Pulses
/legumes/ Beans:
As we have learnt that food means
cereals, they come at the top of the list. After them the second on the list is
Pulses, legumes. They are Dicot seeds, having two halves together. Means if we
break them they depart in to two halves. As per Ayurveda although they have
presence of earth and water element they also have wind and space elements in
dominance. So they are generally astringent along with the sweet taste; some
are also bitter tasting. They are dry, cooling, light, constipating, causes
excess Vata, good for Kapha & Pita imbalance and for obesity.
Do you remember what we need every day as a
nutrition? Yes, we need around 10-15 % of proteins from our food. Cereals
provide around 7-10% of proteins to us, so we can say half of the required
proteins come from cereals. To fulfill the remaining half Pulses is a very
good source along with dairy products.
Also cereals
and pulses work complimentary to each other. Cereals lack some amino acids (Proteins
are made up from various amino acids) & pulses lack some. When we eat
combination of two we get all the required amino acids.
Those who
have non-veg food as their staple diet they get proteins easily. But for a
vegetarian person pulses & dairy is essential. If you see the chart( at the end) you can
easily conclude that all the pulses have little higher protein content, around 17-28%.
Naturally they take care to fulfill the demand. As they are high in proteins
they have little less carbohydrates, around 54-61 %
If you see
how peoples eat pulses/beans world-wide is interesting. In India Dal-Roti or
Dal –rice (Dal is a soup made out of pulses), in South America rice with beans,
In Europe bread with beans, it’s a perfect combination, which makes the food
almost complete food. But see the proportion, almost 70-80 % is cereal and
20-30% is a pulse, legume, not vice versa. That will cause imbalance. We will
understand it latter.
Along with
carbs and proteins pulses give lot of vitamins, minerals and fiber if they are
unpolished. They are rich in Vitamin B
group vitamins. Now
you know it means 7-8 Vitamins. They also have Iron, Calcium, Phosphorus and
other minerals.
As their
protein content is more they are hard in nature. You can easily notice their
hardness. When you cook them they take longer time to become soft than cereals.
As they are hard they take long time to
cook. But remember they are not heavy. Heaviness and hardness are two different
qualities. Try this, take one fist full of cereals in one hand and one fist
full of Pulses in other hand. You will notice the lightness of them as compare
to the cereals.
Now let us understand them with Ayurvedic
wisdom. Ayurveda also gave them importance after the Cereals. All the pulses
have slightly astringent or bitter taste along with the sweet taste. Naturally they have more wind element into
them than cereals. Can you correlate? Astringent & bitter tastes have
dominance of wind element. As wind is light the pulses are lighter than
cereals. And also wind makes them more dry and hard. If you remember the taste
chart the bitter, astringent tastes come at the lower part of it. So they are
less important than cereals. Both the sciences modern medicine & Ayurveda
talking the same about the proportion of Cereals and Pulses.
In Marathi
language the dals are also known as Varan, it means Aavaran, means topping,
covering. It speaks about the proportion of cereals to pulses. So you take a
heap of rice and cover it with Dal, Varan. That’s the proportion. Not vice
versa, taking a dal and mixing small portion of rice into it.
You can very
well understand with the wisdom of Ayurveda that if you have more pulses you
are going to suffer from Vata issues, wind issues as they have more wind into
them. Many of the patients very clearly correlate that when they have more
pulses they suffer from gases and problems due to them.
Remember
your experience. One day you ate more pulses and your stomach bloats. If you
don’t know the gaseous nature of pulses you cannot correlate this bloating with
Pulses. Especially a person suffering with Vata issues cannot tolerate pulses,
he eats pulses and his Vata becomes stormy. The dryness, pains and aches in the
body, the gases increases immediately.
Today one
stream of health emphasizes on having high protein diet. One has to check that
having such diet doesn’t come up with any gas issues? Especially the proteins
from pulses lack fats and can create more gas issues as compare to proteins
from Dairy, Non-veg & nuts. Even the basic science from modern medicine
says that for good metabolism of proteins fats are necessary. So be cautious
for the side effects while having excess of proteins, especially from the
pulses.
There is one
very good information has come up about hormone of happiness—Serotonin, which
is in abundance in the brain. The carbs, sweets, chocolates increases this
hormone making you happy but if you have more proteins serotonin levels goes
down making you unhappy. So remember the side effect of excess protein intake.
The culture
around the world knows this fact about the pulses so while cooking them care
has taken that how the wind, gas can be pacified.
Do you
remember which tastes pacify Vata? Yes, Sweet, sour & salty. See how people
around the world cook pulses. In the north India they use sourness of raw
mango. Of course they use the best medicine of Vata that is oil in abundance or
ghee while cooking pulses. This oiliness and sourness pacifies Vata.
In
Maharashtra, middle part of India they use Jaggery & tamarind or Kokam,
sweet and sour and with some oil or ghee. There is a tradition of putting a
ghee on a sweet dish named Puran Poli made from chick peas. This is also a complete food --rice, plain
dal & ghee. (Carbohydrates, proteins & fats)In south India they will go
for sourness of tamarind.
The famous
humus, an Arabian dish, works on the same
principles. It is a mix of chick peas, sesame seeds & olive oil. In china
they ferment the Soybean (Which increases the sourness of it) before eating.
Use of salt and asafoetida will also pacify
the windiness of pulses. So with this
precautions pulses are very useful for us.
Another precaution is about eating
them raw in the form of sprouts. As we have seen that they are hard to cook. So
in this form they are hard for digestion and so Ayurveda recommends not to have
them raw.
Another very
good way to have proteins is fried pulses, pharsan, shev, Bhujiya, phafada etc.
I was always wondering why this Gujarathi people always have Pharsan (Fried
Pulses items) in their food. Now I got the answer. They used to be strictly
vegetarian, now the culture is changing. Few of Gujarathi’s started eating
Non-Veg food now. For a vegetarian person pulses is a very good source of
Proteins and when you have them with oils then their gas producing effect is
pacified.
After many
years I was reading a book on Biochemistry, a subject in Modern Medicine, and
it mentions that for protein metabolism (proper utilization of protein in the
body) fats are essential. So the Pharsan’s, the fires Pulses is a very good
combination of Proteins & fats. And due to extreme fear about the oils the
vegetarian person stopped having them, what a loss! Although our wise body
demands it often but we restrict this very important food as a junk food.
If you
actually calculate how much oil you need to make a Pharsan, you will come with
the answer that very minimal oil actually goes inside. Just think if lots of
oil was going inside these fried pulses items their prize should have touched
the sky, as oils are expensive. But it is not the case. So in reality Pharsan’s
need very less oils. So don’t worry. Yes, you can worry about the quality of
oil used. It should be filtered or cold pressed Groundnut, Sesame, Musturd or
coconut.
I am waiting
for the day when someone will make Pharsan’s in these oils and also using the
organic pulses. Now a days they use cheap quality refined oils. Or the best way
is to make them is at home. But have them and they will fulfill your nourishment.
This is the
normal proportion but you can increase them especially during Kapha issues. As
the dryness of them acts against the stickiness of kapha. They play a role of balanced food for kapha.
During excess kapha when very little hunger
comes one can go for soups of pulses with addition of hot spices ( sambhar or
rassam) or if hunger is little better some solid item made from pulses –– dosa
or roti made of pluses flour. Or Thalipeeth---
roti from roasted flour of pulses. Or just eating roasted pulses as it is-- Chana
–Phutana (Roasted Pulses). And our wise body prefers anything made from Pulses
when Kapha takes over us.
For obesity
one can give preference to Pulses, increase the quantity of pulses to grains
and you will benefit. But again remember the side effect of pulses. If you
start getting gases, has suffer from Vata issues reduce the amount of pulses.
As most of
the pulses are cooling in nature (Except Horse gram) soup of pulses without hot
spices is a very good remedy for the raised Pitta. And with the addition of the
best medicine of Pitta, the ghee, it will be more ideal.
Amongst them
Green Gram (Moong) is the best one because it produces least gases. If you cook
soup (Dal) from it a slimy layer like cream on the milk comes on the top. This
is the stickiness of Green Gram. Due to this it produces least gases and therefore
best among all Pulses.
Next to it
are Red Gram (Masoor) and Pigeon Pea (Toovar). Pulses like chick peas, Chinese
peas, Garden Peas, kidney beans, flat beans, Chole, Rajma makes lot of gases
and one has to take proper precautions while making them. ( See how they cook
Chole & Rajma in North India – with lot of oil, isn’t it?)
Only the
Black gram (Udid, adhar) is heavy, sticky, sweet, and warm in nature and
reduces Vata.
See the
table for the qualities of different pulses.
The rough
flour made from this pulses especially from Red gram or Chick peas acts as a
very good scrubber for cleaning the skin.
And remember
to have less polished or naturally polished Pulses. They will offer you all the
nature’s wealth into them.
Pulses, Beans
1.
Green gram
(Moong) – Best among pulses, less Vata producing, strength giving, best
for making soup (Dal) and purities (cleans) wounds.
2.
Red gram
(Masoor) - Strength giving, good for skin, increases Vata, good for
making bathing powder.
3.
Pigeon peas
(Toovar) - Increases Vata,
cold, reduces Kapha and Pitta.
4.
Garden peas
(Matar) - Increases Vata too
much, little bitter also.
5.
Chinese
peas (Chuli) - Increases Vata
too much, dry, heavy and increases bowel quantity.
6.
Chick peas
(chana) - Increases Vata, are constipating.
7.
Flat beans
(Pavata) - Hot, increases Pitta
and Vata, reduces Kapha heavy, not good for eyes and
genesis, helps in getting motions.
8.
Kidney
beans (Mataki) - Cold, light, increases Vata.
9.
Black gram
(Urad) - Hot, heavy, oily, sweet, helps in getting motions, reduces vata
increases Kapha, Pitta and
fats, increases stool quantity, increases shukra dhatu (responsible for
genesis) and nourishing.
10.
Horse gram
(kulith) – Hot, sour, dry, light, increases Pitta, causes acidity, reduces Kapha and Vata.
NUTRITIONAL VALUE OF DIFFERENT FOOD TYPES
(We are considering here unpolished cereals
and pulses, and unrefined fats)
Food
Item
|
Carbohydrates
|
Proteins
|
Fats
|
Minerals
|
Vitamins
|
Fibre
|
Water
|
Cereals
|
66.2-78.2
%
|
6.8-12.1%
|
0.5-1.7%
|
0.9-2.7%
|
B
group vitamins (8 vitamins)
|
0.6-3.9%
|
11.9-14.9%
|
Pulses
|
54.5-60.9%
|
17.1-
28.2%
|
0.5-
1.7%
|
2.1-3.5%
|
B
group vitamins (8 Vitamins)
|
0.7-5.3%
|
8.1-13.4
%
|
Leafy Vegetables
|
1.4-13
%
very
few more
|
0.4-8%
|
0.1-
0.8%
|
0.6-3.4%
|
Vitamin
A & C
|
0,8-4,8%
|
73-95%
|
Fruit Vegetables
|
2.2-17
%
very
few more
|
0.4-4.1%
|
0.1-1.9%
few more |
0.3-1.6%
few more |
Vitamin
A & C
|
0.5-3.0%
few more
|
70-96.5
%
|
Fruits
|
3-30%
few
more
|
0.2-1.8%
few
more
|
0.1-1.5%
few more |
0.1-1.7%
few
more
|
Vitamin
C
|
0.5-5%
few more |
60-95.8
%
|
Roots & tubers
|
3.4-28
%
few
more
|
0.2-2.5%
|
0.1-0.7%
|
0.4-2%
|
Vitamin
B group & small amounts of Vitamin C
|
0.1-1.7%
|
60-94
%
few less |
Nuts & oil seeds
|
10-28.9
%
few
more
|
13.9-25.3%
few
less
few
more
|
25.6-64.5%
few less
|
0.6-6.4%
|
Vitamin A,D,E,K
|
1-10.9%
few more |
3-6.5
%
few more |
Oils
|
00.00%
|
00.00%
|
100%
|
very
minimal
|
Vitamin A,D,E,K
|
00.00%
|
00.00
%
|
Fish & sea food
|
0.9-7
%
|
8.9-25.2%
Dried:
56-68 %
|
0.4-10.8%
few more |
0.9-3.2%
Dried:
12-17.4%
|
Vitamin
D
Not
much other vitamins
|
0.0%
|
53-83%
Dried:
5-18 %
|
Meat, poultry & eggs
|
0.1-3.7
%
|
13,3-26.6
%
|
0.9-13.7%
|
1.0-2.4%
|
B
group vitamins
|
0.0%
|
68.8-79.4
%
|