Rainbow Diet: Food for Thought

Oct 30

Contributed by Liz Richards, L.Ac.

fertility diet rainbow diet Back when I first moved to Portland, Oregon in 1997, I met a starry-eyed young man who was on a rainbow diet.  He showed me how he had attempted to get every color food on his Potluck plate.  This made an impression on me, but I also had my judgment about the guy. It took me about 10 years and my own enlightening “a-ha” moment to finally get what he was talking about.

I have realized that incorporating colorful food into my diet is easy, fun, and a great way to get all of my vitamins through food without  thinking too much about it. I have been making an effort to gather at least 2 produce items of each color in my grocery cart every week. My recent shopping trip produced red and orange beets, red and green apples, delicata squash, bananas, broccoli, kale, blueberries, and purple potatoes. Purple is the hardest, but a little purple cabbage, purple potatoes or purple grapes work great.

When the kids help out, I end up with some interesting things in the grocery cart that I wouldn’t normally get, inspiring me to try something new.

What is behind the rainbow diet?

The idea is that each color food has certain naturally occurring vitamins, minerals or anti-oxidants. For example, red foods tend to have lycopenes which are known to help prevent cancer in the body.  Many orange foods have carotenoids, which get converted to vitamin A, a substance known to improve vision, immunity, and maintain healthy mucous membranes. It makes sense that if you eat foods of various colors, then you will be getting a lot of the vitamins you need without a lot of fuss.

Here is a little list of foods of each color with the primary food substances in parenthesis:

Red (lycopenes and anthocyanins)

Tomatoes

Red apples

Beets

Red cabbage

Cherries

Cranberries

Pink grapefruit

Red grapes

Red peppers

Pomegranates

Red potatoes

Radishes

Raspberries

Rhubarb

Strawberries

Watermelon

Orange/yellow (carotenoids)

Yellow apples

Apricots

Butternut squash

Cantaloupe

Carrots

Grapefruit

Lemons

Mangoes

Nectarines

Oranges

Papayas

Peaches

Pears

Yellow peppers

Persimmons

Pineapple

Pumpkin

Rutabagas

Yellow summer or winter squash

Sweet corn

Sweet potatoes

Tangerines

Green (chlorophyll, indoles)

Green apples

Artichokes

Asparagus

Avocados

Green beans

Broccoli

Brussels sprouts

Green cabbage

Cucumbers

Green grapes

Honeydew melon

Kiwi

Lettuce

Limes

Green onions

Peas

Green pepper

Spinach

Zucchini

Blue/purple (anthcyanins)

Blackberries

Blueberries

Eggplant

Figs

Plums

Prunes

Purple grapes

Raisins

White (anthoxanthins)

Bananas

Cauliflower

Garlic

Ginger

Jicama

Mushrooms

Onions

Parsnips

Potatoes

Turnips

I encourage you to bring a little color into your life.  What are your favorite colorful foods?

Happy eating!! #eattherainbow