National Spinach Day
This leafy green is packed with nutrients to boost your health and energy. Add it to your meals for a tasty and nutritious boost!
Drive March produce sales and recipe engagement by positioning spinach as a nutrient-dense superfood for families seeking healthy meal solutions.
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Originally from Persia (the area that is now Iran), spinach made its way to China in the 7th century, where the people referred to it as the “Herb of Persia” or the “Persian Green”.
The vegetable eventually ended up in Europe a few hundred years later, when it landed in Spain. In fact, for some time the English referred to spinach as “The Spanish Vegetable”. It didn’t make its way to being cultivated in North American until sometime in the early 1800s.
Possibly the most famous person in history to be associated with spinach is 16th-century noblewoman, Catherine de’ Medici, who ruled France from behind her three sons for many years. Originally from Florence, Italy, she moved to France when she married King Henry II.
It is said that Catherine loved spinach and made sure her cooks served it at every meal. Because of this, even today, meals that are made with spinach are often known as “Florentine” in honor of the birthplace of Catherine de’ Medici.
This dark, leafy green vegetable that grows in groups that form a rosette-type shape is part of the “goosefoot” family, with its close relatives being Swiss chard and quinoa, as well as beets. Spinach has a few different varieties that offer different shapes and sizes of leaves.
Taking some time to celebrate National Spinach Day acts as a little nod to this tasty, healthy vegetable.
Try Creative Ways to Serve Spinach
Why not try a new recipe on National Spinach Day? Sauté it in olive oil and a little bit of garlic – or what about a baby spinach salad with mozzarella cheese, avocado slices, and crispy bacon crumbled on top? Delicious! Other tasty ideas for meals that include spinach are: Bacon, spinach, and gorgonzola pastaSpinach, artichoke, zucchini dip (with pita bread or baguette)Spinach spanakopita (a traditional Greek pastry dish)Creamy spinach soupSpinach lasagna (a vegetarian take on the traditional Italian dish)Spinach pesto on flatbread pizzaSpinach quiche (also called Quiche Florentine) Mushroom and spinach risotto Some people like to purée spinach up and hide it in soups and pizza sauces for the finicky eaters in the family who may not prefer to eat it straight up. So, no excuses – get your leafy greens down on National Spinach Day!
Learn About the Health Benefits of Spinach
Just like many vegetables, the healthiest way to serve and eat spinach is fresh and raw. However, even when it is cooked, it still remains one of the healthier vegetables. These are just some of the many nutritional benefits: Fiber aids the digestive system Vitamin A (carotene), for healthy organs and eyesIron helps with red blood cells and tissue healthVitamin C, antioxidants, and a booster for the immune systemFolic Acid, useful in cell function and tissue growthCalcium, essential for bone health Antioxidants, help remove free radicals that cause oxidative damage While spinach also has a small amount of natural sugars and carbohydrates, these are small in comparison to the myriad of other health benefits provided by this tasty veggie.
Try Growing Spinach in the Garden
Getting enough leafy greens in the diet is much easier for people who can grow their own! And, actually, spinach is not a particularly difficult one to grow. It’s an annual plant, meaning that it needs to be re-planted from seed each year, but it’s hardy and enjoys weather that is somewhat cool (but not cold). National Spinach Day might be a bit too soon in the year to start a garden outdoors in many parts of the world. If this is the case, it’s simple to begin an indoor planting of spinach from seed and then move it outside when the weather permits. Spinach likes cool weather. So, as long as there is no risk of frost, the spinach plants should do fine outside in the spring. As soon as the leaves are large enough to eat, the spinach is ready for harvest. It is healthiest when eaten as quickly as possible after harvesting. However, it can be stored, loosely packed, in a sealed plastic bag for several days. Don’t wash it ahead of time as it could get mushy. Simply wash it just prior to eating or cooking with it. It can also be frozen while it is still fresh. Since it only takes about 6 weeks from the sowing of seeds to harvest time, it has a quick turnaround time. This means that it’s a great vegetable to grow in the spring as well as in the cooler autumn months so that there’s enough for the family to eat all throughout the growing season.
Take in Some ‘Popeye, the Sailor Man’
Some younger folks might not be familiar with the connection between Popeye and spinach. But those of a certain generation will possibly remember not only the Saturday morning cartoon but also the little jingle song that went along with it! Going further back, even before it was an animated cartoon, more mature folks might remember that Popeye started out as a comic strip in the newspapers in the late 1920s. Eventually, decades later, a live-action film tribute was created in 1980, starring Robin Williams. The theme of the character, Popeye, was that he was a rather average little sailor guy, with eerily large, tattooed forearms who smoked a pipe. And when he ate his spinach? Well, he would immediately gain superhuman strength and be able to punch the lights out of his arch-nemesis, Bluto, in order to help one of his friends who were in need. (Popeye and Bluto were constantly fighting over the affections of the tall, extremely skinny Olive Oyl.) As it turns out, pop culture actually can have a positive influence on the world, proven by Popeye. After the character started eating spinach, children began asking for it and sales in the United States skyrocketed by one-third. That was quite a boost for the spinach industry–and the health of those children! Surprising Facts About SpinachFrom ancient trade routes to scientific myths and garden quirks, spinach has a story that goes far beyond the plate.These fascinating facts reveal how this humble leafy green traveled the world, adapted to its environment, and earned—sometimes mistakenly—its reputation as a nutritional superstar.Spinach’s Journey From Persian “Herb” to Global Crop Modern spinach (Spinacia oleracea) is native to central and southwestern Asia. It is widely believed to have originated in the region of ancient Persia, from where it spread east into India and China and west into the Mediterranean by the Middle Ages. Medieval trade routes helped carry spinach seed to Spain and then to the rest of Europe, where it was prized partly because it grew well in cool seasons when few other vegetables were available. Why Spinach Bolts So Quickly in Warm Weather Garden spinach is a cool-season annual that naturally forms a low rosette of leaves, but when days lengthen and temperatures rise, it rapidly “bolts,” sending up a tall flowering stalk and turning leaves bitter. This response is driven by daylength and heat, which signal the plant to shift from leaf production to reproduction, so commercial and home growers sow early in spring or late in summer and often choose slower-bolting cultivars to extend harvests. The Decimal-Point Myth Behind Spinach’s “Super Iron” Reputation Spinach’s fame as an iron powerhouse partly traces to an oft-cited 19th‑century laboratory value that overstated its iron content by a factor of ten due to a decimal-point error, later corrected by nutritionists. In reality, raw spinach contains about 2.7 mg of non‑heme iron per 100 g, and its high oxalate content further reduces how much of that iron the body can absorb, which is why nutrition guidelines no longer single it out as an exceptional iron source. Oxalates in Spinach Can Block Calcium and Cause Issues for Some People Spinach is unusually rich in oxalic acid, which binds with minerals like calcium to form insoluble salts that the body cannot easily absorb, so the impressive calcium numbers on a nutrition label overstate how much the body actually uses. These oxalate salts are also a concern for people prone to certain kinds of kidney stones, leading many clinical nutrition resources to classify spinach as a high‑oxalate food that should be limited in at‑risk patients. Cooking Changes Spinach’s Nutrient Profile in Surprising Ways Heating spinach wilts its volume and breaks down cell walls, which can increase the availability of fat‑soluble carotenoids such as beta‑carotene and lutein, but it also lowers heat‑sensitive vitamin C and folate levels. Studies comparing raw and cooked spinach show that boiling or blanching can substantially reduce water‑soluble vitamins and some oxalate content, while gentle sautéing or steaming tends to preserve more nutrients overall. Spinach as a Major Source of Folate and Eye‑Protective Carotenoids Beyond basic vitamins, spinach is one of the richest vegetable sources of folate, which is vital for DNA synthesis and especially important in early pregnancy, and it also provides significant amounts of lutein and zeaxanthin. These carotenoids accumulate in the retina, and epidemiological studies have linked higher intakes, often from leafy greens like spinach, with a lower risk of age‑related macular degeneration.Spinach Has Become a High-Volume Global Commodity Crop Although it began as a regional leafy green, spinach is now a globally traded vegetable, with worldwide production surpassing 30 million metric tons annually and China accounting for the vast majority of that output. International food balance data show that per‑capita availability of spinach has risen markedly in recent decades, reflecting both large‑scale commercial production and the vegetable’s integration into cuisines far beyond its original range.