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Fruits and Vegetables. Tubers Potato Roots Beets Turnips Carrots Radishes Bulbs Onion Garlic Stem Celery Mushrooms Asparagus (stem). Seeds Beans Peas Corn Flower Cauliflower Broccoli Asparagus (tops) Leaves Brussel sprouts Cabbage Lettuce Fruit Tomato Green pepper
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Tubers • Potato • Roots • Beets • Turnips • Carrots • Radishes • Bulbs • Onion • Garlic • Stem • Celery • Mushrooms • Asparagus (stem) • Seeds • Beans • Peas • Corn • Flower • Cauliflower • Broccoli • Asparagus (tops) • Leaves • Brussel sprouts • Cabbage • Lettuce • Fruit • Tomato • Green pepper • Squash • Cucumber Botanical Names-Veggies
Red • A, C, Thiamin (B1) iron • Green • A, B, C, iron, calcium • White • B, C, iron, calcium • Yellow • A, B, C, calcium • Other nutrients • Chlorophyll, carbohydrates, incomplete proteins Color=nutrients
Pome • Apple, pear, kiwi • Drupe • Peach, nectarine, apricot, cherry, plum • Berries • Raspberries, strawberry, grape • Citrus • Grapefruit, lemon, orange, lime • Melon • Casaba, cantaloupe, watermelon • Tropical • Banana, mango, pomegranate, avocado, pineapple Botanical Names-Fruits
Crisp • Bright color • Firmness • Soundness • Absence of bruises and decay • Not overripe Selecting Fresh Veggies
Buy • Firm to the touch, the right color, well-shaped, heavy for size, aromatic, in good condition • Avoid • Too soft or too hard, green or underripe, damaged, bruised, decayed, mildewed, discolored Selecting Fresh Fruits
Canned: • They can be whole, sliced, or in pieces. • Come packed in juice or light, heavy or extra heavy syrup • Packed in cans or jars • Purchase the size container that meets your needs • Usually less expensive than frozen or fresh • Cost depends on brand, can size, quality, and packing liquid • Jars free from dents, bulges, leaks • Cover and store in separate container after opening More selection tips
Dried Fruit • Most common: raisins, prunes, dates, and apricots • Other common fruits: apples, peaches pears, figs, pineapple, bananas, and papayas • Come in boxes or plastic bags • Larger fruits generally cost more than smaller fruits • Choose fruits that are fairly soft and pliable • Store unopened in a cool, dry, dark place • After opening store in air tight containers. More selection tips
Frozen: • Available sweetened and unsweetened • Whole or in pieces • Most common: blueberries, raspberries, strawberries, and cherries • Most come in plastic bags, and paper/plastic cartons • May lose texture quality during freezing • Less expensive than fresh • Cost depends on brand, packaging, size, added ingredients such as sweetener • Choose clean, undamaged, and frozen solid • Store in coldest part of freezer • After thawing store in tightly covered container in refrigerator • Use as soon as possible and do not refreeze More selection tips
Fresh Fruits • Underripe • Room temperature or brown paper bag until ripened • Bananas • Uncovered at room temperature • May be refrigerated-skin may darken, but they are still good • Berries, Cherries, Grapes • Remove any that are damaged, refrigerate in perforated plastic bag or container, shallow container, refrigerator crisper • Use as soon as possible Storing
Citrus • Room temperature or refrigerator • Other ripe fruit • Refrigerate in crisper or in a perforated plastic bag • Melons should be in a closed container or plastic bag • Cut fruit • Refrigerate in airtight container or plastic bag Storing
Vegetables • Potatoes • Cool, dark, dry place • Do not refrigerate • Onions • Cool, dry, area • Basket or loosely woven bag for air circulation • Do not refrigerate • Do not store with potatoes Storing
Other vegetables • Perforated plastic bags, airtight containers, refrigerator crisper • Let tomatoes ripen before refrigerating Storing