Nutrition

Microgreens are a simple way of incorporating fresh ingredients for cooking that you can grow in the comfort of your home. Some of the most popular microgreens include pea shoots, radish sprouts, sunflower shoots and wheatgrass.

Gardening at home during COVID-19

Lifestyle

At a time when the COVID-19 pandemic has led most of the American population to practice physical distancing, gardening can provide emotional comfort and improved health.

Sweetened juices and sports drinks in bottles are lined up in a row

Half of the world’s children aren’t getting enough nutrients

salted ducks in china

Salt: China’s deadly food habit

Health
A farmer displays wheat grains at a field in the El-Menoufia governorate, north of Cairo, Egypt May 1, 2019. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany

How combining and fermenting grains can help nutrition in Africa

Health
Tractor farming in India

Global warming threatens nutrition levels in staple crops

Environment
School lunch

Trump’s new school lunch plan allows for ‘dangerously high levels of sodium’

Culture

On Monday, the US Department of Agriculture announced that it now plans to roll back school lunch standards dealing with sweetened milk, sodium and whole grains, among other things.

An agriculturist prepares to plant "Golden Rice" seedlings at a laboratory of the International Rice Research Institute in Los Banos, Laguna.

Forget chemotherapy — try some genetically modified lettuce to fight your colon cancer

Science

Genetically modified foods are a major political issue, but what if scientists told you they could cure cancer? New research suggests that inserting specific genes known to fight cancer into plant material could be an effective tool to eradicate the disease in certain people.

Eggs

At brunch next time, pass on the coffee cake and have an omelette

Health

We’ve been told for years that eating eggs is bad for our hearts and should be avoided. But new government guidelines says that was probably not right. The real problem is sugar — and refined and processed fats.

Brussels sprouts

Scientists think they may have found a way to rewire your brain to like healthy foods

Science

Sure, you eat your Brussels sprouts. And maybe you really like that salad. But in your brain, you know it doesn’t compare to a bowl of ice cream with chocolate fudge. But what if scientists could make your brain think the healthy foods were just as tasty as the junk.

Dinner table

Increasing time between eating controls metabolism and reverses obesity in mice

Science

To most people, eliminating snacks between meals seems like a logical way to reduce calorie intake and perhaps lose weight. But new research suggests the amount of calories you eat may not be as important as when you eat them.