As a child, I was always told to "eat my greens". These were the unappealing vegetables that sat on the edge of my plate. Peas, and green beans, all looked and tasted 1 . Let's face it, when there were so many other delicious treats to 2 why eat boring vegetables?
Since then my taste buds have 3 and I'm also fully aware of the health benefits of eating fresh vegetables. But we still need 4 of the amazing goodness these green super foods give us. In the UK, a campaign has been 5 for several years to encourage us to eat our "5 A Day"—five portions of fruit and vegetables. That's because evidence has shown there are significant health 6 to getting at least five 80g portions of a variety of fruit and vegetables every day.
But I struggle trying to fit these five portions into my daily diet, partly because I have a sweet 7 and vegetables are, well, tasteless. Researchers have been studying how to make eating vegetables more 8 . They analysed the psychology behind our food 9 and found that most of us are 10 by taste. Brad Turnwald from Stanford University says that studies show that people 11 to think of healthier options as less tasty for some reason. "
In Europe, a project called VeggieEAT has also been trying to find ways to get people to eat more vegetables. Project leader, Professor Heather Hartwell believes in 12 encouraging people into eating the right things. One idea has been to put a 13 of a tasty looking fruit
on a supermarket trolley as a hint about buying something from the fruit store after looking at the advertisement. She says, "Choice is a really 14 thing. But making vegetables look attractive will increase their sales. "
Certainly, eating "twisted citrus-glazed carrots" does sound tempting, even if it just 15 like a carrot, but if it makes us eat more vegetables then that can only be a good thing for our health.