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Improve Your Health with Root Vegetables

root vegetables in a crate and on a wooden table, carrots, potatoes

Researchers are turning up all kinds of exciting revelations these days about the significant benefits of root vegetables.

“Rooting” for Your Health

In the last few years I have been seeing an increased volume of research on the health-boosting power of root vegetables. They include familiar items like carrots, beets, turnips, and radishes. Familiar yes, but not foods that typically make it on the superfood list.

The research convinced me some time ago that I needed to make these foods part of my daily menu. More on that in a minute.

Here is a brief summary of a few recent findings I have come across:

How much beetroot juice should you take? Hard to say. Anywhere from a half-cup to a cup or two a day would probably do you good. You might also want to consider adding beets to a veggie and fruit smoothie like I do. The combination makes a great antioxidant and detox cocktail, and getting your fresh beet fix that way is a lot cheaper than buying juice. If you start adding beets (juice or whole) into your diet, you may notice some harmless color changes (redder) in your urine and stool.

Beets have now become a fixture in my daily fare, part of a sustained effort to create “farm stand meals” that can balance the frequent eating out that I do, particularly on business trips. I make a veggie and fruit smoothie most of the time at home for breakfast, and when feasible, carry a blender with me on longer trips. The live enzymes, antioxidants, vitamins, minerals, fiber, and other phytonutrients in the vegetables pack plenty of jump start energy, cleanse and restore the GI tract, supply the cells with raw materials, and boost the immune system. For me, there is no better way to start the day. Give it a shot and see the difference it can make on your energy level and how you feel.

Learn more about what they can do for you and how to put them to use for you as I do, in a “power smoothie.” 

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