You know how the outdoors is bursting with shades of orange and red, well why not bring that colorful radiance inside and onto your dinner plate?
Locally grown pumpkins, squash, red peppers and more are plentiful, and these foods are not just tasty, they’re healthy too.
Red and oranges veggies are especially high in vitamin A, vitamin C, potassium, fiber and Vitamin K.
WebMD lists four benefits of eating and red and orange vegetables.
Antioxidants that occur naturally in these plants can reduce the risk of cancer. The beta-carotene typically found in orange vegetables is one such antioxidant. Lycopene, found in tomatoes, is another.
Two fall vegetables high on Consumer Reports list when it comes to healthy eating are butternut squash and beets.
“The orange flesh that’s revealed when you crack open butternut squash ‘means that it contains lots of beta carotene, an antioxidant that the body converts to vitamin A,’ says Lauri Wright, PhD, RDN, chair of the Center for Nutrition and Food Security at the University of North Florida. Antioxidants, including betalain, give red beets their distinctive deep color as well as their anti-inflammatory powers. Beets are also rich in nitrates, which research has shown may help widen blood vessels and improve blood flow.”
Eating an apple a day is easy to do in Ohio, home to dozens of orchards and farms that grow many different kinds of apple, from tart to sweet varieties, crunchy to soft and everything in between.
Before you head out, though, consider why the old maxim endures.
Here are 5 health benefits from Healthline:
Many orchards offer pick your own, so you and your family can get exercise too.
Nearby orchards include:
Quarry Hill Orchards in Berlin Heights;
Burnham Orchards in Berlin Heights;
Hillcrest Orchards in Amherst;
Miller Orchards in Amherst;
Rex Gees in Amherst;
Grobe Fruit Farm in Elyria.
And if you need yet another reason to eat locally grown produce, remember buying locally supports your farming neighbors and reduces transportation and other stresses on the environment.
Here’s a fall favorite recipe from Kendal Executive Chef Scott Stonestreet
Roast Butternut Squash Lentil Salad (8 servings)
Butternut squash, chopped 3 pounds 5 ounces
Coconut oil 2 Tbsp
Garlic 2 cloves
Light brown sugar 1 Tbsp, 1 Tsp
Chili powder 1 3/8 Tsp
Kosher salt 3/8 Tsp
Black pepper 3/8 Tsp
Preheat oven to 350.
Dried lentils ½ cup, 3 Tbsp
Water 2 ¾ cup
Kosher salt 3/8 Tsp
Tahini 2 Tbsp, 2 Tsp
Maple syrup 5/8 Tsp
Garlic powder 3/8 Tsp
Lemon juice 1 Tbsp, 1 Tsp
Water 3 Tbsp, 1 Tsp
Baby arugula 2 quarts
Pecan halves ¼ cup, 3 Tbsp
Red Grapes 2 cup
To make salad:
Place arugula on dish, top with lentils, squash, pecans and grapes.
Drizzle dressing over salad.
Are you making plans for your future? Kendal at Oberlin offers an active lifestyle with opportunities for lifelong learning, art and culture.
About Kendal at Oberlin: Kendal is a nonprofit life plan community serving older adults in northeast Ohio. Located about one mile from Oberlin College and Conservatory, and about a 40 minute drive from downtown Cleveland, Kendal offers a vibrant resident-led lifestyle with access to music, art and lifelong learning.