What are the healthiest foods

Oct 16, 2015

What are the healthiest foods

What are the healthiest foods

What are the healthiest foods

The Top 10 Healthiest Foods on Earth (And How to Eat Them) | Your guide to the healthiest foods in the supermarket.

Eating healthy has oodles of positive benefits - for the body and the mind alike. When we eat well we feel good, when we feel good we’re happier, when we’re happier we’re more productive… and the wonderful cycle continues. Increasingly, shops and restaurants around the world are getting on the healthy eating bandwagon - making it easier for people to treat their bodies right. This list of 10 of the healthiest foods in the world is just a beginning guide - a way to understand the essential vitamins and minerals the human body needs to stay functioning at its best. And as an added boost - these healthy foods are all downright delicious!

This nutrient-dense green superfood is readily available - fresh, frozen or even canned. One of the healthiest foods on the planet, spinach is packed with energy while low in calories, and provides Vitamin A, Vitamin K, and essential folate.
EASY EATING TIP: Sauté with onion and add to an omelet for an easy, healthy meal.

What are the healthiest foods

Spinach is full of nutriants and always ready to eat (Julia Mikhaylova / Shutterstock.com)

Filled with super healthy antioxidants, black beans digest slowly - keeping you feeling full for longer. These little beauties are full of calcium, protein and fiber, and they also taste great!
EASY EATING TIP: Think Mexican food! Burritos, nachos, tacos… whatever tickles your fancy.

What are the healthiest foods

Black beans are full of calcium, protein and fiber (Mona Makela / Shutterstock.com)

With more antioxidants than any other nut, walnuts are also brimming with Vitamin E, and rich in plant serums, omega 3 oils, and healthy fats.
EASY EATING TIP: Keep a supply in your bag for an easy, healthy snack on-the-go

What are the healthiest foods

Both beets and walnuts made the list of the world's healthiest foods (Olha Afanasieva / Shutterstock.com) 

Good for the brain and skilled at lowering blood pressure, the humble beet is often overlooked as one of the healthiest foods on earth. The brightly-colored root vegetable is filled with folate, magnesium and Vitamin C.
EASY EATING TIP: Grate them into salads for a sweet, crunchy boost.

Eating just one or two avocados a week gives you all the benefit of healthy monounsaturated fats, Vitamin B6 and loads of folate. Check with your local grocer to find out when this spreadable fruit is in season in your area.
EASY EATING TIP: On toast with salt and pepper, or a slice of cheese if you’re that way inclined.

What are the healthiest foods

The humble avocado, pictured here with its close cousin, the mango (RMIKKA / Shutterstock.com)

According to recent research, chocolate contains more antioxidants, gram-for-gram, than most fruit juices - great news for chocoholics! On top of protecting the body from diseases and helping to prevent heart conditions, dark chocolate is a natural mood-booster.
EASY EATING TIP: Eat this healthy food in moderation - just one or two squares per day is enough to reap the benefits.

What are the healthiest foods

Protecting the body from diseases: dark chocolate (Gulsina / Shutterstock.com)

Like most berries, raspberries are filled with antioxidants, to help keep the body healthy and free of disease. Fresh or frozen, they also provide Vitamin C, calcium and iron.
EASY EATING TIP: Sprinkle them on yogurt or porridge in the morning to start your day in a sweet and delicious way.

What are the healthiest foods

Raspberries, in all their delicious glory (Dionisvera / Shutterstock.com)

This pungent bulb has been used to ward off disease for centuries, as it inhibits the growth of bacteria, lowers cholesterol and blood pressure and has some serious anti-inflammatory power.
EASY EATING TIP: Crush it and cook it. Garlic tastes great in everything from dressings and sauces to curries and soups.

What are the healthiest foods

Garlic is known for lowering cholesterol and blood pressure (Gresei / Shutterstock.com)

Often touted as the world’s healthiest food, lemons have strong anti-inflammatory qualities and can help to inhibit the growth of cancer cells. They also have just as much Vitamin C as oranges.
EASY EATING TIP: Add a slice of lemon to your tea or water bottle to get healthy and hydrated at the same time.

What are the healthiest foods

Lemons on the tree, ripe for the picking (DaBeatriz / Shutterstock.com)

Last but not least, this mighty legume is high in fiber and protein and adds great taste and texture to any meal. Vegans and vegetarians are often a fan of using lentils as a meat substitute in traditional recipes.
EASY EATING TIP: Add to salads, soups and stews for some extra oomph.

What are the healthiest foods

Lentils are high in fiber and protein (Foodio / Shutterstock.com)

What are the healthiest foods

What are the healthiest foods

What are the healthiest foods

What are the healthiest foods

Emily Hlavac Green

If you are looking for ingredients that are going to pack a nutritious punch when it comes to adding value to your recipes, you are in the right place. These picks have major health payoffs, and we've included all the good they're doing your body when you eat them, whether they are packed with fiber, vitamins, antioxidants or any other of that wonderful stuff. Plus, we paired them with some recipes that bring out their best flavor qualities, so you can be eating nutritiously and deliciously! Hit the grocery aisles, then the kitchen, and feel free to thank us later.

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Mushrooms

Mushrooms are full of nutritional benefits and can make a great stand-in for meat in vegetarian dishes because of their complex, savory flavor and firm texture. Additionally, mushrooms are the only plant source of vitamin D (a nutrient many of us are deficient in) and one of the only types of widely available produce that contain significant amounts of selenium. The latter, according to WebMD, helps prevent cell damage. Many varieties are also thought to have immune-boosting and anti-cancer properties.

Recipe: Garlic Butter Mushrooms

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Barley

Barley is a grain full of fiber, so it's digested more slowly by the body than more refined grains. It's also thought to help lower blood pressure and keep blood sugar levels stable.

Recipe: Slow Cooker Beef And Barley Soup

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Whole Grain Pasta

Whole grain pastas contain far more fiber and nutrients, like iron and protein, than the traditional semolina type. Make sure you look for packages labeled "whole grain" rather than "multigrain." Multigrain pastas might be made of grains and flours other than semolina, but that doesn't mean they're necessarily in their whole (and healthiest) form.

Recipe: Greek Yogurt Whole Grain Chicken Alfredo

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Walnuts

Walnuts are an excellent source of omega-3 fatty acids, which help lower bad cholesterol (LDL) and raise the good cholesterol (HDL) in your body. If you choose not to eat animal food products that provide these essential fats (like fish), walnuts are an excellent alternative. Walnuts also contain antioxidants, which can help protect against free radical damage, as well as protein and fiber.

Recipe: Candied Walnut Brussels Sprout Bites

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Nut Butters

Nut butters are an excellent source of healthy, unsaturated fats. They're relatively easy to make at home in a food processor—that way you can guarantee you get the freshest, tastiest product without any unwanted preservatives or additives.

Recipe: Breakfast Apple Nachos

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Quinoa

Quinoa is technically a seed, but it cooks and tastes like a grain. It's ideal for salads—warm or cold—and can be used in soups, as a pilaf-like side dish, or formed into patties to make homemade veggie burgers. And because it's a complete protein (containing all 9 essential amino acids), it's an excellent ingredient to use in vegetarian dishes.

Recipe: Zesty Mediterranean Quinoa Salad

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Olive Oil

Olive oil is an amazing source of healthy monounsaturated fats, which, according to the Mayo Clinic, may lower overall cholesterol in the body and lower the risk of heart disease. It's easy to cook with, or you could drizzle it on salads and soups. It can even be a deliciously complex addition to classic desserts.

Recipe: Garlicky Dipping Oil

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Eggs

Eggs have long had a bad rap as a high-cholesterol food, but that description doesn't give consumers the full story. According to a March 2013 article in HuffPost, researchers now know that dietary cholesterol and blood level cholesterol have very different effects on the body, and a recent scientific study even showed that eating whole eggs actually seemed to increase the level of good (HDL) cholesterol in the body. Additionally, eggs (and egg yolks specifically) are one of the best food sources of the B-complex vitamin choline, which is thought to reduce inflammation in the body and improve neurological development and function.

Recipe: Bell Pepper Eggs

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Salmon

Salmon is a fatty fish, and in this case, fatty is a good thing. Salmon is chock full of omega-3 fatty acids, which, among other things, can keep your skin healthy and glowing and even give your mood a positive boost. If you can, opt for wild-caught salmon as opposed to farm-raised—it contains fewer toxins and isn't usually grain-fed.

Recipe: Baked Pineapple Salmon

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Sweet Potatoes

Sweet potatoes are packed full of beta-carotene, which your body can convert to vitamin A and use to protect against diseases like cancer and heart disease, as well as chronic conditions caused by inflammation in the body, like rheumatoid arthritis. The beta-carotene found in sweet potatoes can also help to manage and stabilize blood sugar levels.

Recipe: Baked Sweet Potato

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Oranges

Best known as a good source of vitamin C, oranges are a go-to food when your immune system needs a little boost. Vitamin C is also thought to stimulate collagen production (a reason it pops up in so many skin creams and products), so eating lots of oranges could help keep your skin looking smooth and supple, too. In addition to their high vitamin C content, oranges also have other good stuff like folate, potassium, and vitamin B1.

Recipe: Mimosa Oranges

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Kidney Beans

According to the Mayo Clinic, red beans like kidney beans—commonly included in chili recipes—are a great way to get your daily doses of iron, phosphorous, and potassium. And as an added bonus, they're low in fat and high in other good things, like fiber and protein. That means they'll keep you fuller longer.

Recipe: Best-Ever Beef Chili

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Kale

Kale is a superfood. According to WebMD, this hardy green vegetable, which is a member of the cabbage family, can lower cholesterol and cancer risk. It's low in calories, like most vegetables, but is also a good source of a whole range of essential nutrients, like calcium, vitamin K, vitamin A, vitamin C, manganese, potassium, copper, and fiber.

Recipe: Kale Salad With Apples And Toasted Almonds

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Swiss Chard

Much like kale, chard is a hardy, leafy green that's packed with nutrients. Loaded with essentials like calcium, vitamin A, vitamin K, B vitamins, dietary fiber, potassium, and beta-carotene, Swiss chard comes in many varieties, but has a very similar flavor to beet greens; the two veggies are in the same botanical family.

Recipe: Garlicky Orecchiette With Swiss Chard And Fontina

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Greek Yogurt

Greek yogurt is here to stay. You can serve it with fruit and honey for breakfast, use it to replace other fats in baked goods, or make a sauce for your protein of choice. However you enjoy it, keep eating it: The stuff's full of probiotic bacteria that promote good digestive health—plus, it has more protein than other yogurt varieties.

Recipe: Frozen Yogurt Fruit Bites

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Broccoli

This ubiquitous green vegetable has a secret: Though oranges are a go-to for a healthy dose of vitamin C, a serving of broccoli has nearly a whole day's required amount of the vitamin. It's also a good source of vitamin K, which the body needs for normal blood clotting and for developing strong, healthy bones and cells, as well as calcium and potassium.

Recipe: Grilled Broccoli

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Almonds

Almonds are a nut you should stock up on, as they offer so many nutrients: fiber, protein, healthy fats, vitamin E, and magnesium. Plus, you don't need to cook them! Just grab a handful to get these wonderful benefits.

Recipe: Churro Almonds

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Cabbage

Cabbage is a cruciferous veggie with few calories, no fat, and huge amounts of good-for-you nutrients. It's got small amounts of essentials like vitamin C, calcium, and fiber, and some varieties (savoy and bok choy, specifically) are good sources of beta-carotene. That's an all-important antioxidant that the body can convert to vitamin A and use to boost your immune system and protect against heart disease and cancer.

Recipe: Grilled Cabbage "Steaks"

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Kiwi

We generally think of oranges as the fruit to eat when you're in need of a little boost of vitamin C, but per serving, kiwis have about twice as much of the vitamin as oranges. They are also an excellent source of potassium and phytonutrients. As an added bonus, the recipe below includes blueberries, another little fruit that's packed full of antioxidants.

Recipe: Chocolate Kiwi Pops

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Black Beans

Black beans—like most varieties of beans and legumes—are high in protein and dietary fiber. They're also a good source of antioxidants, phosphorous, iron, and the mineral magnesium, which the body needs to keep nerves and muscles functioning.

Recipe: Instant Pot Black Beans

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Avocado

Avocados are mild and creamy, making them perfect for adding to all sorts of dishes. They're also high in healthy, monounsaturated fats that seem to lower bad cholesterol (LDL) and boost the good cholesterol (HDL) in the blood. Avocados are also a good source of both insoluble and soluble fiber, as well as vitamin K, vitamin E, lutein (which helps protect the eyes), potassium (which helps to regulate blood pressure), and certain B vitamins.

Recipe: Bruschetta Chicken Stuffed Avocados

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Onions

The allium family of vegetables includes aromatic staples like onions, garlic, shallots, leeks, and scallions. Some of the compounds contained in these vegetables—which give them their distinctive, pungent odor—are also what make them so good for you. They're a good source of allyl sulfides and saponins, which are thought to lower blood pressure, reduce cholesterol, and even hinder or prevent tumor growth. These vegetables also contain antioxidants called quercetins, which are thought to have anti-inflammatory properties that are crucial for anyone with inflammatory or auto-immune disorders like arthritis.

Recipe: Baked Bloomin' Onion

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Sardines

Those little fish might not look like much, but the humble sardine is a nutrient powerhouse. Rich and flavorful, sardines contain lots of good stuff—like omega-3 fatty acids, calcium, vitamin D, and vitamin B12—and also have less of the bad stuff, like mercury, that's often found in larger varieties of fish.

Recipe: Pasta Con Le Sarde

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Oatmeal

It's no secret that oatmeal is full of fiber, but you might not know just how much this food can do for your health. Oats are thought to lower inflammation and bad (LDL) cholesterol, as well as help guard against high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, and weight gain.

Recipe: Maple Oatmeal With Cranberries And Pistachios

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Edamame

Edamame are soybeans, and they're most often served simply boiled and salted—a great way to snack on them. They're also easily tossed into stir-fries, thrown on top of salads, puréed and eaten on their own, or mixed into dips, like hummus. However you cook them up, these little beans have a big nutrition benefit; they have just under 10 grams of dietary fiber per 1/2-cup serving, healthy polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fats, and about 11 grams of protein, according to WebMD, as well as some vitamin C, vitamin A, iron, and calcium.

Recipe: Roasted Edamame

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Buckwheat

Despite the word "wheat" in its name, buckwheat is actually gluten-free (it's a seed related to rhubarb), making it a great go-to ingredient for those who are gluten-allergic or averse. It's high in fiber, as well as essential nutrients like manganese, magnesium, copper, and zinc, and contains 8 essential amino acids needed to keep the body healthy, functioning, and strong — even lysine, which is not produced by the body. Try using buckwheat flour to make pancakes or cookies with an earthy, slightly nutty flavor.

Recipe: Gluten-Free Buckwheat Chocolate Chip Cookies

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Bulgur

Bulgur is cracked wheat that has been dried and steamed. Because of that bit of pre-cooking before packaging, it cooks up quickly and has a light, fluffy texture. High in both protein and fiber, bulgur is a filling but low-calorie food that makes a great base for a vegetarian main dish or as a health-boosting ingredient in soups, salads, and stuffings.

Recipe: Bulgur and Cashew Stuffed Eggplant

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Pumpkin

Pumpkin is best known for its place in the traditional holiday pie, but it's also a tasty addition to other baked goods, like breads and muffins, and to savory dishes, like curries and pastas. You'd do well to add it to as many of your meals as possible while it's in season. Pumpkin contains about double your daily requirement of vitamin A, as well as carotenoids like beta-carotene, which help protect your eyes, and which may also have a role in reducing cancer risk.

Recipe: Pumpkin Butter

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Spinach

This ubiquitous green vegetable might seem delicate, but it has a lot in its leaves that can keep you healthy and strong. It's loaded with iron, folate, beta-carotene, lutein, various antioxidant compounds, and has about double the fiber of most other leafy greens.

Recipe: Spinach Salad

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Watercress

Watercress, which is related to cruciferous vegetables like broccoli and cabbage, contains many of those veggies' health-boosting and cancer-fighting properties. This crunchy little green is packed with vitamins A, C, and K, as well as lutein and zeaxanthin, which are carotenoids that are thought to protect the eyes, the heart, and cardiovascular system.

Recipe: Broiled Bacon-Wrapped Chicken with Sweet Potatoes and Watercress