Carrots are nutritional
heroes, they store a goldmine of nutrients. No other vegetable or fruit contains
as much carotene as carrots, which the body converts to vitamin A. This is
a truly versatile vegetable and an excellent source of vitamins B and C as
well as calcium pectate, an extraordinary pectin fibre that has been found
to have cholesterol-lowering properties. The carrot is an herbaceous plant
containing about 87% water, rich in mineral salts and vitamins (B,C,D,E).
Raw carrots are an excellent source of vitamin A and potassium; they contain
vitamin C, vitamin B6, thiamine, folic acid, and magnesium. Cooked carrots
are an excellent source of vitamin A, a good source of potassium, and contain
vitamin B6, copper, folic acid, and magnesium. The high level of beta-carotene
is very important and gives carrots their distinctive orange colour. Carrots
also contain, in smaller amounts, essential oils, carbohydrates and nitrogenous
composites. They are well-known for their sweetening, antianaemic, healing,
diuretic, remineralizing and sedative properties. In order to assimilate the
greatest quantity of the nutrients present in carrots, it is important to
chew them well - they are the exception to the rule - they are more nutritious
cooked than raw.