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Nutrition for Everyone: Quick Tips -- Fruits and Vegetables (page 2)

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Top Your Meals With Fruits and Vegetables

  • Try these tasty additions to add flavor to your salad:
    • Green or red pepper strips, broccoli florets, carrot slices, or cucumber add crunch to your pasta or potato salad.
    • Baby carrots, shredded cabbage, or spinach leaves bring color to a green salad.
    • Apple chunks, pineapples, and raisins perk up coleslaw, chicken or tuna salads.
    • Oranges, grapefruit, or nectarine slices add extra flavor to any salad.
    • Fruit juice, flavored vinegars, or herbs make low-fat salad dressings flavorful without adding fat or salt.
    • Add sliced banana, blueberries, or raisins to cereal.
  • Add fresh fruit and vegetables to foods you already eat — like berries and bananas to yogurt and cereal; vegetables to pasta and pizza; and lettuce, tomato and onion to sandwiches.
  • Put some punch into your party by blending 100 percent fruit juices to create a refreshing new juice. Try mixing pineapple, orange, grapefruit, or other fruit juices. Add a slice of lemon or lime as a garnish.

Cooking With Fruits and Vegetables

  • Using a microwave is fast and fun. Use a microwave or pressure cooker to quickly "zap" vegetables or a potato and retain their nutrients.
  • Grill fruits or vegetables. When grilling, wrap vegetables in aluminum foil, or use skewers of pineapple, yellow squash, eggplant, nectarines, zucchini, or cherry tomatoes, onions, mushrooms. Place over medium-hot coals for a fun-to-eat and flavorful BBQ treat.
  • Make a quick smoothie in the blender by puréeing peaches and/or nectarines, a touch of your favorite fruit juice, crushed ice, and a light sprinkling of nutmeg.
  • Make homemade salsa with tomatoes, mangoes, avocados, red onions, cilantro, and lime juice.
  • Looking for a fun appetizer when you entertain? Try making spears of fruit by attaching strawberries, grapes, melon slices, or pineapple chunks onto small skewers. Use low-fat or non-fat yogurt for a dip.
  • Here's a quick fruit salad you can make in less than a minute. Open a can of juice-packed mandarin oranges and empty into a bowl. Add a sliced banana, a sliced apple, and some blueberries or raisins.
  • Cool off with a great treat! Pour 100 percent fruit or vegetable juice into an ice cube tray or popsicle mold to make juice cubes or popsicles.
  • Sometimes you can eat some of your fruit and vegetables their own containers. Kiwifruit comes with its own serving cup and cantaloupe with its own serving bowl. Just cut them in half through the middle and scoop out each half with a spoon.

Fun For Kids

  • Top off a bowl of cereal with a smiling face from sliced bananas for eyes, raisins for a nose, and an orange slice for a mouth.
  • You can use broccoli florets for trees, carrots and celery for flowers, cauliflower for clouds, and a yellow squash for a sun. When you're all done, you can eat your masterpiece!
  • Make frozen fruit kabobs for kids using pineapple chunks, bananas, grapes and berries.
  • Go shopping with your children. Take them to the grocery store or farmers market to let them see all the different sizes and colors that fruit and vegetables offer. Let them pick out a new fruit and vegetable to try. By making it fun and involving your kids, they'll be more likely to eat healthy foods.

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