Eat the rainbow with recipes in every color (2024)

Many of us here in the United States have heard the phrase “eat the rainbow.” Although the origins of this phrase are murky, a “rainbow” plate can be a beautiful sight — all kinds of colors from fruits and veggies that come together and make an appealing eating experience with lots of variation. For a little while, the food world took that rainbow a little too literally, with neon-sweet hues in waffles, bagels, coffee, grilled cheese sandwiches and so much more with icings and food dyes galore.

But when we go down the rainbow route in our own Recipe Finder, we’ll be focusing on natural hues. Read on for some beautiful ways to build a colorful plate, and if you don’t see what you’re looking for here, make sure to take your own dive.

Red

The color red is a vibrant, appealing and easily accessible option in peppers spicy and sweet, and in fruits such as apples and cranberries, an array of lettuces, tomatoes of all kinds and, somehow, a group of vegetables that really shouldn’t be called red at all but purple.

Radicchio and Red Grapefruit Salad, pictured. This pinky-red salad of winter produce belies its sweet appearance with an undercurrent of nuanced, balanced bitterness from the radicchio and grapefruit.

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Romesco Sauce. Red bell peppers get blitzed up with tomatoes, almonds and a little bread, turning the bright red veggie a little more orange.

Roasted Radishes With Green Goddess Butter. The green goddess butter belongs firmly in the green category, but roasted radishes add a sweet pop of pretty pinkish-red to the plate.

Spicy, crisp, buttery or tender, radishes offer something for every season

Orange

It’s ironic that one of the sunniest colors of all makes up so much winter produce! A wide array of squashes, roots such as carrots and sweet potatoes and, of course, oranges of all variations fall into this category.

Miso-Orange Glazed Carrots, pictured. Though carrots do, indeed, come in many hues, the version we see most often has that signature orange color. Harness it with this simple side dish.

Carrots, get your 10 savory, earthy, sweet carrot recipes here!

Ember-Grilled Sweet Potatoes. Put the sweet potato directly into the grill, right on the coals. Use long-handled tongs and wear gloves. The outcome — ultra fluffy, smoky-sweetness — is absolutely worth it, plus there’s something gorgeous about bright, soft orange against the charred skin of the vegetable.

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Oranges With Rosemary Honey, Ricotta and Hazelnuts. Choose any hue of orange from scarlet orange to sunset orange to that pale, golden-y orange, and serve atop simple ricotta, toasty nuts and a drizzle of rosemary-infused honey.

Yellow

You’ll find bright, sweet yellow from all manner of fruits, from peaches to pineapples, to veggies such as corn, summer squash and even spaghetti squash.

Farro and Charred Corn Salad, pictured. Sweet summer corn, charred for a bit of smoky flavor, works well in this hearty salad.

Summer corn shines in these 8 recipes, including in tacos, ice cream and on the cob

Spaghetti Squash Stuffed With Escarole, White Beans and Turkey Sausage. A lot of wintry squashes tend to veer more orange, but spaghetti squash is a vibrant, golden yellow. You can shred the squash into its signature noodles or bake it into these stuffed boats and have people shred it themselves.

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BBQ Pineapple Grilled Portobello Burgers. A thick slice of juicy, bright, sweet-tart pineapple, grilled until caramelized, on these vegetarian burgers is a real treat.

Green

Ah, green. Possibly the category with the biggest variety of veggies, from beans to peas to all manner of lettuces, and the most maligned. All too often we have heard of aversions to the color green in food, especially in childhood, though this group might even be the most versatile to cook!

Kale Pesto, pictured. If you’re looking for a less chewy way to enjoy kale, blitz it up into a pesto! Use on pasta or in a sandwich, or even in a grain bowl.

5 recipes for hardy greens, including kale, collards, cabbage and Swiss chard

Rigatoni With Broccoli Lemon Sauce. You don’t have to like broccoli, but if you want to, this is a great recipe for getting there. Blend into a creamy and citrusy sauce.

Green Beans in Ginger Sauce. This recipe is so, so easy, and so good. All you need are six ingredients, including salt and a little bit of chicken stock or water.

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Blue

There’s a reason blue isn’t often on your dinner plate — it’s not a particularly appetizing color. Blueberries, however, are the exception. Yes, they cook down to more purple hues, but for simplicity’s sake, this whole category will just be blueberries.

Blueberry Cornmeal Cake, pictured. This cake, studded with blueberries, is unbelievably tasty, with a crisp crust, tender middle and pops of juicy fruit. It’s not too sweet, which means it’s suitable as an addition to breakfast or as a snack.

Blueberry Jam. Get this breakfast all-star stat!

Blueberry-Rosemary Breakfast Pudding. The herbal twist of rosemary against sweet and tart blueberries gives this pudding a savory lilt.

8 delicious recipes to showcase summer’s blueberry bounty

Purple

Purple is a strange category, mostly because items with red in the name — cabbage, onions, grapes — veer far more into purple than red. Berries such as blackberries stain everything in deep, rich purple. And then, of course, there are purple potatoes, which fall solidly into a blue-purple category rather than red-purple.

Braised Red Cabbage Wedges, pictured. More like deep, jewel-purple. Cut a red cabbage into wedges, and let it braise until silky in a bit of cider and vinegar.

7 cabbage recipes to make the most of the long-lasting and versatile vegetable

Grilled Eggplant Salad. Eggplant comes in many shades of purple from deep, jewel-rich and almost-black to much lighter with blushes of lilac. You’ll want slender, Asian varieties of eggplant for this particular salad.

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Roasted Feta With Grapes and Olives. Red grapes stain white, craggy blocks of feta with wine-purple splashes as they concentrate and caramelize in the oven.

Brown & White

Though technically not part of the rainbow per se, brown and white fall into a painter’s palette of color, so we won’t forget them here. As writer Carrie Dennett wrote for Washington Post Wellness in 2016, “pale vegetables offer a wealth of nutrients and phytonutrients, too.” While she follows this up with saying “a plateful of white vegetables might not be a feast for the eyes,” I disagree wholeheartedly: Golden hues that accrue when you cook mushrooms, cauliflower and more couldn’t be more delicious.

Sheet Pan Cauliflower With Lemony Potatoes and Kalamata Olives, pictured. You can make this dish with cauliflower or chicken; cauliflower gets crispy and gold in the oven in this lemony, briny dish.

Crispy, creamy and spiced (not riced!) cauliflower headlines these 7 recipes

Mushrooms With Chiles, Limes and Mint. A quick chile-garlic sauce makes these caramelized mushrooms sing.

Onion Mushroom Tarte Tatin. We’re big fans of onions, full stop. This tarte Tatin is the epitome of the golden brown goodness.

More from Voraciously:

Turn out a vegan omelet made from chickpea flour and stuff it with vegetables

Our best meatball recipes using beef, turkey, chicken, mushrooms and more

How an electric cooktop is changing the way one food writer tests and writes recipes

Eat the rainbow with recipes in every color (2024)

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