- 4 Québec products to add to your recipes
 - 10 Ways to Eat More Fruit Every Day
 - Brighten up Your Plate with Citrus Fruit
 - 12 Fresh Five-Star Salads
 - Discover Hot and Sweet Peppers
 - Eat More Nuts
 - Enjoy Locally Grown Vegetables Year-Round
 - Ways to Use Garden Vegetables
 - Ketchups, Relishes, Chutneys, Marinades and Aromatic Vinegars
 - Cranberries
 - Cook with potatoes
 - 8 Easy Recipes to Prepare Pumpkin—Differently
 - Eat your veggies from the leaves to the roots
 - Rediscover Fries!
 - Super Salads!
 - Eat more chickpeas
 - Fruits and vegetables on the barbecue
 - Apples on the menu
 
Ways to Use Garden Vegetables

Colorful and crisp, garden vegetables lend themselves to so many flavourful combinations. These earthly treasures are a feast for the eye as well as the palate.
Sides and appetizer ideas

- Slightly blanch small bunches of broccoli and top them with a horseradish and walnut vinaigrette
 - Arrange small broccoli florets over a tomato or red hot pepper coulis
 - Cut your favourite vegetables julienne style, then sear in a light oil with a few drops of sesame oil added
 - Make a red hot pepper coulis with lemon juice and a drop of cream to go with salmon and other seafood dishes
 - Brush garlic and herb-flavoured olive oil on grilled hot peppers, summer squash, eggplants and onions
 - Make cold or warm salads with green beans, shrimp and almonds; new potatoes, red onions, walnuts and goat cheese; or cauliflower, red hot peppers and black olives
 
Get creative with soups

- Upgrade an everyday soup with exotic herbs or spices
 - Add artichoke bottoms, cooked and diced, in minestrone or cream of asparagus soups
 - Purée basil, garlic and olive oil and use as a garnish over green bean and potato soup
 - Make a cold soup of summer squash, onions, olive oil and plain yogurt
 - Add curry and coriander to carrot soup
 - Enrich cream of broccoli soup with cubes of blue d’Auvergne
 - Chop eggplant and cook with tomato soup
 - Make an apple velouté to add to a radish, tomato and beet soup then top with citrus fruit zest
 
Sweet and salty

- Onion is enjoyed both as an accompanying vegetable and condiment — it can be caramelized with veal, candied with pâtés or used for fruit chutneys
 - Carrots pair well with citrus fruit — grated carrots, quartered oranges, grapefruit along with a little cinnamon makes a simple, satisfying salad
 - Try mixing carrot juice with honey and coconut milk for a deliciously sweet drink
 - When cooking carrots, add a trickle of apple or orange juice to enhance their sweet taste
 - Chutneys and marinades of fruit and vegetables with a bitter-sweet taste pair well with cheeses and meat dishes
 - Use vegetables to make sweet treats, such as carrot cookies, summer-squash muffins, beet and carrot cake or green tomato pie.
 
Preserving summer's bounty

- Home canning and freezing vegetables are two ways to take advantage of their abundance at summer's end
 - Stored in a dark, dry and cool environment, homemade preserves keep so long as the seal remains intact — but they're best enjoyed within a year of canning
 - Watch for signs of spoilage such as a bulging lid, a leaky jar, a spurt of liquid upon opening or viscous or pulpy marinades. These are signs that the jar is damaged — avoid tasting the product and discard it immediately!
 
Tips and tricks

- Keep lettuce and spinach extra fresh by washing, draining, wrapping in absorbent paper and refrigerating them in an airproof plastic bag
 - When buying leafy greens that come in airtight sealed packages, refrigerate them that way
 - Do not wash other fresh vegetables before storing because this accelerates spoilage
 - Cook vegetables as quickly as possible and with methods that require little water, such as steaming, to preserve their nutritional value
 - Keep leftover vegetable broth as it contains nutritional elements and can be used for soups or sauces;
 - Freeze leftover broth in ice-cube trays and place the frozen cubes in freezer bags to use only the necessary amount when desired
 - Vegetables stored in plastic bags made especially for freezing will keep for up to a year in a freezer at –18°C
 - Most frozen vegetables do not need to be thawed before cooking, but cooking time will be shorter than when using fresh vegetables
 - Enjoy fresh vegetables as quickly as possible to get more of their nutritional value
 - With the exception of onions, which should be left uncovered, most vegetables will keep in the refrigerator in a perforated plastic vegetable bag
 - Broccoli, spinach and green and yellow beans keep for 4 or 5 days
 - Fresh carrots, cauliflower, hot peppers, tomatoes, radishes, new potatoes, summer squash and lettuce all last up to a week
 - Onions and beets are good for up to 4 weeks
 
Expert Tip
Cut the green tops off root gourd vegetables (carrots, radishes, beets) before storing because they dehydrate the vegetable and diminish its nutritional value
            


