Click me
Transcribed

EWG's Guide to a Healthy Thanksgiving

EWG's guide to a N Hathy hankgiwng 2 5 1 3 6 4 8 Try an organic, local or heritage turkey or one raised without antibiotics. Or embrace a seasonal, climate-smart, stuffed winter squash centerpiece. Cankery Sauce Cranberry sauce is super easy, delicious and even more nutritious to make from scratch. Opt for organic cranberries if you can, because conventional berries are heavily treated. O Jampkin Fe Pumpkin pie is a Thanksgiving tradition, with good reason. Pumpkin is packed with nutrition, widely available locally and generally low in pesticides. Baked pears are simple and delightful. Geatves 4 White potatoes make EWG's Dirty Dozen foods because of high pesticide loads, Try nutrient-packed mashed sweet potatoes from the Clean 15. Sray Gravy is delicious but not terribly nutritious. Enjoy it on spě- cial occasions as a tribute to the times when our ancestors made gravy for sustenance. Or try a light, flavorful mushroom ragout instead. B O Butter Some experts estimate that the average person finishes off the equivalent of three sticks of butter at the Thanksgiving table. Use heart-healthy and GMO-free oils where you can. O Green Beans Canned green beans are double trouble – they're on EWG's Dirty Dozen+ list and high in bisphenol A, the can-lining chemical. Go for fresh or frozen organic green beans, or revel in cleaner seasonal stars like peas, broccoli and Brussels sprouts. Fhuffing Stuff your stuffing with low-pesticide produce. Organic apples, organic celery, pears and carrots perk up stuffing o and add nutritional punch. Walnuts and pecans pair nicely in place of chronic-disease-linked sausage. Learn more about feeding your family well at Good Food on a Tight Budget www.ewg.org/goodfood © 2012 Environmental Working Group. www.ewg.org EWG's guide to a N Hathy hankgiwng 2 5 1 3 6 4 8 Try an organic, local or heritage turkey or one raised without antibiotics. Or embrace a seasonal, climate-smart, stuffed winter squash centerpiece. Cankery Sauce Cranberry sauce is super easy, delicious and even more nutritious to make from scratch. Opt for organic cranberries if you can, because conventional berries are heavily treated. O Jampkin Fe Pumpkin pie is a Thanksgiving tradition, with good reason. Pumpkin is packed with nutrition, widely available locally and generally low in pesticides. Baked pears are simple and delightful. Geatves 4 White potatoes make EWG's Dirty Dozen foods because of high pesticide loads, Try nutrient-packed mashed sweet potatoes from the Clean 15. Sray Gravy is delicious but not terribly nutritious. Enjoy it on spě- cial occasions as a tribute to the times when our ancestors made gravy for sustenance. Or try a light, flavorful mushroom ragout instead. B O Butter Some experts estimate that the average person finishes off the equivalent of three sticks of butter at the Thanksgiving table. Use heart-healthy and GMO-free oils where you can. O Green Beans Canned green beans are double trouble – they're on EWG's Dirty Dozen+ list and high in bisphenol A, the can-lining chemical. Go for fresh or frozen organic green beans, or revel in cleaner seasonal stars like peas, broccoli and Brussels sprouts. Fhuffing Stuff your stuffing with low-pesticide produce. Organic apples, organic celery, pears and carrots perk up stuffing o and add nutritional punch. Walnuts and pecans pair nicely in place of chronic-disease-linked sausage. Learn more about feeding your family well at Good Food on a Tight Budget www.ewg.org/goodfood © 2012 Environmental Working Group. www.ewg.org

EWG's Guide to a Healthy Thanksgiving

shared by ewgdesignteam on Nov 13
482 views
1 shares
1 comment
This year, give thanks with less--fewer pesticides, greenhouse gases and maybe less money. Small turkeys can be tastier. And when you cook just what you need, you don't waste.

Category

Food
Did you work on this visual? Claim credit!

Get a Quote

Embed Code

For hosted site:

Click the code to copy

For wordpress.com:

Click the code to copy
Customize size