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Why you should eat two fruit and five veg

And what a serve actually looks like

According to Nutrition Australia, the foundation of the healthy eating pyramid (of which 2 fruit, 5 veg hails) was born in Sweden in the 1970s.

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The idea started with a simple โ€˜more to lessโ€™ idea that was illustrated in the form of a 4-layered pyramid. At the bottom, in the โ€˜eat moreโ€™ category sat fruit and veg.

Healthy eating pyramid

How many servings of fruit and veg per day?

The Australian Dietary Guidelines which includes 2 fruit and 5 veg, have been around since those early days of the Healthy Eating Pyramid.

Nutrition Australia says the guidelines are there to โ€œprovide advice on the amounts and types of foods that we should consume every day for good health and to reduce our risk of diet-related diseases.โ€

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What does 1 serving of vegetables look like?

A standard serve of vegetables equates to about half a cup. So thatโ€™s roughly one small to medium sized carrot, about 3-4 medium florets of broccoli, a large handful of peas, a handful of spinach and about 6 cherry tomatoes.

eatforhealth.gov.au says 1 serve of veg is

  • 1/2 cup cooked carrots, spinach, broccoli, pumpkin
  • 1 cup green leaves or raw salad vegetables
  • 1/2 cup sweetcorn
  • 1/2 medium potato
2 serves of veg
2 serves of veg look like this
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What is the fruit serving size?

Two fruit 5 veg is an Australian recommendation. Worldwide, WHO recommends no less than 400g of combined fruit and veg per day. 

To get your 2 serves of fruit per day, eatforhealth.gov.au provides the following as a guide.

1 serve of fruit looks like

  • 1 medium apple, banana, orange or pear
  • 2 small apricots, kiwi fruits or plums
  • 1 cup diced or canned fruit (no added sugar)
  • 125ml fruit juice (no added sugar)
  • 30g dried fruit (eg 2 dried apricots. 1 + 1/2 Tbsp sultanas)
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What happens if you eat more/less than 2 fruit and 5 veg?

Eating more than the recommended amount of veg is rarely a problem. As long a youโ€™re mixing it up and not counting potato chips as a serve.

When it comes to fruit, itโ€™s worth remembering it contains sugar. So sticking to the recommended 2 a day is a good idea. Eating less than the recommended amount is where the problems lie.

According to the Australiaโ€™s Health 2018 report n 2014-2015 only 50% of adults ate the recommended 2 serves of fruit and only 7% ate the daily 5 serves of vegetables.

The World Health Organization (WHO) says โ€œInsufficient intake of fruit and vegetables is estimated to cause around 14% of gastrointestinal cancer deaths, about 11% of ischaemic heart disease deaths and about 9% of stroke deaths globally.โ€

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Here are some ways to increase your daily serve of vegetables 

  • Stir fry with capsicum strips, carrot, onion and snow peas
  • A spoonful of sauerkraut with your poached eggs on toast
  • Roasted vegetable salad with pumpkin, beetroot and sweet potato, mixed with raw spinach, cucumber and asparagus

Even fussy kids can get their daily vegetables. Add a cup of spinach per person to bolognese or other pasta sauces. Mix it in well so it melts and theyโ€™ll hardly notice.

Eating your daily 2 and 5 is important for good health so why not decide to make a habit of adding a few of slices of cucumber or tomato to your sandwich today!

5 serves of veg
Each half contains 1 serve of veg
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