No matter where you stand on the food choice continuum – from omnivore to healthy vegan – we can all agree on one thing: everyone needs to simply get more vegetables, fruits, and whole plant foods on our plates.
We need the fiber, and we fare far better against disease with the increase in antioxidants. We create more resilient bodies and brains with the phytonutrition – nutrients abundant in plants – that a diet richer in plant foods provides.
Whether you have been aspiring to eat plant-based for some time or just getting started, we can all use some tips for getting more plants onto our plates in quick and easy fashion. I call it “plantifying” your plate.
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With this approach, you let go of the idea that you have to ditch your best-loved dishes and say goodbye to your favorite flavors in the quest of eating more plants.
Rather, you start by adding more plants to your current favorites. From there you can replace some of the animal products in these dishes with options that are better for your body and the environment.
You nudge out the old undesirables with fresh ideas in the form of healthful additions!
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How to plantify your plate
If you find that your eyes glaze over when a recipe has a long list of ingredients, then these simple methods of adding more fresh vegetables and greens to everyday foods – “plantifying” your plate and getting your green on – will have instant appeal.
1. Know when to fold ‘em
Even if greens aren’t your cup of tea, here is a way to work more of them in that doesn’t have you feeling like you must consume mountains of salad or piles of steamed strange-looking plants.
Fold handfuls of finely shredded cabbage, chopped spinach, Swiss chard, or kale into brown rice, other freshly cooked whole grains, or pasta.
Warmed by the hot grains, the greens will slightly wilt the vegetable, adding a little crunch, color, and all the goods that come with greens. You can start with adding a little and work your way up to more greens.
2. Nutrify pasta
This is an offshoot of idea #1, folding greens into grains. Drain cooked pasta and fold in baby spinach or basil leaves.
3. Stir them into the pot
Drop handfuls of baby kale, baby spinach or torn leaves of romaine into a pot of hot soup or chili, stirring briefly to cook before serving.
4. Blend in
Smoothies are a classic, easy way to sneak in more greens.
Place a small amount of frozen or fresh fruit into a high-powered blender, splash in some water or plant milk, add a couple of handfuls of mild-tasting greens such as baby kale, and blend.
5. Beyond the beef
Bulgur wheat has a crumbly, chewy texture reminiscent of ground beef or turkey, making it the perfect plant-based replacement for animal products in your favorite chili or spaghetti sauce.
Not only that, but bulgur cooks up quickly, making it an easy addition. You can start by replacing part of the meat called for with cooked bulgur and gradually increase until the animal products are out of the picture – or jump in all the way from the start.
Chili largely gets its flavor from the seasonings, tomato, beans, and other ingredients anyway so you can retain the essence of chili – the same with spaghetti sauce.
If you’d like to replicate the beefy flavor, there are plant-based meat analogs available in markets everywhere that specifically resemble ground beef, yet include no animal products. And, if you are gluten-free, you can substitute quinoa for the bulgur.
6. Think outside the salad bowl
Often, while prepping a meal, I’ll start in on some vegetables straight out of the fridge.
By the time everything is officially ready to serve for lunch or dinner, I’ll have noshed on a big carrot, ¼ a head of cabbage, or a few chunks of sweet bell pepper or sugar snap peas. There’s a salad. It just didn’t look like one. ‘Salad’ doesn’t have to mean all prepped up and pretty in a bowl.
7. Better baked goods
Fold whole kernels of cooked corn and/or chopped red and green peppers into cornbread batter before baking. It lends extra flavor, a fiesta feel and color, more texture – and more whole plant foods to your plate!
8. Go whole – bit by bit
If you prefer white rice and pasta as opposed to whole grain varieties, it’s because it’s what you are used to. Plantify pots of rice or pasta by swapping out half of the white variety for whole grains.
You’ll barely notice the taste difference, and you can work your way up to a greater percentage of whole grains from there.
The Plant-Based Journey Book
You’ll find dozens of ideas for easy meal prep, crowd-pleasers and can’t-misses recipes, simple recipe templates, additional swap-out ideas and more in “The Plant-Based Journey: A Step-by-Step Guide to Transition to a Healthy Lifestyle and Achieving Your Ideal Weight.” (Amazon Link)
More vegan guides
- 40+ Best Vegan Books
- Vegan Nutrition Guide
- 12 Food Combining Tips
- Plant-Based Protein Guide
- Healthy Food Swaps
How do you make sure that you have enough veggies in your diet? Are there any sneaky ways we haven’t covered here? Let us know about your experience in the comment section below and Pin this article here!
hey lani, i must say, these are some GREAT tips to include more plants into one’s diet! will definitely try some, thanks so much for the inspiration :) if you ever need new ideas for vegan recipe ideas, i’d love if you stop by at eatwholegreens.com to explore more vegan awesomeness!
cheers, stäf | eatwholegreens.com
Hi Steffi,
thanks for your comment! I just stopped by your blog and really loved it. Although I’m not Lani (she wrote this guest post for our website), I would love to get in contact with you. Maybe you’d like to share one of your amazing recipes on our website sometime? Let me know what you think. I love the name of your blog and the whole design.
Warmly,
Alena
This is great. I love smoothies. Thanks for sharing this. I will definitely go by your tips.
Thanks so much for the comment, Rachel! We’re happy that you like this article :)