Studies have shown that people with larger brains have a better ability to think. That’s the simple way to say it, and now here’s a more detailed explanation from a scientist involved in research on the subject. “People with greater brain volume,” says Meike W. Vernooij, MD, PhD, of the Erasmus University Medical Center in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, “have been shown in other studies to have better cognitive abilities, so initiatives that help improve diet quality may be a good strategy to maintain thinking skills.”

The question then becomes how to get and/or maintain a bigger brain with more volume, which Dr. Vernooij has been studying. The May 2018 issue of Neurology (the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology) published the research results, which conclude the following about brain-boosting foods: “People who eat a diet rich in vegetables, fruit, nuts, and fish may have bigger brains.”

To reach this conclusion, Vernooij and other scientists conducted a study that included more than four thousand people in the Netherlands. The average age was 66. To qualify for the study, the person could not already have dementia.

Study participants were given a questionnaire listing almost 400 food and beverage items and asked how much they had eaten of each item over the past month. Researchers then ranked the results per person, with a possible score of zero to 14 for each one. They also scanned each participant’s brain to determine, among other factors, the volume of each person’s brain.

On average, brains were 932 milliliters, with the average diet score being seven (out of the possible 14). And it was found that, to have the best brain volume, the ideal diet “consisted of vegetables, fruit, nuts, whole grains, dairy, and fish, but a limited intake of sugary drinks.”

Farmacy at The Chef’s Garden to the Rescue

By looking at the list of foods, it’s easy to see the role that farmers play in good health as growers of fresh vegetables, fruits, and grains and as the ones working at dairy farms. So, this adds credence to a saying passed down through the generations – that you can pay the farmer now or pay the doctor later.
Farmer Lee Jones agrees with the concept that eating nutritional food is the foundation of health and well-being. He also shares that, when selecting nutritious foods, you don’t have to give up good flavor.

That is the core of Farmacy at The Chef’s Garden®. Our farm-fresh vegetables are sustainably grown in rich and healthy soil so that you can have flavor AND nutrition, as well as a beautiful plate presentation.
Here are just three examples of the nutritional value of vegetables. Studies have shown how microgreens promote health and/or prevent disease – and you can find out more about the health benefits of microgreens here.

At The Chef’s Garden, we offer a rainbow of colorful and flavorful products in microgreen size.
You can also see how, at a luxury equestrian restaurant, delicious summer squash is helping to keep diners healthy as a horse! Then there are sweet, farm-fresh beets, which are being shown to play a unique role in combating Alzheimer’s disease.

Flavor, nutrition, and beauty on the plate . . . Farmacy at The Chef’s Garden® means that you really can have it all.

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