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Public Health
Seattle & King County
401 5th Ave., Suite 1300
Seattle, WA 98104

Phone: 206-296-4600
TTY Relay: 711

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Home » Healthy Eating » 5 A Day - The Color Way

Healthy Eating for Lifetime
5 A Day - The Color Way

5 A Day - The Color WayEat a colorful variety of fruits and vegetables. By eating a variety of colorful fruits and vegetables ― green, yellow-orange, red, blue-purple, and white, you are giving your body a wide range of nutrients that are important for good health. Each color offers something unique, like different vitamins, minerals, and disease-fighting phytochemicals, that work together to protect your health. Only fruits and vegetables, not pills or supplements, can give you these nutrients in the healthy combinations nature intended.

Fruits and vegetables are low in calories and fat and contain valuable fiber and a variety of nutrients that reduce the risk of chronic diseases. Recommended numbers of servings are 2½ cups of vegetables and two cups of fruit each day for an average diet of 2,000 calories. (The amount of servings recommended varies depending on your daily calorie needs, which are based on age, gender and activity level.)

Fruits and vegetables are easy to prepare and serve and there are so many tasty choices.

Fruits

  • Eat an array of fruit in a variety of colors. Select fruits that are in season to save money.
  • Choose fresh, frozen, canned, or dried fruit.
  • Light or heavy syrup adds sugar to canned fruits. Fruits canned in juice or water are a better choice.
  • Go easy on fruit juices. Choose whole or cut-up fruits more often as snacks or with meals, instead of juice. Consider water or milk as a beverage choice.
  • Regularly use fruit in salads, toppings, desserts and snacks.

Vegetables

  • Eat more dark-green vegetables like broccoli, spinach, kales and other dark leafy greens.
  • Eat more orange vegetables like carrots, pumpkin, winter squash and sweet potatoes.
  • Eat more dry beans and peas like pinto beans, kidney beans and lentils.
  • Keep the amounts of starchy vegetables such as potatoes and corn to the quantity recommended each week. For example, those needing 2,000 calories per day need only 3 cups of starchy vegetables per week.

Here are some helpful links to including more fruits and vegetables in your diet:

Updated: Thursday, June 22, 2006 at 09:34 AM

All information is general in nature and is not intended to be used as a substitute for appropriate professional advice. For more information please call 206-296-4600 (voice) or TTY Relay: 711. Mailing address: ATTN: Communications Team, Public Health - Seattle & King County, 401 5th Ave., Suite 1300, Seattle, WA 98104 or click here to email us.

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