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The spring-summer diet

The spring-summer diet

The writer is a certified macrobiotic nutritionist, chef and instructor from the Kushi Institute, Massachusetts.

Let’s talk about the season’s energy. With the arrival of spring-summer, one can sense the change in energy, apart from the heat in April/May. In traditional Chinese medicine, each organ corresponds to a season, taste, time of day, etc. Including seasonal food in our diet strengthens the corresponding organ for that season.

Organs associated with this time of the year are liver, gall bladder, spleen, stomach, and pancreas. Food that nurtures liver and gallbladder are barley (grain), anything growing upward such as sprouts, leeks, suha (dill), coriander, green onions, and leafy greens. Since the taste of the liver is ‘sour’, include food such as lime, green apples, and apple cider vinegar, which help discharge liver excesses. Add shiitake mushrooms in your diet, as it dissolves fat in the liver. Spleen, stomach, and pancreas would benefit from millets (of the sweeter variety like foxtail millet), melons, and sweeter vegetables such as corn, carrots, onions, etc.

Also, since cooling foods activate our body, add chia seeds, watermelon, honeydew melon, cucumber, mint, sesame, white raddish, pomegranate, coconut water, fennel, poppy seeds, and fenugreek seeds to the diet. Opt for cooking styles such as blanching, quick sauté, medium boil, steaming, one-hour pressed salad (with rock/sea salt). Go for boiled grains as opposed to pressure cooked, and quick marinated pickles. Avoid alcohol, sugar (extremely expansive, causing liver energy to rise quickly and resulting in migraines), big portions of fruit (keep it under 500 grams a day), and reduce oil and salt intake.

The spring-summer diet

Recipe
Carrot Sprouted Moong Bean Salad (Serves 4)

Ingredients
Green sprouted moong (steamed): ¼ cup

Carrot: One, large and grated

Red bell pepper: ½, skinned and diced

Ginger: 1 tsp, grated

Lemon juice: 2 tbsp

Mustard seeds: ½ tsp

Green chilli: 1 small, chopped

Curry leaves: 10

Fresh coriander: 1 tbsp

Method
In a skillet, heat oil, add mustard seeds and let them pop. Once the popping stops, add chilli and curry leaves and fry for 30 seconds. Now, add this to the green sprouted moong, red bell pepper, ginger, and carrots. Add coriander leaves and lime-toss in the oil dressing before serving.

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