• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Chicago Sports Today

Chicago Sports News continuously updated

  • Bears
  • Baseball
    • Cubs
    • White Sox
  • Basketball
    • Bulls
    • Sky
  • Blackhawks
  • Colleges
    • DePaul
    • Illinois
    • Loyola
    • Northwestern
    • Notre Dame
    • UIC
    • Valparaiso
  • Soccer
    • Fire
    • Red Stars

Cold-weather root veggies provide a bounty of delicious, healthy cooking options

February 28, 2022 by Chicago Sun-Times

Load up your meals up with seasonal winter foods.
Load up your meals up with seasonal winter foods. | Dreamstime/TNS

From soups to stews to salads to stir-fry, there seems to be no limit to their culinary uses, and they can be very budget-friendly.

The weather outside might still be cold, but that does not mean your fruit and vegetable options aren’t sizzling.

If you take a closer look at the produce aisle right now, you’ll find some standout cold-loving options that will surely increase your appetite for winter and also the nutritional value of your diet.

“When in season, fruits and vegetables likely have a higher concentration of vitamins and minerals,” says Jill Nussinow (a.k.a. The Veggie Queen), registered dietitian, culinary educator and cookbook author.

From beets to turnips, many of these subterranean wonders are now available year-round, but Nussinow says they’re at their best when the local weather turns chilly — “cool temps make them sweeter tasting.” She adds that many people do not realize how versatile winter vegetables and fruits can be in the kitchen. From soups to stews to salads to stir-fry, there seems to be no limit to their culinary uses. As a bonus, Nussinow notes that seasonal root vegetables can be very budget-friendly and benefit from a long storage life.

Here is the cream of the crop when it comes to winter fruits and vegetables to help tide you over until strawberry and asparagus season.

Beets contain a nitrate that can improve blood flow to aid in lowering blood pressure numbers.
stock.adobe.com
Beets contain a nitrate that can improve blood flow to aid in lowering blood pressure numbers.

BEETS: Notable for their sweetness, beets have some of the highest natural sugar levels of any veggie. They contain betacyanin, an antioxidant that may help combat certain cancers, as well as nitrate that can improve blood flow to aid in lowering blood pressure numbers.

Try this: Add a splash of color to hummus by blending in 2 medium-sized cooked beets.

Blood oranges are delicious in salsas.
stock.adobe.com
Blood oranges are delicious in salsas.

BLOOD ORANGE: Their flavor tends to be sweeter and less tart than typical oranges. On top of a wallop of vitamin C, the color of these blood oranges signals the increased presence of anthocyanins, potent antioxidants that appear to help lower the risk for cognitive decline.

Try this: Toss together 1 peeled and chopped blood orange, 1 chopped orange bell pepper, 1 cup halved cherry tomatoes, 1 seeded and minced jalapeno, ¼ cup cilantro, juice of ½ lime and a couple pinch of salt. Use as a salsa for cooked chicken or fish.

Consider adding butternut squash puree to your favorite pancake recipe.
stock.adobe.com
Consider adding butternut squash puree to your favorite pancake recipe.

BUTTERNUT SQUASH: This curvy winter stalwart is jam-packed with beta-carotene, which in greater intake levels has been linked to improved brain functioning as we age. “Beta-carotene also helps boost your immune system and is good for the eyes and skin,” adds Nussinow.

Try this: Add pureed squash to pancake batter and baked goods batter, including muffins, to add natural sweetness and moisture.

Consider adding chopped or shaved Brussels sprouts in salads and slaws.
stock.adobe.com
Consider adding chopped or shaved Brussels sprouts in salads and slaws.

BRUSSELS SPROUTS: This veggie is loaded with vitamin K, a nutrient which a study in the Journal of the American Heart Association found can lower the risk for certain types of heart disease.

Try this: Shred raw sprouts and use as you would cabbage in slaw recipes.

Fresh raw fennel is ideal for salads. All parts of the crunchy vegetable are edible.
stock.adobe.com
Fresh raw fennel is ideal for salads. All parts of the crunchy vegetable are edible.

FENNEL: Crisp and crunchy with a pleasant licorice flavor and aroma. all parts including the white bulb, green stalks, and wispy dill-like foliage are edible. Fennel contains appreciable amounts of quercetin, a flavonoid antioxidant that may lower the risk for some cancers.

Try this: Toss thinly sliced raw fennel with orange sections, baby spinach, sliced red bell pepper and 1 tablespoon each extra virgin olive oil and lemon juice. Garnish salad with fennel fronds.

Try a blended pear smoothie — shown here with cocoa, chocolate, cinnamon, anise and mint leaves — for a fiber-rich snack.
stock.adobe.com
Try a blended pear smoothie — shown here with cocoa, cinnamon, anise and mint leaves — for a fiber-rich snack.

PEAR: Nutritionally, pears claim to fame is stellar levels of dietary fiber — six grams in a medium fruit. “Most people need to be eating more fiber to promote better gastrointestinal health,” notes Nussinow.

Try this: Blend a pear into a seasonal smoothie with milk, yogurt, almond butter, cinnamon, and vanilla.

RUTABAGA: The yellow-tinged creamy flesh has a slight sweetness that’s combined with a peppery edge. It supplies good amounts of vitamin C, hunger-fighting fiber, and potassium to keep blood pressure numbers in check.

Try this: Use in pureed soup recipes or shred raw rutabaga and make it into fritters.

Sunchokes pack plenty of fiber and iron.
stock.adobe.com
Sunchokes (or Jerusalem artichokes) pack plenty of fiber and iron.

SUNCHOKES: Sometimes called Jerusalem artichokes, the crunchy tuber is an unexpectedly good source of energy-boosting iron and is also well-endowed with the soluble fiber inulin. “This feeds the good bacteria in your gut which can improve your immune system,” says Nussinow.

Try this: For a much healthier take on French fries, slice sunchokes into matchsticks (no need to peel them), toss with oil, salt and pepper and bake at 350 F for roughly 15 minutes.

Turnips have a peppery taste and are great in hash  recipes.
stock.adobe.com
Turnips have a peppery taste and are great in hash recipes.

TURNIP: The flesh is crispy with a peppery zing and delivers plenty of vitamin C. Research suggests adequate intakes of vitamin C can help lower the risk of suffering a stroke.

Try this: Cube and add to potato mixtures and hash recipes.

Environmental Nutrition is the award-winning independent newsletter written by nutrition experts dedicated to providing readers up-to-date, accurate information about health and nutrition.

Filed Under: Bulls

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • Storylines to follow during June’s second huge visit weekend
  • Today in White Sox History: June 6
  • It’s Kyle Teel time: Sox fans get their wish as another top prospect joins the bigs
  • South Side Sox Reacts: Where are we headed?
  • Game Thread: Royals at White Sox

Categories

Archives

Our Partners

All Sports

  • CHGO
  • Chicago Tribune
  • Chicago Sun-Times
  • 247 Sports
  • 670 The Score
  • Bleacher Report
  • Chicago Sports Nation
  • Da Windy City
  • NBC Sports Chicago
  • OurSports Central
  • Sports Mockery
  • The Sports Daily
  • The Sports Fan Journal
  • The Spun
  • USA Today
  • WGN 9

Baseball

  • MLB.com - Cubs
  • MLB.com - White Sox
  • Bleed Cubbie Blue
  • Cubbies Crib
  • Cubs Insider
  • Inside The White Sox
  • Last Word On Baseball - Cubs
  • Last Word On Baseball - White Sox
  • MLB Trade Rumors - Cubs
  • MLB Trade Rumors - White Sox
  • South Side Sox
  • Southside Showdown
  • Sox Machine
  • Sox Nerd
  • Sox On 35th

Basketball

  • NBA.com
  • Amico Hoops
  • Basketball Insiders
  • Blog A Bull
  • High Post Hoops
  • Hoops Hype
  • Hoops Rumors
  • Last Word On Pro Basketball
  • Pippen Ain't Easy
  • Pro Basketball Talk
  • Real GM

Football

  • Chicago Bears
  • Bears Gab
  • Bear Goggles On
  • Bears Wire
  • Da Bears Blog
  • Last Word On Pro Football
  • NFL Trade Rumors
  • Our Turf Football
  • Pro Football Focus
  • Pro Football Rumors
  • Pro Football Talk
  • Total Bears
  • Windy City Gridiron

Hockey

  • Blackhawk Up
  • Elite Prospects
  • Last Word On Hockey
  • My NHL Trade Rumors
  • Pro Hockey Rumors
  • Pro Hockey Talk
  • Second City Hockey
  • The Hockey Writers

Soccer

  • Hot Time In Old Town
  • Last Word On Soccer - Fire
  • Last Word On Soccer - Red Stars
  • MLS Multiplex

Colleges

  • Big East Coast Bias
  • Busting Brackets
  • College Football News
  • College Sports Madness
  • Inside NU
  • Inside The Irish
  • Last Word On College Football - Notre Dame
  • One Foot Down
  • Saturday Blitz
  • Slap The Sign
  • The Daily Northwestern
  • The Observer
  • UHND.com
  • Zags Blog

Copyright © 2025 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in