Abstract

The aim of our study was to analyse vegetables, potatoes and their products as sources of energy and nutrients in the average diet in Poland. Representative data of the 2016 Household Budget Survey from 36,886 households were used. This is the largest study sample in Poland, so we generalized the conclusions to the whole population using the statement ‘average diet’. We analysed three main product groups: vegetables, vegetable products, and potatoes and potatoes products, dividing them into 14 subgroups (e.g., tomatoes, cabbage, carrots, other vegetables, and mushrooms). The percentages of energy, protein, carbohydrates, total fat, nine vitamins (thiamine, riboflavin, niacin, vitamin B6, folate, vitamin C, vitamin A, vitamin D, and vitamin E), seven minerals (calcium, phosphorus, sodium, potassium, iron, magnesium and zinc), and fibre from the analysed food subgroups are presented. Additionally, the influence of household characteristics on the supply of energy and nutrients from each subgroup of vegetables, potatoes, and their products was evaluated using cluster analysis. In the analysis, R programme and Kohonen neural networks were applied. Our study showed that vegetables, potatoes, and their products provide 7.3% of daily dietary energy supply. Vegetables contribute more than 20% of the supply of six nutrients: vitamin C (51.8%), potassium (32.5%), folate (31.0%), vitamin A (30.6%), vitamin B6 (27.8%), and magnesium (20.2%), as well as fibre (31.8%). Cluster analysis distinguished three clusters that differed in nutritional supply from vegetables, potatoes, and their products. Educational level, income measured by quintile groups, village size, socio-economic characteristics, urbanization degree, and land use were the most important factors determining differences between clusters.

Highlights

  • Vegetables and potatoes are important staple foods consumed daily worldwide

  • The analysed product groups supply 31.8% of the fibre, of which vegetables accounted for 18.2%, potatoes and potatoes products accounted for 9.1%, and vegetable products accounted for 4.5%

  • Vegetables accounted for the largest share of this amount—4.2%—and potatoes and their products accounted for 2.7%

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Summary

Introduction

Vegetables and potatoes are important staple foods consumed daily worldwide. Vegetables are considered as an essential component of a healthy diet, so nutrition experts recommend eating at least a few servings of them every day [1,2,3,4,5,6]. Potatoes are characterised by a large scale of production, consumption, affordability with easy availability in the open market and are a vital food-security crop [7,8,9]. The literature describes many factors that determine the level and structure of the consumption of vegetables, potatoes, and their products [10,11,12,13,14]. The nutritional value of vegetables and potatoes differs considerably and should be considered separately.

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