The Colour Code System for Fruits and Vegetables

Herbalife nutritionist, Susan Bowerman explains how you can get 7 servings of fruits & vegetables everyday. There are different colour categories for fruits & veggies, as described in the book “Seven Colours of Health”. Aiming for one serving of fruits & veggies from each colour category can help you reach your daily serving amount.

For breakfast, a cup of fruit added to your Herbalife Formula 1 protein shake or stirred into a dish of yogurt will get one serving out of the way right off the bat. Berries will give you a serving from our red-purple group that includes fruits like berries, plums and pomegranate.

At lunchtime, if you have a large salad with romaine lettuce and a sliced tomato, that’s 2 more colourful servings. The lettuce counts as a serving from our yellow-green group, which includes most leafy greens, and the tomato comes from the red group which also includes pink grapefruit and watermelon.

At dinner, if you have a cup each of steamed broccoli and asparagus with your meal, that’s another 2 servings. Our green group includes foods in the cabbage family, like broccoli, cabbage and cauliflower, and the asparagus represents the white-green group, which also includes foods like leeks, onions and artichokes.

We’ve only got two servings to go! Our orange group includes foods like apricots, mango, cantaloupe, winter squash and carrots. Snack on some baby carrots during the day and you’ve got that color taken care of. And lastly, a fresh orange for dessert after lunch or dinner comes from the orange-yellow group, which includes other citrus fruits, pineapple, peaches and papaya.

The Colour Code System for Fruits and Vegetables

Colour coding can be a useful device to introduce diversity into the diet. The different colors are important because the different plant chemicals they represent have different effects on the body. By eating regularly from each group, you will obtain a rich group of phytochemicals to help promote good health.

Colour Group: Red (lycopene) Foods: Tomatoes, pasta sauce, tomato soup, tomato-based juices (spicy or regular), and ketchup; pink grapefruit, guava and watermelon.

Colour Group: Red/Purple (anthocyanidins, resveratrol) Foods: Grapes, red wine, grape juice, prunes, cranberries, blueberries, blackberries, strawberries, pomegranate, plums, cherries.

Colour Group: Orange (alpha- and beta-carotene) Foods: Carrots, mangos, apricots, winter squash, cantaloupe, pumpkin, acorn squash, sweet potatoes.

Colour Group: Orange/Yellow (terpenoids, Vitamin C) Foods: Orange juice, oranges, tangerines, yellow grapefruit, lemon, lime, peaches,papaya, pineapple; Lemon, lime, and orange zest.

Colour Group: Yellow/Green (lutein) Foods: Spinach, avocado, collard, mustard, or turnip greens, green peas, green beans, green peppers, yellow peppers, cucumber, kiwi.

Colour Group: Green (glucosinolates) Foods: Broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, kale, cauliflower, Chinese cabbage or bok choi.

Colour Group: White/Green (allyl Sulfides) Foods: Garlic, onions, leeks, celery, asparagus, artichoke, endive, chives.

Adapted From:  What Color Is Your Diet? written by David Heber and Susan Bowerman, New York: Harper Collins, 2001

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