The Fall Produce You Should Be Eating As Temperatures Cool
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Eating in season is an important part of maintaining a more environmentally sustainable diet. Not only can eating in season be good for the planet, it’s also cheaper than eating produce that’s out of season, and it can ensure you’re getting the freshest and best-tasting fruits and vegetables possible. After a long summer, as the temperatures start to drop and you’re planning out your meals, you may be wondering how to work more fall produce into your diet. This list can give you a good place to start. Find these fruits and vegetables at your local farmers market or grocery store, and build your meals around them. This is the fall produce you should be eating this autumn.
1. Apples
Whether you can find the time to go apple picking or not, you should definitely find a way to use apples in your fall recipes. This is the time of year when the fruit tastes its best and is at its least expensive. Keep it simple and snack on some apple slices plain or with cinnamon and peanut butter, or turn them into a dessert by baking them into a pie or crisp. Apples also make a crunchy and fresh addition to an autumnal salad.
2. Sweet Potatoes
It’s always great to have sweet potatoes on hand during the fall months because they can be used for both sweet and savory purposes. You can treat a sweet potato like a baked potato by adding butter, salt, pepper and chives for an easy, healthy side dish, or you can turn it into a dessert by giving it a sprinkle of sugar and baking spices or transforming it into a sweet potato casserole with marshmallows.
3. Cabbage
There are few types of fall produce that will give you more bang for your buck than cabbage, which can be used both raw and cooked. Sliced thinly and quick-pickled in some vinegar or lemon juice, cabbage makes a crunchy sandwich topper, or it can be braised or sautéed to bring out its sweeter, milder, less punchy side. Add it to soups, salads, stir frys—it’s one of the most versatile ingredients you could have on hand.
4. Carrots
Carrots can make for both a crunchy snack and a mildly sweet side dish, which is why they’re great to have stocked in your fridge. They’re also a healthy and budget-friendly addition to those soups and stews you’ll be making this fall. Plus, they last a long time, so you don’t have to worry about using them up within a matter of days before they go bad.