“…Therefore, searching for nutrient-dense vegetables through the manipulation of phytochemicals by environmental (air temperature, light quality, intensity and photoperiod) and innovative crop management practices (growing media, nutrition and biofortification) represents a promising and balanced approach between safety, cost and effectiveness [2,3]. Microgreens (i.e., edible seedlings of herbs, grains and vegetables), also known as vegetable confetti, are an emerging class of specialty crop that have gained increasing popularity among consumers, urban farmers, food technologists and nutritionists due to their fortified phytochemical composition, accumulated in the two fully developed cotyledons and the first true leaves, compared to their mature counterparts [4][5][6][7][8][9]. In addition to their potential nutritional and functional benefits, microgreens production presents the following advantages: (i) short cultivation cycle, (ii) all-year round production, (iii), ease of cultivation, (iv) suitability for indoor farming technology, (v) high potential returns/profitability for producers with an estimated value of 30-50 $ per pound and (vi) higher sustainability compared to growing mature herbs and vegetables, offering a small footprint in terms of space, water and fertilizers [8,10,11].…”