Tuna, Apple, and Carrot Salad + 5 Easy Fruit and Vegetable Hacks

This recipe for Tuna, Apple, and Carrot Salad is not your grandmother’s tuna salad. This updated version of old-fashioned tuna salad calls for a convenient can of tuna (you could also boneless, skinless pink salmon, which is rich in omega-3 fats), shredded carrot, chopped apple, green onion, lite mayo, lemon zest and Dijon mustard. Scoop into halved avocados or add to a sandwich with lettuce, juicy slices of tomato, and smashed avocado.

Tuna, Carrot, and Apple Salad + 5 Easy Fruit and Vegetable Hacks via lizshealthytable.com

Getting more fruits and vegetables onto your table requires planning and easy hacks to make produce the star ingredient in your weekly meal and snack prep. What follows are a few ideas to nudge you one step closer to meeting your daily fruit and veggie requirement of 2 to 3 cups of vegetables and 1.5 to 2 cups of fruit each day for women over age 60.

Produce Hacks:

  • Place a damp paper towel under your cutting board to keep it from moving around as you slice and dice your fruits and veggies. Plus, a stable cutting board keeps fingers safe from knives.
  • Rely on all forms of fruits and veggies including frozen, canned, juiced, dried, and fresh.
  • Squeeze lemon juice over apples to prevent them from browning.
  • Buy pre-shredded carrots vs. shredding yourself and add to salads, soups, and meatballs.  
  • Don’t have time to chop an onion. Use green onions (scallions) instead. 

Tuna, Carrot, and Apple Salad + 5 Easy Fruit and Vegetable Hacks via lizshealthytable.com

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5.0 from 2 reviews
Tuna, Apple, and Carrot Salad + 5 Easy Fruit and Vegetable Hacks
 
Author: 
Nutrition Information
  • Serves: 2
  • Calories: 300
  • Fat: 23g
  • Saturated fat: 3.5g
  • Carbohydrates: 10.5g
  • Sodium: 365mg
  • Fiber: 4.5g
  • Protein: 14g
Recipe type: Dinner
This recipe serves two, but it can easily be doubled if you have more mouths to feed! To ease your mealtime to-do list, enlist family members to help. Get kids involved. They can chop the apple, shred the carrot or chop the celery, and rip herbs.
Ingredients
  • One 5 ounce can tuna or boneless, skinless pink salmon, drained and flaked with a fork
  • 1 small carrot, peeled and shredded on the large holes of a box grater (about ½ cup), or 1 stalk celery, peeled and trimmed, sliced in half lengthwise, and thinly sliced, (about ⅓ cup)
  • ¼ medium apple, cut into ¼-inch dice (about ⅓ cup)
  • 1 green onion, trimmed and thinly sliced
  • 1 to 2 teaspoons chopped fresh tarragon, dill, or parsley, optional
  • Zest ¼ lemon, plus more to taste
  • 3 to 4 tablespoons mayonnaise
  • 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
  • 1 avocado, halved
Instructions
  1. Place the tuna, carrot, apple, onion, tarragon as desired, and lemon zest in a bowl and stir to combine. Mix in the mayonnaise, mustard, and salt and pepper to taste.
  2. Scoop into halved avocado and serve.

As a dietitian, what I love most about this recipe is its easy, flavor, and great nutrition. Each serving provides high-quality protein, omega-3 fats for heart, eye, and brain health, and fiber, for healthy digestion.

Tuna, Carrot, and Apple Salad + 5 Easy Fruit and Vegetable Hacks via lizshealthytable.com

 

 

 

 

 

  1. Liz,
    I am always looking for new recipes to incorporate into menus used at group homes. How many servings per recipe and what is the serving size for the tuna apple carrot salad?
    Thanks
    Karen

  2. I just made this recipe with canned pink salmon, and it was excellent! I am always looking for salmon recipes, and this will be a keeper. I also plan on trying your other recipes on this site. I am a healthy eater foodie. 🙂

    1. I’m so glad you found me and tried the recipe. I’m a huge fan of canned salmon, so we’re on the same (culinary) page for sure!!

  3. It’s funny that you say “not your grandma’s tuna salad,” My grandmother used to make her tuna salad with carrots, apples, onions, and mayo. So simple…so delicious. I am going to try the green onions instead…a little less mayo (bc I’m going to eat the whole thing myself)!! PS…a hardboiled egg is also good in there!

  4. I was hoping, since you are a dietician, that there would be nutritional values on your revipe. Did I miss them somewhere?

    1. I don’t always provide nutrient analysis as it takes time and resources. And as it is, I spend a lot of time creating original recipes for my readers. But if this is a recipe you want to know more about, I can work on it for you! Stand by and I’ll get you the numbers this week!

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