Healthy Living

8 Types of Root Vegetables to Add to Your Plate (+ Delicious Root Vegetables Recipe)

8 Types of Root Vegetables to Add to Your Plate (+ Delicious Root Vegetables Recipe)

When you think about healthy eating, do salads and green vegetables usually come to mind? How about adding a little more variety to your plate?

Root vegetables like carrots, sweet potatoes, and turnips are a rich source of nutritious complex carbohydrates & a great way o add a healthful variety to your diet. Instead of upsetting blood sugar levels as refined sweet foods do, these power-packed root vegetables help regulate your blood sugars.

Why Eat More Root Veggies?

Long root vegetables – carrots, parsnips, burdock, and daikon radish – are excellent blood purifiers & can help improve circulation in the body. Round root vegetables – turnips, radishes, beets, and rutabagas – nourish the stomach, spleen, pancreas, and reproductive organs. Which root vegetables do you eat most? If you’re like most of the world, you probably eat carrots and potatoes the most. Here are a few other root vegetables to explore and add to your dinner plate!

How to Use the Power of Forgiveness to Stop Unhealthy Eating

How to Use the Power of Forgiveness to Stop Unhealthy Eating

Have you ever downed an entire package of chips, crackers, or cookies? Ate pizza or cake until you felt sick? Drank more coffee or wine than your body wanted? Do you remember how you were feeling at the time? I ask because sometimes we overeat to help distract us from emotional pain.

Think about it: have you noticed that sometimes when you overeat you’re not hungry at all? What you are is lonely. Or angry. Or sad. Or resentful. Or frustrated. Or something else. What hurt are YOU holding on to?

How to Cook Beans for Easy & Healthy Meals Powered by Plant Protein

How to Cook Beans for Easy & Healthy Meals Powered by Plant Protein

“I was determined to know beans.”— Henry David Thoreau, The Bean-Field

How about you? How well do you know beans? Creamy cannellinis, meaty garbanzos, sweet adzuki, tender pintos, and so many more—beans are one of the most powerful, nutrient-dense plant foods around.

Consider this: Beans are packed with tons of fiber, as well as plenty of iron and protein. They are rich in antioxidants and phytonutrients. They are low in calories. Plus, studies have found them to lower risk of cancer, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes.