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Livsmedel för att balansera pittas matsmältning

One of the key ways to balance the doshas is through what we eat and drink each day, and just as importantly- how and when. Ayurveda really considers the right food and good digestion as being at the heart of good health.

With a roaring digestive fire, this type has also strong appetite, and you’re likely to get rather irritable if kept hungry for too long. Skipping meals is not for you. However,  types or those with aggravated pitta may also have poor digestion with excess acidity and strong thirst.

You can balance pitta’s hot, sharp, and intense nature by seeking out the opposite qualities of calm, coolness and moderation. Pitta types fare best when they minimise spicy, salty and sour foods, such as alcohol, chillies and citrus fruits.

Eating more cooling foods such as leafy vegetables rich in the bitter taste is a good way of balancing Pitta. Ayurveda agrees with the old saying of ‘lunch like a King’ - digestion is at its strongest during the middle of the day. Pitta types especially need a good lunch by 2pm latest.

However, pitta types or those with aggravated pitta may also have poor digestion with excess acidity and strong thirst.

Eating to suit pitta dosha

The following guidelines are to help you begin to recognise the qualities of different foods and start to appreciate which foods are best to balance pitta dosha:

  • Aim for three good meals a day. Eating at consistent times from one day to the next also helps to balance an overactive digestive fire

  • Favour sweet, bitter and astringent tastes which are cooling and refreshing- such as fresh fruits and vegetables, rice, quinoa, spelt, barley, oats, milk, butter, ghee, foods rich in the bitter tastes include green, leafy vegetables, rhubarb and rocket

  • Raw foods tend to be naturally cooling, and 

    pitta

     tends to be able to handle them better than the other 

    doshas

    , so mixing in an assortment of raw fruits and vegetables will generally be supportive—especially in the warmer months. Try not to mix raw and cooked foods in the same meal

  • Avoid hot and spicy foods such as those cooked with chillies, raw onion, raw garlic, mustard and cayenne.

  • Minimise the sour taste, for example, foods such as cheese, yoghurt and tomatoes are considered especially sour

  • Minimise your use of salt and salty foods such as salted nuts and crisps

  • The best oils for 

    Pitta

     are olive, sunflower and coconut oil, as well as ghee or unsalted butter. Avoid fried and greasy foods and low-quality oils

  • Favour the milder spices such as fresh ginger, fennel, coriander, turmeric, and small amounts of black pepper. Some key cooling and calming herbs you can use to help balance your strong digestion are coriander, mint and fennel. You can use these herbs liberally in your cooking and as cooling garnishes

  • Favour all the sweet fruits but avoid the sour tasting ones such as oranges, grapefruits and pineapples. Lemon and lime are fine in moderation

  • Limit your intake of stimulants such as alcohol, coffee. Instead, drink cool drinks and minty, refreshing herbal teas. Pukka’s Mint Refresh blend was formulated with 

    pitta dosha

     in mind to calm and soothe digestion

  • Include cooling and calming Pukka Aloe Vera Juice in your daily diet  

Don't know your dosha? Take our dosha quiz to find out.

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