White veggies dropped like a hot potato

PURDUE (US) — Colorful vegetables are promoted as key to a healthy diet, but white vegetables, especially potatoes, are getting a bad rap, nutrition expert says.

“Potatoes are a great source for potassium, and only 3 percent of American adults consume the recommended daily intake for this mineral that’s essential to healthy blood pressure,” says Connie Weaver, distinguished professor of nutrition science at Purdue University.

“Potatoes are often discounted from being healthy because of how they are cooked, topped, or the amount consumed, but, when prepared in a healthy way, potatoes are nutritious. People need to remember that white veggies have a place at the table, too.”

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In addition to potatoes, other white vegetables often neglected are cauliflower, turnips, onions, parsnips, mushrooms, corn, and kohlrabi.

These vegetables, and related topics such as ambiguity regarding classification of white vegetables and limitations of color as measure of nutritional content, are published this month in the Advances in Nutrition journal supplement.

Too few veggies

“It’s recommended that the variety of fruits and vegetables consumed daily should include dark green and orange vegetables, but no such recommendation exists for white vegetables, even though they are rich in fiber, potassium, and magnesium,” Weaver says.

“Overall, Americans are not eating enough vegetables, and promoting white vegetables, some of which are common and affordable, may be a pathway to increasing vegetable consumption in general.”

The daily recommendation is 4.5 cups of fruits and vegetables in a 2,000-calorie diet, but Americans consume less than half of that, or about 1.8 cups.

In 2004 the adequate intake for potassium was set at 4,700 milligrams a day, but the average adult intake is about half that amount. Potassium is one four nutrients identified by the Dietary Guidelines for Americans as lacking in daily diets.

“Western diets have led to a decrease in potassium with fewer fruits and vegetables, and at the same time, there’s been an increase in sodium consumption because people eat more processed foods,” says Weaver, who is an expert in mineral bioavailability, calcium metabolism, and bone health.

Too much salt

While potatoes are one of the highest sources of dietary potassium, when processed, they are often higher in salt. While potassium improves blood flow, too much salt increases blood pressure, making the vascular system work harder.

“The relationship between potassium and sodium is interesting because how the two work together may influence risk of cardiovascular disease,” Weaver says. “The human body needs both, but today’s problem is sodium consumption is up and potassium is down. Because potassium-to-sodium intake ratios are more strongly related to cardiovascular disease risk than either nutrient alone, more research is needed to understand this relationship.”

Potassium also shows signs of supporting bone health and reducing the risk of cardiovascular disease and stroke, as well as protecting against age-related bone loss and reducing kidney stones, but more research also is needed in these areas, Weaver says.

Weaver is editor of the journal supplement on white vegetables, and she served as chair for the June 2012 white vegetables roundtable. The roundtable was funded by the Alliance for Potato Research and Education.

Source: Purdue University