| Colors | Food Sources | Nutrients | Health Benefits |
|---|---|---|---|
| Red |
tomatoes tomato sauce ketchup watermelon guava juice red peppers |
Lycopene Beta carotene Vitamin C |
Lycopene is a potent antioxidant and is one of the top ten anticancer carotenoids. It has been linked to reductions in the risk of prostate cancer. Anthocyanins have anti- cancer properties. Red peppers contain much more beta carotene (and more vitamin C) than green peppers. |
| Pink | pink grapefruit |
Lycopene beta carotene |
Like lycopene, beta carotene is an antioxidant that is good for the eyes. It also reduces the risk of cancers and cardiovascular disease. |
| Orange or deep yellow |
apricots and peaches (especially dried) sweet potato carrots pumpkin winter-squash mango yellow-peppers |
Beta carotene vitamin C |
Some orange/yellow vegetables, such as pumpkin and summer squash, contain the phytonutrient, lutein, which helps protect against degeneration of eye structure with aging. Carotenoids, like beta carotene, are the phytos that protect plants from sun damage. Perhaps they do the same for humans. |
| Dark green |
kale, other "greens" asparagus watercress spinach broccoli parsley-fresh dill-fresh romaine lettuce zucchini green peppers |
Beta carotene | Dark green foods are rich in antioxidants. |
| Blue or dark purple |
blueberries bilberries cherries grapes red wine plums purple cabbage |
Anthocyanin | The pigment anthocyanin has anti-cancer properties. |
| Black or dark red | black beans kidney beans |
Calcium Iron |
Black beans are higher in fiber and calcium; red beans contain slightly more iron. |