In this
However, when these vegetables are cooked they become
Dietary recommendation for Vata
Vata should eat cooked vegetables. Raw vegetables are rough (fibrous), dry and hard to digest. Vata people have a weak digestive fire, so this might cause indigestion further deprecating the digestive fire. So Vata has to do will well cook food – preferably boiled or steamed food.
Vata should consume vegetables cooked with cumin or mustard as these help in sparking the digestive fire. Raw vegetables are especially prone to cause bloating, gas build up and constipation in Vata people. If you prefer salads, consume them with lots of sesame or olive oil, however, it is best to avoid salads in Vata people.
Vata should prefer vegetables with sweetness and sourness, vegetables that have been heavily salted (pickled – use rock salt) and vegetables underground. They should avoid bitter, frozen, dried, raw, astringent and pungent.
Dietary recommendation for Pitta
Pittas are naturally hot, oily, sharp, and pungent in energy so uncooked vegetables that are more cool, juicy, sweet, and dry are recommended for pitta. Pitta due to their excess of digestive fire can easily digest uncooked vegetables as well. It provides a cure to many pitta related problems like acidity, pimples, heartburn, ulcers and plethora of skin diseases. Pitta should
Dietary recommendation for Kapha
Kaphas are naturally dense, heavy, oily, and sweet in energy so they need vegetables which are light, dry, bitter, astringent, and pungent. These vegetables restore their imbalances, such as lethargy, weight gain, swelling, mucus buildup, and sluggish metabolism. Kapha should avoid sour, sweet or salty vegetables. Kapha should also avoid deep frying their vegetables, tempura, and stir-frying. They should cook their vegetables by roasting, drying, baking, and grilling. Raw food is avoidable due to their weak digestive fire.
What the yogic approach to dietary lifestyle provides are a choice and habit. Cultivating the right habits and choosing right diet according to Prakriti of an individual provides not only a benefit of having a healthy life physically but also a mindfulness-based approach to diet, which cultivates the mind as well. Thus as the saying goes “you are what you eat”, in order to be a yogi, you have to eat like a yogi.