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Microgreens Nutrition Guide

A factual overview of vitamins, minerals, and phytonutrients studied in common microgreen varieties. References included. No medical claims.

Nutrition Guide
Research-Referenced
Updated Feb 21, 2026
Key takeaways
  • Some microgreens show higher vitamin concentrations per gram than mature leaves (Xiao et al., 2012)
  • Broccoli microgreens are a studied source of glucoraphanin, precursor to sulforaphane (Fahey 1997)
  • Use microgreens as a nutrient-dense addition to a varied diet — not a supplement replacement

Why microgreens are studied for nutrient density

Microgreens are seedlings harvested during a phase of rapid plant development. At this stage, the plant is drawing on stored seed energy and actively synthesizing chlorophyll, vitamins, and protective compounds in preparation for photosynthesis and growth. Some researchers have proposed that this growth window may result in elevated concentrations of specific nutrients relative to mature plant tissue.

This is not a universal rule — concentration varies significantly by variety, growing medium, light exposure, and harvest timing. The research below references the most widely cited study in this area, which analyzed 25 commercially available microgreen varieties. The five crops covered in depth — sunflower, broccoli, radish, pea shoots, and amaranth — are all grown and sold by ChefPax.

↑ Back to contentsNext: What does nutrition research say?

What does nutrition research say about microgreens?

Are microgreens healthy?
Microgreens are nutrient-dense whole foods. Research found some varieties contain higher concentrations of select vitamins per gram than mature leaves (Xiao et al., 2012) — a concentration comparison at an early growth stage, not a medical claim or a reason to replace vegetables. Use them as a regular finishing ingredient in a varied diet.

The most frequently cited source in microgreens nutrition literature is Xiao et al. (2012), published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry. The study analyzed 25 varieties of microgreens and measured concentrations of four groups of nutrients: ascorbic acid (Vitamin C), tocopherols (Vitamin E), phylloquinone (Vitamin K), and carotenoids (including beta-carotene, lutein, and zeaxanthin).

Key findings from the study:

The study did not compare microgreens to mature vegetables in a clinical or dietary context. The comparison was nutrient concentration per gram — a useful data point, not a dietary recommendation.

↑ Back to contentsNext: Sunflower microgreens — Vitamin E and plant fats

Sunflower microgreens — Vitamin E and healthy plant fats

Sunflower microgreens are among the meatier, more filling microgreen varieties — harvested at a stage when the seedling has drawn significantly on the fat-rich sunflower seed. They are a source of Vitamin E (tocopherols) and contain unsaturated plant fats from the seed cotyledon. Flavor is mild and nutty, which makes them a practical beginner variety. See sunflower microgreens recipes.

Broccoli microgreens and sulforaphane: what the research says

Broccoli is the most widely studied microgreen in published nutrition literature, largely because of sulforaphane — a compound formed when glucoraphanin (present in broccoli plant tissue) comes into contact with the enzyme myrosinase (released when the tissue is chewed or cut).

A foundational study by Fahey et al. (1997) measured glucoraphanin levels in broccoli sprouts and found concentrations significantly higher than in mature broccoli. Broccoli microgreens (harvested slightly later than sprouts) are also studied as a source of this precursor compound. Sulforaphane has been investigated in scientific literature for antioxidant properties — the research is ongoing and does not constitute a medical claim. See broccoli microgreens recipes.

Radish microgreens — folate and antioxidant compounds

Radish microgreens are in the brassica family alongside broccoli and are studied for their folate content and anthocyanin pigments (particularly in red radish varieties). Anthocyanins are the compounds responsible for the red-purple color seen in varieties like Rambo radish and are studied for their antioxidant properties. Flavor is sharp and peppery — closer to the mature radish than many other microgreen varieties. See radish microgreens recipes.

Pea shoots — plant protein and Vitamin C

Pea shoots are harvested from pea plants at the early shoot stage and are one of the more substantial microgreen varieties in terms of bulk and stem thickness. They are a source of plant-based protein relative to other microgreens — legume-family plants generally contain higher protein than brassica or herb-family microgreens. They also contain measurable Vitamin C. Flavor is mild and sweet, making them one of the most broadly usable varieties. See pea shoot recipes.

Amaranth microgreens — iron and beta-carotene

Red and garnet amaranth microgreens are among the most visually striking varieties, with deep magenta stems and leaves that come from betalain and anthocyanin pigments. The Xiao et al. (2012) study measured garnet amaranth among the highest in Vitamin E concentration across the 25 varieties tested. Amaranth is also studied as a source of iron and beta-carotene (a precursor to Vitamin A). The intensity of color is generally understood as a proxy for pigment and phytonutrient density. See amaranth microgreens recipes.

↑ Back to contentsNext: Microgreens vs mature vegetables: how do they compare?
Explore by crop
research-referenced varieties
Crops with studied phytonutrients

Jump to recipes for the four varieties most referenced in microgreens nutrition research.

Earthy flavor; glucoraphanin studied since 1997
Peppery finish; red varieties high in anthocyanins
Deep magenta color; among the highest Vitamin E in the 2012 study
Mild, nutty; tocopherols from the sunflower seed
Ready to use them?

Fresh microgreens from our Manor, TX farm — available weekly for Austin delivery and pickup.

Organized by crop and flavor
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Microgreens vs mature vegetables: how do they compare?

The comparison between microgreens and mature vegetables is frequently framed as microgreens being “more nutritious.” The more precise reading of the research is:

↑ Back to contentsNext: How to get more microgreens into your diet

How to get more microgreens into your diet

The most practical approach is to use microgreens as a finishing ingredient on meals you already cook. Because they are added raw at the end, they require no preparation beyond rinsing. A consistent habit with any ingredient matters more than occasional high-volume consumption.

For microgreens recipe ideas organized by crop, visit the recipes section. ChefPax also delivers a rotating variety of live trays weekly — see current availability.

Related guides

Microgreens for BeginnersStorage GuideFlavor Profiles
Related questions

Frequently asked questions

Are microgreens more nutritious than mature vegetables?

Research has found that some microgreens contain higher concentrations of certain vitamins and carotenoids per gram than their mature counterparts (Xiao et al., 2012). This reflects concentration at an early growth stage — it does not mean microgreens replace mature vegetables, which contribute fiber, bulk, and a wider nutrient range.

What vitamins are commonly found in microgreens?

Studies have measured Vitamins C, E, K, and beta-carotene (a Vitamin A precursor) in various microgreen varieties. Specific levels vary significantly by crop, growing conditions, and harvest timing.

What is sulforaphane and why is it associated with broccoli microgreens?

Sulforaphane is a naturally occurring compound formed when glucoraphanin (present in broccoli plants) is broken down by the enzyme myrosinase. Broccoli sprouts and microgreens are studied as a source of glucoraphanin. Sulforaphane has been investigated in scientific literature for its antioxidant properties — it is a research compound, not a supplement or treatment.

How often should I eat microgreens to benefit from their nutrients?

There is no established clinical dose for microgreens. They are whole foods — incorporating them regularly as part of a varied diet is a practical approach. Use them as a fresh finishing ingredient on meals you already prepare.

References

Fahey, J. W., Zhang, Y., & Talalay, P. (1997). Broccoli sprouts: An exceptionally rich source of inducers of enzymes that protect against chemical carcinogens. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 94(19), 10367–10372.

Xiao, Z., Lester, G. E., Luo, Y., & Wang, Q. (2012). Assessment of vitamin and carotenoid concentrations of emerging food products: Edible microgreens. Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 60(31), 7644–7651.