-fat
cheese
Mustard sauce. Mustard is an excellent herb
Other herbs of many kinds
Almond butter mixed with a little water
Thai – peanut butter sauce
Chinese – real soy sauce
A few chopped nuts or seeds
Salad dressings you make yourself or
you buy
Sesame dressing
Pesto sauce
Relishes
Tomato and Chile pepper sauces like
Tabasco sauce if you wish, but only occasionally. Peppers and tomato are nightshade family vegetables, which
are best avoided. Hot spices are irritating,
and are much less recommended for this reason.
To thicken sauces, arrowroot powder is superb
and very nutritious
For
fancier vegetable recipes, many natural food cook books can be helpful. One that is completely dedicated to
nutritional balancing science is Joyful Cooking by Joy Feldman.
CHILDREN AND VEGETABLES
Many
parents have trouble getting their children to eat vegetables. Here are a few ideas:
1.
DonÕt lecture your children.
Instead, set a great example.
Eat plenty of vegetables yourself.
Ideally, fill half your plate filled with vegetables whenever you eat,
at least twice daily. Children
will often imitate you.
2.
Create tasty sauces your children enjoy to put over the vegetables. See
the suggestions above for ideas.
3.
Disguise vegetables in other dishes, if needed. For
ideas, read the article entitled Fourteen Ways To
Disguise Vegetables.
4.
Puree vegetables if a child does not like the texture of vegetables. To make a puree soup, cook vegetables
for 10 minutes or more. Then pour
the mix into a blender and blend for about 15 seconds. Then cook it some more and most vegetables
will not be recognizable.
5.
Make it fun. Grow a
garden. For young children, carve
little faces on vegetables, slice them creatively, arrange them creatively on a
plate, and in other ways make them
attractive to children. Dip them
in fun sauces or otherwise make them more attractive.
6.
Start introducing vegetables when children are very young. This can help children to feel they are
just normal food. For instance,
frozen peas can help toddlers when teething and make a refreshing snack in hot
weather for older children as well.
7. Beware of allowing your children to
mix and play with children who have learned to hate vegetables. This is all too common.
8. For quick, easy meals and snacks for
children and adults, read Fast Food For Nutritional
Balancing.
Dried
vegetable capsules. If
you will not eat enough vegetables, a type of vegetable food supplement I
strongly recommend, along with kelp capsules, are capsules of dried
vegetables. Many brands are
available at health food stores. These
will supply extra vegetables for those who donÕt like eating them on a daily
basis or who may need more of the nutrients than standard portions supply.
Dried
vegetable powders are not as good, in my opinion. These are sold as Ògreen superfoodsÓ,
for example. The main reason is
that dried, chopped vegetables can oxidize and turn rancid quickly. I believe that the vegetable capsules,
while more costly, are much better and safer.
JUICING VEGETABLES
Juicing
is when the vegetables are run through a juicer that removes
the pulp or fiber. So one does not
get the fiber, just the juice.
This concentrates many nutrients in the vegetables. Carrot is a popular one to juice, as it
is quite sweet and delicious. You
can add some greens, some ginger, turnip, beet or other raw vegetables as well
for more richness, flavor or therapeutic reasons.
I
suggest that most everyone today drink 10-12 ounces of carrot juice daily. This will provide an important form of
calcium and many other nutrients that most everyone needs. Do not skip this aspect of a nutritional
balancing program or any health program.
However,
more than this much juice is not helpful for most people. It is far too yin,
it upsets the blood sugar in many cases, and it can tear up the digestive tract
in some cases. Avoid becoming a juice
fanatic, please.
Which
juicer is best?
Any juicer will do. The
least costly are the centrifugal juicers.
The masticating type such as the Champion or Green Power are a little
easier to clean, perhaps, and may extract a little more juice.
What
about blenders for carrot juice?
Powerful blenders such as the Vita-Mix, Ninja and other machines do not
make juice from carrots as well. I
would use a juicer, not a blender.
DRIED VEGETABLE SNACKS
In
recent years, health food stores have begun selling plastic containers of dried vegetables. These are excellent as snacks, though
they may be a bit more costly.
Another
recent innovation are vegetable chips. These are also okay for snacks,
especially if they do not contain sugar and chemical additives.
CONCLUSION
It
is easy to make jokes about vegetables, the soggy, limp pile of spinach tucked
under the corner of a juicy steak.
Yet vegetables are a major food group enjoyed by all human civilizations
throughout all time. They are also
our major source for many vital minerals, vitamins, fiber, and many other
nutrients.
So
eat plenty of vegetables – at least a large serving twice a day. Also, be sure to have your 10 to 12-ounce
glass of carrot juice every day.
This will assure that you get a wide variety of essential nutrients,
some of which are simply not available from any other food source or food
supplements.
References
1. J.
Applied Nutrition, 1993:45(1);35-39.
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