top of page
Writer's pictureJennifer McDiarmid

8 - 10 portions? How.

Updated: Feb 10, 2019

Recent reports in the media and health experts are now promoting that we should be eating 8-10 portions of fruits and vegetables a day. How do you do this? Here are some ideas.


I want to start by putting some general ideas down and then look at some daily menus that easily incorporate 8-10 portions of vegetables each day. You may be surprised how easy it could be.


Think of the following;

· Imaginative salads using a wide variety of colourful vegetables. This could include some or all of the following, beetroot cooked or grated raw, peppers sliced or grilled then sliced, sweet corn, rocket, grated carrots, grated courgettes, red onions as well as the standard lettuce cucumber and tomato. Note always wash your vegetables well if they are going to be eaten raw.

· Soups are fabulous, homemade is best but the fresh soups from the chill counters of the super markets are fine. I would avoid the creamy ones and focus on the vegetables/ lentil. Bean sorts. Soups freeze really well.

· Smoothies using a mixture of fruits and vegetables. A good starting point is celery apple and carrot, or mango apple and banana. I use the frozen mango chunks from the freezer section of the super market. Whiz these up with some coconut milk or almond milk or soya milk to make an addition to a breakfast. You can get many good recipe books on smoothie blends.

· Stir fried vegetables using olive oil or coconut oil and 1 tblsp of water. The water creates a stem fry and prevents the fat from becoming over heated and therefore damaged.

· Oven baked vegetables again using olive oil. A mixture of carrots, pumpkin and sweet potato or a mix of courgettes, aubergine, red onion and peppers. Or of course your own mixture. One thing that I quite often do is to bake a whole butternut squash. So easy, no preparation needed. The flesh will scoop out of the skin as a vegetables portion or to add to a soup or to make a mash.

· Stews and casserole which contain lots of vegetables are particularly nourishing as we have the stock with the meal and so do not lose valuable nutrients.

· A steamed medley using a range of colourful vegetables cooked in the same trivet. Healthy and saves washing up.

· Vegetable tagines. You can use a wide variety of vegetables and use the Moroccan spices to add flavour. See recipe of the month

· Frozen vegetables are a very good standby and can often have more nutritional value than some fresh food that has been around a while or has lots of air miles on it. Once a vegetable or fruit is harvested the nutritional value starts to deterioate. Frozen vegetables and fruits are usually frozen within hours of harvesting and this preserves the nutritional value.


Thinking of this list above at times it is worth thinking ahead, i.e. when roasting vegetables for your evening meal do some extra and have them cold at lunch time the next day with some added protein like tinned sardines or cold chicken or an omelette etc. or do a similar thing with a stir fry which are surprisingly good cold.


Let us now look at some typical day’s food intake and how we can fit in all of the recommended portions. I have added up the portions as I have gone along.

Day 1

Breakfast; Porridge with fresh blue berries on top (1)

Snack; banana and some cashew nuts (2)

Lunch; Wholemeal sandwich with egg, tomato, lettuce and cucumber (3&4). An orange (5)

Snack; fruit scone (6)

Evening meal; Poached salmon fillet with steamed cauliflower, carrots and peas and a baked sweet potato. (10)


Day 2

Breakfast; muesli with dried fruit (1) and a banana sliced (2) with almond milk.

Snack; A pear and some almonds.

Lunch; vegetables soup (4&5) with rye bread and humus

Snack; Oatcakes with cashew nut butter and carrot sticks (6)

Evening meal; beef casserole with root vegetables (7&8) steamed spring cabbage or broccoli.


Day 3

Breakfast; fruit smoothie (123) with ground almonds and almond milk.

Snack; apple and natural yogurt

Lunch; Large imaginative salad (5,6,7), omelette and slice of whole meal bread.

Snack; satsuma (8)

Evening meal; baked beans on toast with grilled mushrooms (9) and tomatoes (10).



 

Please note that these daily meals are by no means a diet plan or to be followed they are simply ideas showing how 8-10 portions could be eaten in one day.


 

I read an interesting article published a few weeks ago in one of the daily newspapers. A woman called Sara Malm explained how she had embraced the new guidelines despite having a very small budget. She found that the increase of the fruits and vegetables cost her approximately £1 a day.


Give it a go and let me know what you think!


28 views0 comments

Recent Posts

See All

Fig rolls

Comments


bottom of page