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Posted: 2020-01-17T10:45:16Z | Updated: 2020-01-17T10:45:16Z How Balancing 'Warming' And 'Cooling' Foods Could Benefit Your Health | HuffPost Life

How Balancing 'Warming' And 'Cooling' Foods Could Benefit Your Health

This concept from Chinese medicine could lend a new type of balance to your diet.
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Poh Kim Yeoh / EyeEm via Getty Images
Foods considered yin include dark leafy greens like spinach.

Many of us find ourselves trying to eat a more balanced diet with the turn of the new year, but here’s another type of balance you may want to consider: balancing warming and cooling foods.

Achieving balance in the body is at the heart of traditional Chinese medicine , and what you eat plays a key role in reaching that level of equilibrium. 

“Chinese medicine is based on the philosophy of the yin and the yang, two opposing yet complementary forces that make up life and energy,” said Felicia Yu , physician and assistant clinical professor of health sciences at the University of California, Los Angeles Center for East-West Medicine.

In Chinese medicine, the diet is viewed as a way to “maintain energetic balance,” Yu said. Diets are considered dynamic and should change with a person’s health, environment and lifestyle.

“It recognizes that all foods have a particular energy — some more yin, some more yang,” she said. “Yin foods are typically thought of as cooling and moistening, while yang foods help to warm, dry and heat.”

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BJI/Blue Jean Images via Getty Images
Greens and tofu are considered to be cooling in Chinese medicine.

The terms warming and cooling  don’t necessarily refer to a food’s temperature or spiciness, but its energy. Chinese medicine experts say food has the power to heal and harmonize the body, mind and qi , which refers to someone’s life force.

Food’s healing properties, according to Chinese medicine 

The diet along with acupuncture, moxibustion (a form of heat therapy), herbal medicine and exercise has been part of the foundation of traditional Chinese medicine therapy for centuries. The guiding principle is to retain or reestablish the balance of yin and yang, said ZhanXiang Wang , professor and clinician at National University of Health Sciences .

Foods are divided into warming and cooling categories to accomplish the balance. 

The body can be too cold or warm because of internal or external factors, like illness, climate, seasons or consuming too much or too little of certain foods, said Carla Wilson, dean at the American College of Traditional Chinese Medicine at the California Institute of Integral Studies.

When the body is too warm, for example, someone may experience constipation or dryness, which could be from eating too many spicy foods or spending too much time in a hot, dry climate, Wilson said. “It’s too much heat being held in the body without it being discharged,” she said.

Too much cold in the body may be from being sick with a cold or virus, or having a deficiency, which Wilson said could cause problems such as fatigue, mental fuzziness or diarrhea.

“A way to start to address either of those — too hot, which would be an excess, or too cold, which would be a deficiency — is to start to think about that [in terms of] food,” she said.

From a Chinese medicine perspective, eating cooling foods brings down the heat, and warming foods add heat to the body. The idea is to find a balance between the two, which varies from person to person and is based on that individual’s constitution .

Some people may have an unbalanced (too hot or too cold) constitution, but that doesn’t mean they necessarily have a medical condition, said Jinhua Xie , a certified acupuncturist and Chinese herbalist and professor of oriental medicine at Midwest College of Oriental Medicine .

“Food, cooling or warming, may be consumed based on constitutional type to help correct some of the abnormality in constitution and prevent illness,” Xie explained. “In this case, food is used for therapeutic purposes.”

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Akepong Srichaichana / EyeEm via Getty Images
In Chinese medicine, yin (cooling) and yang (warming) foods fall along a spectrum, where nothing is purely yin or purely yang.

 

Warming and cooling foods

In Chinese medicine, yin (cooling) and yang (warming) foods fall along a spectrum, where nothing is purely yin or purely yang, Yu said. Foods just have more yin or yang energy .

Foods considered yin include dark leafy greens like spinach, lotus root, radish, dandelion greens, cucumbers, bamboo shoots, seaweed, watermelon, green tea, chamomile tea, mint tea, clams, crab and tofu, Yu said. 

Yang foods include peppers, chicken, beef, lamb, cinnamon tea, chai, ginger, garlic, onions, peppers, leeks, pumpkin, shallots and cherries.

The five-flavors system, where specific flavors are yin or yang, is another key part of food classification in traditional Chinese medicine, Wang said. For example, sweet and pungent flavors have yang qualities, while salty, sour and bitter flavors have yin qualities. 

Flavors offer specific benefits to different bodily organs, Wang said. Sweet offers stomach benefits; acrid, the lungs; salty, the kidneys; sour, the liver; and bitter, the heart. 

“However, too much in one taste can also damage organs,” Wang said. 

Balancing yin and yang foods in the diet is key to optimal health, Xie said. Moderation helps achieve the balance: Eating too many foods considered warming or cooling, no matter how healthy they are, could create imbalance and lead to illness. 

“Eating too much of one group of foods (warming or cooling) will cause accumulation of heat or cold,” Xie said.

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Wako Megumi via Getty Images
If it is cold weather, a soup or stew with root vegetables, garlic, ginger, onions and pumpkin would be helpful to warm the body, said Felicia Yu, physician and assistant clinical professor of health sciences at the University of California, Los Angeles Center for East-West Medicine

 

How to actually balance yin and yang foods

Truly balancing yin and yang foods on your own dinner plate is a complex, individualized process. Visiting a traditional Chinese medicine provider can assess your constitution and help you get it right. 

Xie said practitioners use a questionnaire to evaluate someone’s constitution and classify the constitution into one balanced type and nine unbalanced types to offer dietary advice accordingly. 

Yu offered examples of a yin-yang balanced meal.

“If it is cold weather, a soup or stew with root vegetables, garlic, ginger, onions and pumpkin would be helpful to warm the body,” she said. “If it is hot weather, a brown rice bowl with sautéed kale or spinach, tofu, sesame seeds, cucumbers, tomatoes, chickpeas, burdock root and fermented foods, such sauerkraut or cabbage, would be a great way to cool the body.”

Yin-yang nutrition is a holistic approach to nutrition 

Comparing Chinese medicine nutrition with Western paradigms is difficult. Many Western diets focus on eliminating or reducing specific types of foods, such as low-fat or low-carb diets. The Chinese nutrition system’s emphasis on a balance of yin and yang foods is a much more holistic approach, Yu said.

“While focusing on calories and carbohydrates is useful in some situations, it is a reductionist way of looking at food,” Yu said. “It does not always take into account the whole person. Eating according to the energetic properties of food is a holistic way to live that supports good health and well-being, factoring in the dynamic quality of human beings.”

Balance and eating with intention are at the heart of dietary therapies in Chinese medicine. Long-term monitoring of the diet is essential in Chinese medicine to ensure balance and that someone with a cold constitution is avoiding too many cooling foods and heat constitutions avoid too many warming foods, Xie said. 

“In Chinese medicine, by following the principle of clinical medicine, treating illness based on pattern, foods may be considered a therapeutic tool and recommended based on patient’s pattern when they are sick or constitutional types when they are not sick but they have abnormal constitutional type,” Xie said. “So, you can say it is about eating with intention.”

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Before You Go

Is Your Diet Healthy? What Mediterranean Really Means
Introduction(01 of11)
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We know that following a Mediterranean style diet is one of the healthiest choices you can make. For most people, however, the word Mediterranean conjures up dishes like Greek salad, hummus and dolmas as the sorts of foods they have to eat to follow the diet. This couldnt be further from the truth. The reality is that the Mediterranean style diet is a basic set of principles that you can easily follow by making a few small adjustments in your regular diet. This quiz will help you understand those guidelines and show you the small changes you can make in your daily life to improve your health. Lets get started.
Vegetables(02 of11)
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1. If you are female, do you eat more than 9 ounces of vegetables per day (11 ounces for men)? 4 ounces is about two medium carrots about 8 medium spears of asparagus about 1 cup sliced yellow squash or zucchini about one 3 inch beet about 1 1/4 cups chopped broccoliIf you eat....a) More than 9/11 oz., give yourself 1 pointb) Less than 9/11 oz., give yourself 0 pointsWhy It Matters:Here are some great examples of how powerful eating more vegetables can be: Beyond Mediterranean diet research, other studies have shown that each additional serving of vegetables you eat per day reduces your risk of heart disease by 4% . See more in the Journal of Nutritionhttp://jn.nutrition.org/content/136/10/2588.abstract .In another study of successful weight loss strategies, the 5 most common strategies included consuming more vegetables along with eating smaller portions, reducing the amount of food eaten overall, more fruits, fewer fatty foods, and no sweetened beverages. Read a medical abstract about the study here .Its also important to know that taking vitamin pills instead of eating more vegetables doesn't work very well. Supplementing your diet with antioxidants or B vitamins in pill form won't have any effect on hardening of the arteries. Read more here from the American Journal of Clinical Nutritionhttp://www.ajcn.org/content/84/4/880.abstract .
Legumes(03 of11)
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2. Do you eat more than 1 3/4 ounces of legumes per day (2 ounces for men)? 1 3/4 ounces is about 1/4 cup canned chick peas about 3 tablespoons peanut butter about 1/4 cup raw lentils about 1/3 cup canned kidney beans about 1/3 cup roasted soybeans about 2/3 cup frozen peasIf you eat more than 1 3/4 ounces (2 ounces) per day, give yourself 1 point.If you eat less than 1 3/4 ounces (2 ounces) per day, do not give yourself a point.Why It Matters:In a study of 10,000 men, those eating legumes 4 times or more per week reduced their risk of heart disease by as much as 22%. Get more information. Its not just heart disease. In one study the top 25% of surveyed men, those eating the most beans, had a 65% reduction in recurrence of colon polyps and almost a 50% reduction in more advanced colon tumors as compared to those men who ate the fewest beans. Learn more about the study. Eating legumes doesn't mean just eating beans, however. Eating legumes means having a peanut butter sandwich, a side of black eyed peas or some chili. Heres a great, simple chili recipe to get you going.
Fruit and Nuts(04 of11)
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3. Do you eat more than 8 ounces of fruit or nuts per day (9 ounces for men)? 8 ounces is 1 large apple 2 medium bananas 1 cup walnuts, pecans, pistachios or other nutsIf you eat more than 8/9 oz, give yourself 1 point.If you eat less than 8/9 oz, do not give yourself a point.Why It Matters.This is a good place for combination. An ounce of nuts contains somewhere in the range of 200 calories. Even though nuts and seeds are calorie dense, these are excellent quality calories in that they contain good quality fats and are high in minerals. Nuts help control cholesterol and the health benefits even extend to a lowered risk of sudden death. (See a study that confirms this. )In addition to being a great source of vitamins (remember that vitamin supplements are not as effective as getting your vitamins from foods), eating fruit can be a tremendous help with weight control. (Read more about a study that confirms this. )
Dairy(05 of11)
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4. Do you eat less than 7 ounces of dairy per day (7 1/4 ounces for men)? 7 ounces is about a cup of yogurt about a cup of sour cream 7 slices of cheeseIf you eat more than 7 / 7 1/4 oz, do not give yourself a point.If you eat less than 7 / 7 1/4 oz, give yourself a point.Why It Matters.Contrary to some of the hype, many studies have shown that eating more dairy products is not the perfect solution for weight control or weight loss. That said, consuming fermented dairy products, like cheese and yogurt, appears to be very beneficial. Likewise, using lower fat dairy products is key to getting the best quality calories from your foods.
Whole Grains(06 of11)
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5. Do you eat more than 9 ounces (4.5 servings) of cereals or grains per day (10 1/2 ounces, or about 5 servings, for men)? 2 ounces (one serving) is about 1 cup bite size shredded wheat two slices of whole wheat bread 1/4 cup of brown rice 1/2 cup dry whole wheat pasta 1/3 cup uncooked quinoaIf you eat more than 9 / 10 1/2 oz, give yourself 1 point.If you eat less than 9 / 10 1/2 oz, do not give yourself a point.Why It Matters:There are many studies that show the benefits of whole grains. Good quality cereals and grains have been shown to help with lowering cholesterol, controlling diabetes and high blood pressure, and best of all, weight control. The best part is that it doesnt take much. Changing as little as 2 slices of whole wheat bread for white bread is enough to have a significant reduction in the risk of heart disease. Read more from the Journal of the American Medical Association. Start the day with a great quality cereal or oatmeal, take a sandwich with whole wheat bread for lunch and choose brown rice instead of white rice. Simple changes are the easiest. Here are a few recipes that can help you make changes:Healthy Toasted Oatmeal Shrimp Fried Rice Pasta Carbonara Whole Wheat Pizza Dough
Fish(07 of11)
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6. Do you eat more than 3/4 ounces of fish per day (1 ounces for men)? This is not much fish, and the research looked at averages so thats why it seems to be so little. This really means about two or more 4 ounce servings per week.If you eat more than 3/4 / 1 ounce per day, give yourself 1 point.If you eat less than 3/4 / 1 ounce per day, do not give yourself a point.Why It Matters.There are a lot of reasons that consuming fish is good for you. Fatty fish like salmon, tuna, halibut, grouper and sardines are high in Omega-3 fats and have clearly been linked to lower rates of heart disease, stroke and high blood pressure. High consumption of fish has even been shown to reduce the progression of heart disease. Read more from the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
Meat(08 of11)
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7. Do you eat less than 3 1/4 ounces of meat per day (4 ounces for men)? Most people think that a serving of meat is much larger than it should be. Four ounces of beef, chicken, pork or lamb is about the size of a deck of cards. Take time to look at the package, or better yet, ask the butcher to cut your choices to the right portion size. Choose lean meats whenever possible. Avoid processed meats like hot dogs, bologna and sausage.If you eat more than 3 1/4 / 4 ounces of meat per day, do not give yourself a point.If you eat less than 3 1/4 / 4 ounces of meat per day, give yourself 1 point.Why It Matters.We now know that problem isnt as much eating red meat at all, but an issue of the quality of meat you choose. Select fresh meats and avoid or minimize highly processed meats such as hot dogs, bologna and sausages. Read more here. We also know that eating less meat is linked to better weight control. Read more from the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. This recipe for Cumin Dusted Flank Steak with Black Beans is great because it combines a serving of legumes, vegetables and lean beef with delicious spices.Asian Lettuce Wraps are delicious and these use brown rice, veggies and chicken.
Alcohol(09 of11)
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8. Do you drink between 5 and 25 grams of alcohol per day (10 and 50 grams for men)? 25 grams is the equivalent of about one drink: One twelve ounce beer One 5 ounce glass of wine One 1 ounce shot of spiritsIf you drink less than 5/10 grams per day, do not give yourself a point.If you drink between 5/10 and 25/50 grams per day, give yourself 1 point.If you drink more than 25/50 grams per day, take away 1 point.Why It Matters.Drinking alcohol has been shown to be beneficial, but too much is clearly a problem. In Mediterranean diet studies most alcohol consumed is at meal times. It is clear that binge drinking is a major problem, so saving all of your drinks up for Saturday night isnt a good idea. Those men who drank one-half to two drinks per day had the lowest risk for heart attack of all the participants in the Health Professionals Follow-up Study.
Fats(10 of11)
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9. The ratio of the type of fat you consume is important. Do you eat more healthy oils? The optimal ratio is 1.6 portions of healthy fat to 1 portion of less healthy fats per day. Healthy fats include: Olive oil Canola oil Grapeseed oil Peanut oil Soybean oilLess healthy fats include: Hydrogenated vegetable oil Stick or hard margarines Butter Lard Vegetable shorteningIf the ratio of the amount of fats you eat is greater than the optimum ratio of greater than 1.6 to 1 for healthy fats:less healthy fats, give yourself 1 point.If the ratio of the amount of fats you eat is less than the optimum ratio of greater than 1.6 to 1 for healthy fats:less healthy fats, do not give yourself a point.Why It Matters.For a long time there was a feeling that all fats were bad. We now know that this is wrong. Low fat diets turned out to be almost as silly as low carbohydrate diets. So the key is good quality fats. In Mediterranean diet studies its clear that the main fat used is olive oil (and you thought that the French only used butter). Using olive oils in cooking is well documented to be good for you and it doesnt take much to see that benefit in your health. Studies have shown that even taking oil as a supplement will work. Fill your cupboard with really great quality fats like olive and canola oil. Use butter sparingly for great flavor and texture.
How Did You Do?(11 of11)
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Conclusion and ScoreThere is no passing or failing grade for this test. The higher your score is, the better. A perfect Mediterranean style diet would be a score of 9, and if youre living off snack food and soda, its likely your score will be closer to zero. The impact of improving your score can be dramatic. One of the largest Mediterranean diet studies showed that a two point increase in your score translates to a 25% reduction in the risk of death from heart disease or cancer. You can find out more about the Mediterranean diet along with recipes that suit your life at the Dr. Gourmet website.

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