Your Privacy is Important to us

We encourage you to review our Terms of Service, and Privacy Policy.

By continuing, you agree to the Terms listed here. In case you want to opt out, please click "Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information" link in the footer of this page.

Opt out of the sale or sharing of personal information

We won't sell or share your personal information to inform the ads you see. You may still see interest-based ads if your information is sold or shared by other companies or was sold or shared previously.

Continue on TOI App
Open App
Login for better experience!
Login Now
Welcome! to timesofindia.com
TOI INDTOI USTOI GCC
TOI+
  • Home
  • Live
  • TOI Games
  • Top Headlines
  • India
  • City News
  • Photos
  • Business
  • Real Estate
  • Entertainment
  • Movie Reviews
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcasts
  • Elections
  • Web Series
  • Sports
  • TV
  • Food
  • Travel
  • Events
  • World
  • Music
  • Astrology
  • Videos
  • Tech
  • Auto
  • Education
  • Log Out
Follow Us On
Open App
  • ETIMES
  • CINEMA
  • VIDEOS
  • TV
  • LIFESTYLE
  • VISUAL STORIES
  • MUSIC
  • TRAVEL
  • FOOD
  • TRENDING
  • EVENTS
  • THEATRE
  • PHOTOS
  • MOVIE REVIEWS
  • MOVIE LISTINGS
  • HEALTH
  • RELATIONSHIP
  • WEB SERIES
  • BOX OFFICE

6 cooling foods Ayurveda recommends during extreme heat

etimes.in | Last updated on - Apr 27, 2026, 10:54 IST
Comments
Share
1/7

Six cooling foods Ayurveda recommends during extreme heat

When the air turns thick and the days feel relentless, the body starts asking for something lighter, quieter and easier to carry. Ayurveda has long answered that question through the idea of pitta-balancing foods: cooling, moist, fresh ingredients, with sweet, bitter and astringent tastes often favoured in hot weather. In that framework, summer eating is less about indulgence than relief, a way of softening internal heat before it turns into irritability, heaviness or a tired, overheated body. Here are six foods Ayurveda often recommends turning to when the heat feels overwhelming.

2/7

Watermelon

Few foods feel as immediately seasonal as watermelon. In Ayurvedic food lists, it sits comfortably among pitta-pacifying fruits, valued for its sweetness, high water content and cooling feel. That is part of its charm: it does not ask the body to work hard.

In bustling summer markets, its presence is unmistakable, stacked high on carts and sliced open to reveal that deep red flesh. It becomes a shared experience, eaten in quick wedges, passed around, or quietly enjoyed as a moment of relief from the heat.

It simply hydrates, refreshes and disappears quickly, which is exactly why it works so well on punishingly hot days. Eaten chilled but not icy, or sliced with a little lime, it feels less like a snack and more like a pause.

3/7

Cucumber

Cucumber is the quiet hero of summer eating. It is crisp, mild and water-rich, with the kind of freshness that seems to lower the volume on the whole meal.

There is also something instinctively comforting about its simplicity. No elaborate cooking, no heavy seasoning, just a clean bite that feels immediate and grounding. In the middle of long, exhausting heat, that kind of uncomplicated nourishment can feel almost restorative.

Ayurvedic summer food guides repeatedly place cucumber among the ingredients that help balance excess heat, especially when the body is craving something raw, simple and easy to digest. It is the vegetable version of cool water in solid form, clean, spare and strangely satisfying when heat has worn everything else down.

4/7

Coconut

Coconut appears again and again in Ayurvedic summer guidance because it carries both richness and relief. Fresh coconut, coconut water and coconut-based preparations are all described as cooling and pitta-balancing, which is why they show up so often in warm-weather recipes and snacks. There is something almost architectural about coconut in heat: it gives the body nourishment without the feeling of weight, and hydration without blandness. In a hot spell, that combination can feel like a small mercy.

5/7

Fennel

Fennel brings a different kind of coolness, less watery, more digestive. Ayurvedic sources describe it as cooling and sweet, traditionally used to support digestion without provoking pitta. Its gentle aroma and natural oils help stimulate digestive enzymes, easing heaviness without overwhelming the system or adding to internal heat.

That matters in extreme heat, when many people do not just feel hot but also sluggish, bloated or slightly off balance after meals. A few fennel seeds after eating, or fennel folded into a light summer dish, can make the meal feel calmer from the inside out. It is one of those ingredients that seems small until you notice how much easier the body feels afterward.

6/7

Coriander

Coriander, especially in its fresh herb form, has the kind of cooling reputation Ayurveda loves in summer. Along with cilantro, mint and fennel, it is repeatedly grouped among the herbs that help calm pitta’s heat. It works particularly well because it does not dominate a dish; it freshens it. Chopped into salads, sprinkled over grains, blended into chutneys or stirred into cooling drinks, coriander brings brightness without fire. In hot weather, that lightness is often exactly what a meal needs.

7/7

Mint

Mint feels almost made for extreme heat. Ayurveda places it firmly among the cooling herbs used to soothe pitta, and it shows up in guidance for summer eating again and again, often alongside coriander and fennel. Its effect is immediate, almost emotional: one taste and the mouth feels fresher, the breath clearer, the meal lighter. Whether folded into yogurt, scattered over fruit or steeped in a simple drink, mint has a way of making heat feel less oppressive. It does not fight summer. It outlasts it.

In many Indian homes, mint becomes almost instinctive during peak heat, appearing in chutneys, chaas and infused water without much thought. Its presence is less about trend and more about tradition, passed down quietly through everyday meals that respond to the season rather than resist it.

Extreme heat is not just uncomfortable; it can become dangerous. Public health guidance warns that overheating can lead to symptoms such as dizziness, weakness, nausea, heavy sweating and heat exhaustion, and recommends drinking fluids even before thirst kicks in. Ayurveda’s cooling foods are best read in that same spirit: as support, not superstition, a practical, seasonal way to make hot weather easier to endure.

Start a Conversation

Post comment
Featured In lifestyle
  • How Lalit Modi convinced his family to accept his marriage to Minal Sagrani, who was 10 years older: The love story that defied the odds
  • Child behavior expert says these 5 common phrases parents say to their children can hurt them psychologically
  • Proverb of the day: “The donkey that feared the dust of the road spent its life admiring...”
  • Man who lost nearly 32 kgs reveals the weight-loss mistakes most people keep making
  • 5 life skills parents should teach children because AI can’t replace them
  • Too much screen time? Here are 8 things parents can do to set healthy boundaries for kids
  • The 'magic potion' behind trees: scientists discover protein that let plants conquer land 470 million years ago
  • Nature's most unbelievable parenting trick: Meet the Malabar frog that builds a foaming pillow nest with over 200 eggs
  • Love packaged snacks? New study says they could raise your Dementia risk by nearly 60%
Photostories
  • The 5 numbers cardiologists want every adult to know before it's too late
  • Child behavior expert says these 5 common phrases parents say to their children can hurt them psychologically
  • 8 words that women hate from the core of their heart: Which one can YOU not stand
  • Getting married soon? 10 common questions women should ask themselves before tying the knot
  • Millions of women live with period pain, PMOS and UTIs: But experts say that doesn't make them normal
  • From Spiti to Antarctica: World's most unusual post offices every traveller should visit
  • Too much screen time? Here are 8 things parents can do to set healthy boundaries for kids
  • Aamir Ali’s luxurious Mumbai house: A massive living room, art collection, walk-in wardrobe and more
  • The most powerful Devi Mantras to enhance your inner power and strength
Explore more Stories
  • 6
    Child behavior expert says these 5 common phrases parents say to their children can hurt them psychologically
  • 11
    Too much screen time? Here are 8 things parents can do to set healthy boundaries for kids
  • 6
    From Spiti to Antarctica: World's most unusual post offices every traveller should visit
  • 10
    Is your child ready for pre-school? These 8 signs can help you decide
  • 11
    10 countries where it is safe to drink tap water while travelling
Up Next
  • ETimes
  • /
  • Life & Style
  • /
  • Food News
  • /
  • 6 cooling foods Ayurveda recommends during extreme heat
About UsTerms Of UsePrivacy PolicyCookie Policy

Copyright © Jun 4, 2026, 07.45PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service