If you think of carrots as stodgy old tubers, something more fit for rabbits than healthy humans, you’re in for a bunch of surprises.
Carrots can be a significant source of crucial nutrients, said Sherry Tanumihardjo, professor of nutritional sciences at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. These days, they’re popping up in a whole palette of colors. They’re also convenient and versatile.
“You can just take them out of the ground, wash them and eat them, just like that, or you can peel them and cut them up,” she said. “You can slice them and dice them into all kinds of foods.”
Carrots have been around a long time, probably originating in central Asia, possibly Afghanistan. Researchers say that by the Middle Ages, purple and white varieties were domesticated as far west as England, but the orange carrot didn’t become common until the 15th century in Europe.