What to Eat: Food that’s good for your health, pocket and plate. Joanna Blythman

What to Eat: Food that’s good for your health, pocket and plate - Joanna  Blythman


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to an autumnal minestrone.

      Are spinach and Swiss chard good for me?

      Spinach and Swiss chard are rich in the antioxidant vitamins C and E, which help protect against free radicals that can predispose the body to disease; vitamin K, which promotes bone health; folate, which helps prevent birth defects; and iron, which prevents anaemia. They are also a good source of soluble fibre, which slows down the rate at which sugar is released into the bloodstream. The green colour of the leaves hides the fact that chard and spinach are also a good source of carotenes, such as lutein and zeaxathin, which may perform many beneficial functions, including protecting the eyes against age-related degeneration and lowering the risk of heart disease, certain cancers and stroke.

      Spinach is a vegetable that in the past has been shown to contain pesticide residues above safe limits. The most recent tests suggest that the residues in spinach do not pose a threat to health, but small amounts of residues have been detected in over half the samples tested. As pesticide residues are a toxin, it makes sense to minimize exposure to them, and buying organic spinach would be a good way to do that. As Swiss chard is considered to be something of a minority vegetable, it has not been monitored for pesticides in any systematic way. However, it is popular with organic growers because it is less susceptible to disease than spinach, and therefore more easily cultivated without pesticides. Even conventionally grown Swiss chard is likely to have lower residues than spinach.

      How are spinach and Swiss chard grown?

      Spinach and Swiss chard are grown in open fields or in polytunnels. Spinach is grown in the UK and Ireland throughout the year but considerable amounts of spinach are imported, usually from Spain, Portugal and Italy. Swiss chard, too, is cultivated in the UK and Ireland all year. Imported Swiss chard, generally organic, comes from Italy.

      Where and when should I buy spinach and Swiss chard?

      In the coldest months, hardier perpetual spinach and Swiss chard may be easier to find than the more tender true spinach, which is susceptible to frost. Swiss chard is less widely available, but it is a staple of the organic vegetable box and prominent on farmers’ market stalls.

      SUPERFOOD LORE

      Spinach once had the reputation of being an outstandingly rich source of iron. This superfood lore around spinach generated the cartoon character Popeye the Sailorman, whose weightlifter’s muscles and prodigious strength were attributed to his taste for the vegetable: ‘I’m strong to the finish when I eats me spinach.’ Then in the 1930s it emerged that the vegetable’s iron had been overstated by a factor of ten, due to a decimal point being put in the wrong place. Now it is accepted that while there are very many health reasons to eat spinach, it contains a level of iron comparable to other leafy green vegetables, no more.

      Will spinach and Swiss chard break the bank?

      By washing your own spinach, rather than buying it pre-washed, you can save a considerable amount of money. Your spinach will also be more robust because it hasn’t been put through a pack house bath of water – often chlorinated.

      Swiss chard is one of those vegetables that are rarely found in supermarkets and where stocked is much more expensive than at a farmers’ market stall. Gardeners insist that it is easy to grow, so if you do have any green space, try growing it from seed. It should keep going for months and save you lots of money.

      Tomatoes

      The defining quality of a really good tomato is a balance of sweetness and acidity. To achieve this, a number of different factors come into play. The variety grown is critical. The justly famous tomatoes of southern Europe, such as the Sicilian Pachino, San Marzano and Cuor di Bue tomatoes or the French Marmande have taste built into their DNA, whereas more recently developed varieties, such as the revealingly named Moneymaker, were bred to meet different goals entirely: regular appearance and size, split-resistant skins, long shelf life. Sun and heat are also essential to grow tomatoes with really memorable flavours.

      Some tomato buffs argue convincingly that home-grown tomatoes, which have reached maturity slowly, growing outdoors (or only lightly protected from the elements) in a sunny, sheltered spot on fertile soil, can give imports from sunnier countries a run for their money. Very few tomatoes are now grown that way in Britain so nearly all the home-grown tomatoes you buy will have been grown in glasshouses which are notorious for producing high-tech tomatoes that look the part but don’t taste it. The Germans have a word for them, ‘wasserbomben’ – literally water bombs – an ironic description of those pinkish, mushy fruits that we have all tasted. That said, the eating quality of glasshouse-grown tomatoes has improved immeasurably as growers have selected more intrinsically flavoursome varieties, allowed them to ripen longer and picked them when they are more mature.

      When choosing fresh tomatoes, as a general rule, and whether home-grown or imported, small is beautiful. Large plum and beefsteak tomatoes often disappoint – although they can be quite good for cooking as opposed to eating raw – but small plum and cherry tomatoes usually have the best flavour. Two of the most consistent cherry varieties from a taste perspective are Gardener’s Delight and Sungold. Try to make a note of the name of the variety to build up your own mental checklist of which varieties pack a flavour and which are duffers.

      Don’t get sidetracked by tricksy appearance. Tomatoes come in all shapes, sizes and hues: beefsteak, cherry, yellow, black, gold, plum, mini-plums, cocktail, pumpkin and heart-shaped. The only way you can tell if they taste any good is by trying them. Don’t automatically assume that pricier tomatoes with a ‘vine-ripened’ label will taste better. They might, but equally they might be from an inherently tasteless variety, or ripened in an artificially heated glasshouse, so cheaper, less upmarket tomatoes might outperform them on flavour and texture.

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