The Five Flavors in TCM

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In Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), food is considered medicine. Herbal formulas mostly consist of food items like twigs, berries, nuts, fruit skins, roots, flowers, and animal products. Food also has qualities beyond the biochemical nature assigned by Western medicine and nutritionists. Food also has elements such as taste and temperature, color, and texture. These qualities go to specific organs that identify with these elements and are absorbed and benefited by them.

Let’s explore five main food tastes: sweet, salty, sour, pungent, and bitter- which organs they are associated with, and how food choices can affect your health and well-being.

Sweet

Sweet foods are associated with the spleen and stomach, the earth element, late summer season, and the color yellow. Sweet foods help the digestive system transform and transport food. These foods tonify the body and harmonize other flavors in a formula and are also considered a tonic. Sweet foods help low energy, ease pain, and relax tension.

Examples of sweet foods are yams, fruit, carrots, and honey.

Salty

Salty foods are associated with the kidneys and bladder, the water element, black and winter season. Salty foods are said to soften hardenings and dissipate nodules as we see in lumps, masses, and cysts. Salty food also helps with low back pain, knee soreness, fertility, and is anti-aging due to the kidney association with bones, basic constitution, fertility, and sexuality.

An example of a food that is salty is seaweed, which helps goiter.

Sour

Sour foods are associated with the liver and gallbladder, the wood element, green, and spring season. Sour foods are astringent and absorb, which means they hold in fluid and stop the discharge, as in excess sweating and diarrhea.

Examples of sour foods are lemon, vinegar, and fermented food.

Pungent

Pungent foods are associated with the lungs and large intestine, autumn, white, and the metal element. These foods disperse moisture and promote circulation; they move stagnation. Pungent foods also open pores and promote sweating. They are used in colds to promote sweating and expel pathogens.

Examples of pungent or acrid foods are garlic, ginger, mint, scallions, daikon, and peppers.

Bitter

Bitter foods are associated with the heart and small intestine, summer, red, and the fire element. Bitter foods dry dampness (excess mucus in the body) has a cleansing action, a descending action (so they promote urination), clear heat (symptoms like insomnia restlessness, palpitations, a red tongue, rapid pulse, and anxiety indicate heat), and edema.

Examples of bitter foods are kale, parsley, collard greens, endives, and sesame seeds.

How to know what to eat? It’s all about balance. It’s best to eat what’s in season and be in harmony with the rhythms of nature. It’s also a good idea not to overdo any one flavor. Too much sour in the diet hurts the liver and creates stagnation, in the same sense, too much cold food hurts the stomach and affects the digestive fire resulting in bloating, gas, loose stools, and fatigue.

These symptoms, in turn, may make one crave sweets to counterbalance the deficiency in the stomach. When an herbal formula is created for a specific ailment, there is a balance of flavors so we don’t have an overabundance of one that can create a problem elsewhere. It’s best to visit a licensed acupuncturist to get a proper diagnosis and dietary recommendations designed for you.

In the meantime, stay in season with fresh market choices, have a variety of colors in your food, and experiment with a nice balance in food choices and cooking.

If you are interested in learning more about how eating the right foods can improve your health, call now to schedule an appointment.

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Master Lu has been practicing Acupuncture and Chinese martial arts for over 40 years. He was one of the first Licensed Acupuncturist in the state of Utah. He was trained in Taiwan in both Acupuncture and Chinese martial arts mainly Northern Shaolin Kung Fu and Old Yang Style Tai Chi. Master Lu was also twice national champion for full contact fighting in Taiwan.

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